Chargers vs. Jaguars: Highlighting Jacksonville’s top defensive players

A look at the Jaguars’ impact defenders that the Chargers must craft their game plan around.

To defeat the Jacksonville Jaguars and avoid an early exit from the playoffs, Justin Herbert and the Los Angeles Chargers must avoid a repeat of the shell-shocking performance displayed in their 38-10 loss earlier this season.

Points are expected in this Wild Card rematch, and the Chargers must be prepared to take on one of the NFL’s most-improved defenses

The Jaguars may not tout a hearty selection of household names, but several playmakers have helped transform this unit into one keen to fortify the trenches and take away the football.

The AFC South champs rank fifth in the NFL with 1.6 takeaways per game. In their Week 18 win against the Tennessee Titans, the Jaguars swarmed quarterback Josh Dobbs for four sacks, an interception, and a forced fumble. The Titans were held scoreless in the fourth quarter.

Additionally, the Jaguars’ 3-4 base defense has been instrumental in quashing the run. Opponents only averaged 4.2 yards per carry (seventh-best in the league) and 114.8 rushing yards per game (12th-best) in 2022. The Jaguars have been especially impressive over the last three weeks of the season, giving up no touchdowns and only 162 yards on the ground.

Here is a look at the three impact players on defense for the Jaguars who the Chargers must craft their gameplan around.

OLB Josh Allen

The Chargers will look to neutralize the best player on the other side. Outside linebacker Josh Allen totaled 57 tackles (11 for loss) and six sacks during the regulars season, the latter of which leads the Jaguars. Allen has also forced four fumbles and recovered two loose balls, including the one forced from Dobbs’ hands that he scooped and returned 37 yards to the end zone. The play earned him AFC Defensive Player of the Week honors. 

Allen is a powerful rusher who effectively uses his speed and explosiveness to overwhelm offensive tackles. He can fluidly switch between attacking the pocket to blanketing routes in his zone or out of the backfield. Allen also has a high success rate at backing down blockers with his length to constrict the pocket and create opportunities for other members of the pass rush.

Keeping Allen contained will be key to decreasing the stress on Herbert and maximizing his time to throw. 

NT Davon Hamilton

Hamilton, a third-round choice by the Jaguars in 2020, has become one of the team’s best defensive pieces at the nose tackle position. Hamilton garnered 39 tackles and 27 pressures, which included three sacks. His 74.9 PFF grade on the year ranks sixth on the Jaguars. This year, his pass-rush tasks have been expanded and he has shown the ability to win with strength and get upfield with urgency.

However, Hamilton’s best work includes absorbing double teams up front so his linebacker support can swoop in and corral the running back. At 6-4 and 320 pounds, Hamilton is well-equipped to do precisely that. The Chargers didn’t run the ball much in their last outing, but starter Austin Ekeler struggled for just five yards on four carries.

The interior offensive line must win the battles against Hamilton to establish the run and open up play-action pass opportunities.

CB Tyson Campbell

Campbell had a big rookie year in 2021, leading the Jaguars in interceptions and pass breakups while ranking fourth in tackles. With a starting role locked down, Campbell parleyed his first-year success into a sturdier performance that displayed major improvement in coverage against the league’s top targets. Campbell collected three interceptions and nine pass breakups, earning an 81.2 PFF Grade – better than Jalen Ramsey, Darius Slay, and Stephon Gilmore.

Campbell was also responsible for a huge play in the win over the Titans, picking off Dobbs with under a minute to play in the third quarter to set the Jaguars up in scoring position. He has good length to stiffen receivers at the line and possesses the awareness to get eyes on the quarterback for opportune plays on the ball.

With Mike Williams out for Saturday’s game with a back fracture, Josh Palmer will get the chance to challenge Campbell on the outside.

Jaguars channeling their ‘Sacksonville’ days as they dominate the Colts

Touchdown Wire’s Laurie Fitzpatrick details how the Jaguars’ defense beat up the Colts, and why “Sacksonville” is back in Duval County.

History repeated itself as the Jacksonville Jaguars once again took down the Indianapolis Colts in Jacksonville. The Jaguars are 4-0 against Frank Reich at home and haven’t lost a to the Colts at home since 2014.

The defense was the highlight of the day for the Jaguars, as they forced a shutout and only allowing the Colts offense to see the red zone twice. Stopping them on both fourth down attempts in the fourth quarter. Matt Ryan only completed 16 passes for 195 yards. The Jaguars defense had three interceptions and totaled five sacks on the day, leaving Ryan with a 34.0 passer rating.

What was even more impressive was how they shut down the Colts’ best offensive player, running back Jonathan Taylor. He ended the day with only 54 yards on the ground.

Here is what Doug Pederson had to say about the defense after the game. “It’s about being physical and just understanding to stay disciplined in your run fits and your eye discipline on things… It was a focus for us this week in practice and [it’s] just a credit to how hard our guys worked to understand and then eliminate the run.”

Let’s dive into the defense, specifically up front, to see how they were able to stop the Colts’ offense with pressure!

Did Josh Allen have the worst start of any QB this season vs. Jaguars?

Did the #Bills’ Josh Allen have the worst start of any QB this season vs. #Jaguars? (via @NateMendelson):

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Bills quarterback Josh Allen’s performance on Sunday was far from good. But was it the worst performance by any quarterback this season?

Football Outsiders grades every game, for every quarterback, adjusting it to the competition. Because the Bills played the lowly Jaguars, the football analytics outlet says Allen’s numbers against them make for the worst start by a quarterback this season.

Here’s what FO wrote following the Bills’ 9-6 loss vs. the Jags:

This is now the worst game for any quarterback this season. Allen finishes in last place in part because he loses 71 DYAR due to opponent adjustments, 15 more than any other quarterback. Without those adjustments, he would have been … third-worst. With the heavy burden of those adjustments, he finished worst in DYAR on throws to running backs (9-of-12 for 61 yards with an interception), throws down the middle (8-of-13 for 77 yards with an interception), and in the third quarter (6-of-10 for 64 yards with two interceptions and a sack).

Allen finished the game with a -210 DYAR. Falcons QB Matt Ryan was the top quarterback this week with a 173 DYAR going 23/30 for 343 yards and two touchdowns against the Saints.

Allen was 31/47 for 264 yards and had two interceptions and a fumble lost.

DYAR is Defense-adjusted Yards Above Replacement. Football Outsiders explains it as “the value of the quarterback’s performance compared to replacement level, adjusted for situation and opponent and then translated into yardage.”

Allen didn’t have the worst box score numbers of any quarterback (just look back at Davis Mills’ start Week 4 against Buffalo) but using their explanation its understandable that Allen put forth the worst QB effort this season.

This season Allen is No. 17  in DYAR at 253. If he had a backup-worthy week and finished with a 0 he’d be fifth behind the Bucs’ Tom Brady, Rams’ Matthew Stafford, Cowboys’ Dak Prescott, Cardinals’ Kyler Murray, Vikings; and Kirk Cousins.

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Jaguars’ Josh Allen has all-time career day against Bills’ Josh Allen

Josh Allen of the Jaguars had one of the most amazing games in pro football history against the Bills’ Josh Allen.

In retrospect, we should have seen this coming.

Josh Allen, the Jaguars’ edge-rusher selected with the seventh overall pick in the 2019 draft, had one of the most incredible and unrepeatable days any defender has ever enjoyed in pro football history on Sunday, as the Jaguars upset the Bills, 9-6. Why was this day so unique for the Jaguars’ Josh Allen? Because of all things he did against Bills quarterback Josh Allen, selected with the…

*re-checks Pro Football Reference*

…seventh overall pick in the 2018 draft. Yes, it was already weird before the game, and it was about to get weirder. The Jaguars’ Josh Allen had a great hat trick against the Bills’ Josh Allen — he sacked the quarterback, intercepted the quarterback, and recovered the quarterback’s fumble. The Jaguars’ Josh Allen had 17.5 sacks coming into this game, including two sacks against the Seahawks in Week 8, which matched his career high, but he had never recorded an interception or recovered a fumble before the Bills’ Josh Allen showed up at his doorstep. It was as if one Josh Allen had been waiting for the other all along.

The Jaguars’ Josh Allen was asked this week about the potential same-name storyline.

“I’m just looking forward to playing against this team and then looking forward to playing against him,” Allen said Wednesday. “He’s been playing at a high level of recent. He’s been evading sacks recently, he’s been getting out of the pocket, his O-line does a really good job of protecting him. I love this challenge. We’re going to get after them but we have to do it early and throughout the whole game.”

Had this Josh Allen received any of the other Josh Allen’s mail? Turns out, yes.

“I have. I actually got an email that was something—I’m not going to tell his business out there—but I got an email for him and I was like, ‘Oh yeah!’ Then, I looked at it and I was like, ‘I don’t think this was for me.’ So, that was all the hiccup I got, outside of just fans or whatever. So, I thought that was pretty cool.”

The whole day was pretty cool for the Jaguars’ Josh Allen. The Bills’ Josh Allen, who finished his day with 31 completions in 47 attempts for 264 yards, no touchdowns and two interceptions, didn’t feel the same.

Jaguars’ Josh Allen sacks Bills’ Josh Allen, an NFL first

What happened for the first time in the NFL when the Jaguars met the Bills?

The name’s the same. Their game is quite different.

The Jacksonville Jaguars have a Josh Allen on their roster, an edge rusher/linebacker.

The Buffalo Bills’ quarterback is Josh Allen, too.

When Josh Allen met Josh Allen in the Bills’ backfield on Sunday there was an NFL first.

This marked the first time in league history a player sacked a quarterback who had the same name.