Jaguars vs. Colts: Thursday injury reports

Jaguars vs. Colts: Thursday injury reports

The Jaguars and Colts each saw some key contributors in upgraded action in Thursday’s practice compared to Wednesday’s, a good sign for both squads as they prepare for their Week 5, AFC South matchup at EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville, Fla.

Find Jacksonville and Indianapolis’ Thursday injury reports for Week 5 below.

* indicates status upgrade from previous practice

Jaguars injury report

  • RB Tank Bigsby (shoulder) — limited
  • RB Travis Etienne Jr. (shoulder) — limited
  • WR Gabe Davis (shoulder) — limited
  • TE Evan Engram (hamstring) — limited
  • DE Josh Hines-Allen (concussion) — limited*
  • LB Devin Lloyd (knee) — limited*
  • LB Yasir Abdullah (neck) — limited
  • CB Jarrian Jones (shoulder) — limited
  • S Darnell Savage Jr. (quadricep) — limited

Analysis: Jaguars starting defenders, defensive end Josh Hines-Allen and linebacker Devin Lloyd, were upgraded to limited Thursday after being nonparticipants in practice Wednesday.

They joined every other player on Jacksonville’s injury report in being limited Thursday, marking the only changes to the Jaguars’ list.

Colts injury report

  • OT Braden Smith (knee) — full*
  • LB Zaire Franklin (illness) — full*
  • LB Grant Stuard (heel) — full*
  • QB Anthony Richardson (oblique) — limited
  • RB Jonathan Taylor (ankle) — did not practice
  • C Ryan Kelly (neck) — did not practice
  • DE Kwity Paye (quadriceps) — did not practice
  • CB Kenny Moore (hip) — did not practice

Analysis: Three Colts, starting offensive tackle Braden Smith and linebacker Zaire Franklin and backup linebacker Grant Stuard, were upgraded to full participation Thursday after being sidelined on Wednesday.

Starting Indianapolis quarterback Anthony Richardson remained limited, while starting running back Jonathan Taylor did not practice for a second consecutive day.

Jaguars DE Josh Hines-Allen returns to practice

Jaguars DE Josh Hines-Allen returns to practice

Jaguars star defensive end Josh Hines-Allen returned to practice in what appeared to be a limited capacity Thursday after missing Wednesday’s workout while in the NFL concussion protocol, per Michael DiRocco of ESPN.

DiRocco noted that Hines-Allen participated while wearing a no-contact jersey in the media viewing window of Thursday’s practice.

Hines-Allen exited Jacksonville’s Week 4 matchup with Houston in the third quarter after taking on contact during a run by Texans running back J.J. Taylor, leading to his placement in the concussion protocol. He finished the game with three tackles and two quarterback hits.

Jaguars head coach Doug Pederson suggested Monday that he did not intend to rush Hines-Allen back into action, ensuring he clears protocol instead of taking any risks.

“That’s a day-to-day thing and I want to make sure he’s 100 percent,” Pederson said.

After signing a five-year, $141.3 million contract extension with Jacksonville this summer, Hines-Allen has recorded 12 total tackles including one for loss, one sack, two defended passes and six quarterback hits.

Hines-Allen is up to 264 tackles with 54 for loss, 46 sacks, two interceptions, 10 defended passes and nine forced fumbles in his 78-game Jaguars career.

Jaguars vs. Colts: Initial Week 5 injury reports

Jaguars vs. Colts: Initial Week 5 injury reports

The Jaguars and Colts are banged up entering Week 5, although most of Jacksonville’s hurt players practiced in some capacity on Wednesday while most of Indianapolis’ did not.

Find Jacksonville and Indianapolis’ initial Week 5 injury reports below.

Jaguars injury report

  • RB Tank Bigsby (shoulder) — limited
  • RB Travis Etienne Jr. (shoulder) — limited
  • WR Gabe Davis (shoulder) — limited
  • TE Evan Engram (hamstring) — limited
  • LB Yasir Abdullah (neck) — limited
  • CB Jarrian Jones (shoulder) — limited
  • S Darnell Savage Jr. (quadricep) — limited
  • DE Josh Hines-Allen (concussion) — did not practice
  • LB Devin Lloyd (knee) — did not practice

Analysis: Starting defenders, edge rusher Josh Hines-Allen and linebacker Devin Lloyd, did not practice Wednesday. Lloyd did not play in Week 4 due to knee soreness, while Hines-Allen exited the game and entered the NFL’s concussion protocol.

Starting running back Travis Etienne Jr. suffered a shoulder injury against Houston Sunday but returned and finished the game, rushing for 50 yards and adding 10 yards receiving.

For the first time since Week 2, starting tight end Evan Engram practiced on Wednesday in a limited capacity.

Colts injury report

  • QB Anthony Richardson (oblique) — limited
  • RB Jonathan Taylor (ankle) — did not practice
  • OT Braden Smith (knee) — did not practice
  • C Ryan Kelly (neck) — did not practice
  • DE Kwity Paye (quadriceps) — did not practice
  • LB Zaire Franklin (illness) — did not practice
  • LB Grant Stuard (heel) — did not practice
  • CB Kenny Moore (hip) — did not practice

Analysis: All eyes were on starting quarterback Anthony Richardson entering the week after he suffered a hip injury against Pittsburgh on Sunday. He participated in individual drills but was not expected to take part in team drills, per Stephen Holder of ESPN.

Six of the seven Colts who did not practice Wednesday — Jonathan Taylor, Braden Smith, Ryan Kelly, Kwity Paye, Zaire Franklin and Kenny Moore — are starters.

Taylor reportedly suffered a high-ankle sprain against the Steelers Sunday, after rushing for 88 yards and one touchdown.

Doug Pederson updates six injured Jaguars starters entering Week 5

Doug Pederson updates six injured Jaguars starters entering Week 5

The Jaguars are banged up entering Week 5 and ahead of their second consecutive AFC South showdown, against the Colts at home on Sunday.

Jacksonville head coach Doug Pederson provided updates for six hurt Jaguars starters Monday, including confirmation that star defensive end Josh Hines-Allen entered the NFL’s concussion protocol after taking a thud against Houston in Week 4.

Running back Travis Etienne Jr. (shoulder) and right tackle Anton Harrison (ankle) will “be fine” after getting hurt in the Jaguars’ 24-20 loss against the Texans, too, per Pederson.

Linebacker Devin Lloyd (knee) was somewhat surprisingly made inactive before kickoff in Week 4. He appeared on Jacksonville’s injury report last Thursday and was questionable entering the game, although Pederson said Friday that the linebacker was dealing with soreness and “should be fine.”

“[Lloyd] had just a contusion the week before. It was kind of sore during the week, hopefully he would make it. Just went to warm up prior to the game and just felt like he couldn’t give 100 percent, so we put him down,” Pederson explained Monday.

Tight end Evan Engram (hamstring) and safety Darnell Savage Jr. (quadriceps) each missed their third consecutive game Sunday. Savage entered the weekend questionable but was downgraded to out Saturday.

Pederson indicated Savage did not suffer a setback, but rather, he did not get to 100% athletically during practice last week, leaving him sidelined for at least one more game. Engram enters Week 5 “day-to-day.”

“I’m hoping Savage [will be available in Week 5]. He went last week. Pushed it pretty hard. Didn’t feel like he could really open up last week – not a setback, nothing like that. We’ve just got to get him to burst,” said Pederson.

“Evan, I think is going to be day-to-day right now. Felt good today, we’ll see where he’s at here in a couple of days.”

Pederson thinks Jaguars DE Josh Hines-Allen is in concussion protocol

Pederson thinks Jaguars DE Josh Hines-Allen is in concussion protocol

Jacksonville head coach Doug Pederson shared his belief that star defensive end Josh Hines-Allen entered the NFL’s concussion protocol amid the Jaguars’ 24-20 loss to Texans in Houston on Sunday.

Hines-Allen briefly exited the contest with over five minutes left in the third quarter, after a six-yard rush by Texans running back J.J. Taylor. He re-entered the game two plays later for one rep but was ultimately pulled from action during Houston’s next drive.

“I’ll talk to Ferg (Jaguars vice president of player health and performance Jeff Ferguson), see what he says. But, I think so, yes,” Pederson said post-game, asked if Hines-Allen had entered concussion protocol.

Hines-Allen finished the game with three total tackles and two quarterback hits.

Through four games after signing a five-year, $141.3 million contract extension with Jacksonville in April, Hines-Allen has accumulated 12 total tackles including one for loss, one sack, two defended passes and six quarterback hits.

Pro Football Focus credits Hines-Allen for generating 10 quarterback pressures through the season’s first three weeks. The outlet had not charted the edge rusher’s Week 4 performance at press time.

Bills vs. Jaguars: 3 key matchups to watch in Week 3

Bills vs. Jaguars: 3 key matchups to watch in Week 3

The Buffalo Bills host the Jacksonville Jaguars in their upcoming Week 3 matchup.

Even with it being an important AFC clash, it will still be the games, within the game, that will make all the difference.

Here are three key matchups to watch during Monday’s Bills-Jaguars contest:

OL Dion Dawkins vs. Josh-Hines Allen

(Photo by Henry Browne/Getty Images)

While Hines-Allen only has recorded one sack so far in 2024, he’s still doing pretty well in for a good overall defensive front in Jacksonville. Pro Football Focus grades him as the NFL’s sixth-best edge defender through two weeks. Considering he is watching Bills quarterback Josh Allen’s blindside, Dawkins has to play well.

WR Keon Coleman vs. S Andre Cisco

(Photo by Courtney Culbreath/Getty Images)

Each week it seems like a new player is stepping up in the passing game for the Bills which has complemented the rushing efforts of James Cook very well. This might be a good time to show why Coleman is a deep threat.

PFF is not the end all, be all, but let’s be frank: It’s never good when the football analytics outlet ranks you as the worst player at your position in the entire NFL. That’s what Cisco currently is. Get Coleman on his side of the field and send him deep.

LB Baylon Spector vs. RB Travis Etienne Jr.

(Photo by Eakin Howard/Getty Images)

Spector has the confidence of his team. He is going to make his first start since the postseason in 2023 against the Kansas City Chiefs as Terrel Bernard (pectoral) is expected to miss a few weeks.

Even so, Etienne is a good playmaker. There’s a reason why Buffalo wanted to draft him years ago. Spector is not solely going to be tasked with stopped him, but when he has his shots at the running back Spector has to stop him.

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X-Factor: Jaguars pass rush faces ailing Browns OL

X-Factor: Jaguars pass rush faces ailing Browns OL

The Jaguars’ pass rush should be licking its chops ahead of its Sunday matchup, hoping to replicate Dallas’ six-sack performance in Week 1 against an ailing Cleveland offensive line.  

The Browns on Friday ruled out left tackle Jedrick Wills Jr. for a second consecutive game, while right tackle Jack Conklin is considered questionable for Sunday’s contest.

Additionally, Cleveland left guard Joel Bitonio was listed as limited during the week. 

With the Browns’ offensive line banged up, the Jaguars are in prime position to unleash their pass rush behind edge rushers Travon Walker and Josh Hines-Allen. 

Jacksonville’s pass rush could be crucial in helping out its backend, as the secondary is down two key defensive backs due to injury, safety Darnell Savage Jr. and cornerback Tyson Campbell

Walker hopes to replicate the success that found him in the backfield against the Dolphins when he twice brought down Miami quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, generating 67% of Jacksonville’s Week 1 sacks. 

Jaguars defensive coordinator Ryan Nielsen felt the edge duo showed flashes of their potential in Week 1 but wants each player to continue on an upward trajectory when facing the Browns. 

“Those guys did a good job on the edge, they really did,” Nielsen said Thursday. “Travon getting off of blocks. I mean, there were times Josh, his awareness in terms of the blocks and his block reaction, things like that.”

“There’s some disruption; there’s some things that you didn’t see on the stat line that he did during the game in the run game and the pass-rush game that showed up on the tape on the toss plays in the backfield, taking two guys where Tyson [Campbell] can make a tackle.”

In addition to the homegrown edge tandem, Nielsen acknowledged the addition of free-agent defensive tackle Arik Armstead in the middle of the defense. The former 49er got home in his first game as a Jaguar, bringing down Tagovailoa for a loss of five. 

Nielsen says the fit was evident for Armstead, who moved around the front depending on personnel and down and distance, a tactic the Jaguars will continue to employ. 

“We knew exactly where we were going to do when he got here: play some ends, play some tackle,” Nelsen said. “And then how we rotated it was personnel packages, things like that. So, it wasn’t a big [deal], and you’ll see the continuation of that, moving him around, things like that for the rest of the year.”

Nielsen’s unit generally performed well in Week 1, yet the Dolphins’ big play threat proved detrimental, changing the tide of the game once Miami receiver Tyreek Hill went for an 80-yard touchdown one play after Jacksonville running back Travis Etienne Jr. fumbled in the red zone in the third quarter. 

In Jacksonville’s second contest of the season, head coach Doug Pederson wants to see improvement from the defense in giving up explosive plays against the Browns offense, which only posted 169 passing yards on 45 attempts against the Cowboys.

“To me, it just came down to those three plays,” Pederson said Monday. “It was like 182 yards on three pass plays. The first third-and-eight screen went for 39, I think, then the 63 and the 80. So those are the plays we have to eliminate, and I think it’s a different outcome.” 

As Pederson looks ahead from the Jaguars’ dramatic Week 1 loss, he is not concerned with the laundry list of Browns’ offensive linemen named on the injury report. He said his team’s strategy remains the same: trust the game plan and execute.

Jacksonville’s pass rush fared well in that respect a week ago. It is crucial the unit does so again to beat Cleveland.

“You’ve got to still go out and play whoever’s out there for them, whoever’s out there for us. I mean, they’re not going to change, we’re not going to change,” Pederson said Friday. 

“I just think you have to go execute and play and study the man that you’re going up against and study his tendencies. I think that’s the most important thing.”

Jaguars’ Josh Allen changes name to Hines-Allen

Jaguars’ Josh Allen changes name to Hines-Allen:

There will be no more confusing these two.

Jacksonville Jaguars pass rusher Josh Allen has announced that he has changed his name to “Allen-Hines.”

Naturally, Hines-Allen was previously confused with Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen during certain conversations.

Per Jaguars Wire, the addition to Hines-Allen’s name is a nod to the maternal side of his family. The name extension runs in the family, too.

Hines-Allen’s sister, Myisha Hines-Allen, plays for the WNBA’s Washington Mystics. Additionally, sisters Kyra Hines-Allen played basketball at Cheyney University and LaTorri Hines-Allen played basketball at Virginia Tech and Towson.

The Jaguars team account appears to have added on that Hines-Allen will continue wear his name No. 41 jersey:

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