All 10 times the Jaguars have used the franchise tag

The Jaguars appear set to use the franchise tag for a fifth straight offseason.

As of Tuesday, NFL teams are allowed to use the franchise tag or transition tag to retain one player due to become a free agent. And for the fifth straight year, the Jacksonville Jaguars are likely to make use of the tag.

The likeliest scenario is that pass rusher Josh Allen will get the tag after posting a career-best 17.5 sacks during the 2023 season. But even if the Jaguars manage to get a deal done with Allen ahead of the March 5 deadline (which seems unlikely), they’d probably instead use the tag to keep wide receiver Calvin Ridley.

The franchise tag is a tool that guarantees a player, at minimum, a one-year fully guaranteed deal that makes them one of the highest paid players at their position. Teams also have until mid-July to sign a multi-year extension with a tagged player.

While Jacksonville has used it in four straight offseasons, the team only used it six times in the more than two decades prior. Here’s the Jaguars’ entire history of using the franchise tag:

Jacksonville Jaguars’ history with the franchise tag

The Jaguars have used the franchise tag nine times in their history. Here’s every player franchised by the team:

The Jacksonville Jaguars are approaching three decades in the NFL and that has meant using the franchise tag a few times along the way.

If the Jaguars use it this offseason — perhaps to retain tight end Evan Engram or right tackle Jawaan Taylor — that’d make it four straight seasons of designating a franchise player.

But prior to the current stretch of tagging players, there were significant stretches where the Jaguars didn’t use the tag at all.

Altogether, Jacksonville has used the franchise tag nine times and has never used the rare transition tag. Here is every time the Jaguars have designated someone a franchise player:

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Former NFL kicker Josh Scobee scores rarest of shots at TPC Sawgrass

The former Jaguars kicker had a round to remember at TPC Sawgrass.

A two on a par-5 hole — an “albatross,” in golf parlance — is the rarest of shots.

Former Jaguars kicker Josh Scobee pulled it off on Monday during a charity tournament at the TPC Sawgrass Players Stadium Course, doing so on a hole where the best professionals in the world over the last 39 years have tried and failed in the Players Championship.

Scobee was playing in a tournament benefitting the Ronald McDonald House, which provides lodging, meals, transportation and other care to critically ill children and their families who need to be near a hospital for treatment.

At the 520-yard par-5 ninth hole of the Stadium Course, Scobee pounded a drive of about 275 yards down the fairway. The tournament was being played under a “Shamble” format, which means the group selects one drive, and each competitor plays their own ball for the rest of the hole.

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Scobee’s was the best drive of the group, which included another former Jaguar who now splits time between Jacksonville and a real estate business in Seattle, Bryan Walters, Black Knight executive Brad Basto and Herb Shemer.

Those three hit second shots over the water splitting the ninth fairway, landing in various spots short of the green. But using a 5-wood from 244 yards out, Scobee hit the green, with the ball landing only three feet from the hole and going in on one hop.

“From where we could see, the ball took one hop and disappeared,” Scobee said. “I thought it had gone over the green but our caddie [Chris Mullen] had gone ahead and he started screaming, ‘It’s in the hole!’ That was a pretty special moment.”

Scobee used a TaylorMade Sim2 driver and 5-wood, and TaylorMade’s TP5X ball.

As it turned out, Scobee’s team needed that albatross. They eagled No. 11 when Walters pounded a 350-yard drive (winning the long-drive contest, by the way) and Scobee made a 30-foot putt and went on to shoot 16-under 56 to win by one shot.

“It’s crazy that with a two at No. 9 and an eagle at No. 11, we still only won by one,” Scobee said.

For a dose of perspective, the ninth hole is the only one of the four par-5s on the course in which an albatross has not been made during a Players Championship. There has been one at No. 2 (by Peter Lonard in 2007), two at No. 11 (by Hunter Mahan in 2007 and Harris English in 2019) and two at No. 16, by Rafael Cabrera Bello in 2017 and Brooks Kopeka in 2018.

And how rare is a 2 on a par-5? In the history of The Players Championship, there have been 31 holes-in-one at the par-3 holes but only five 2s on the par-5 holes.

The albatross has been another big shot for Scobee as he enjoys his retirement by playing as much golf as possible. He has made two holes-in-one this year, for five total, including the first hole of the Augusta National Par-3 Course, two weeks before the Masters.

Without warming up, Scobee used a pitching wedge to ace that hole.

He also had a hole-in-one in June at a charity tournament he sponsors for the Guardian Catholic School. Under that event’s set-up, there are nine par-3 holes on the course, with five par-4s converted to par-3s. Scobee used a 9-iron from 152 yards at No. 4 for the ace.

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Wide left: Former NFL kicker Josh Scobee calls famed Pine Valley ‘overrated’

Former NFL kicker Josh Scobee called the famed Pine Valley Golf Club “overrated” on Sunday.

Pine Valley has sat at No. 1 atop the list of Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses for quite some time now.

Year in and year out the ultra-exclusive and super-secret club located 20 miles outside Philadelphia in Camden County, New Jersey, receives praise as one of nation’s best courses. One avid golfer and former kicker in the National Football League begs to differ.

Josh Scobee played 12 seasons in the NFL – 11 with the Jacksonville Jaguars and one with the Pittsburgh Steelers – and is an avid golfer. The 38-year-old’s low handicap index was once +5.1, and according to the USGA’s Golf Handicap Information Network (GHIN), he’s currently a +1.8.

Folks online began to question where he was supposed to be playing. One of the first guesses was naturally Pine Valley (the correct answer is Augusta National). Scobee’s response?

He doubled-down, saying in another response it is “Soooo overrated.” We aren’t here to tell anyone that their opinion is wrong but … Scobee certainly has some explaining to do.

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