Titans hosting WR Zay Jones on free-agent visit

Former Jags WR Zay Jones is reportedly set to visit the Titans.

The Tennessee Titans are exploring their options for more depth at the wide receiver position and are reportedly set to host former Jacksonville Jaguars wideout Zay Jones on a free-agent visit.

The news comes from NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, who notes that Jones is coming to Nashville on Monday. Jones already has some familiarity with the Titans thanks to his connection to offensive coordinator Nick Holz, who was Jacksonville’s passing-game coordinator in 2023.

Jones was slowed by injury in 2023, appearing in just nine games and tallying 321 yards and two scores. But the year before that, the 29-year-old posted the best season of his career, finishing with 823 yards and five touchdowns.

The East Carolina product offers versatility thanks to his experience lining up in the slot and out wide and would be a solid depth piece to bolster the Titans’ wide receivers room, which is filled with question marks behind Calvin Ridley and DeAndre Hopkins.

Jones, who we suggested the Titans sign in a separate article, is the second wide receiver to visit Nashville recently, as the team met with former Cincinnati Bengals slot receiver Tyler Boyd last week.

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Report: Ex-Jaguars WR Zay Jones visiting AFC South rival

Could Tennessee sign a second former Jacksonville wide receiver this offseason?

Tennessee is reportedly set to host former Jacksonville wide receiver Zay Jones for a free-agent visit on Monday, according to Ian Rapoport of NFL Network.

“Jones has an obvious connection to Tennessee [offensive coordinator] Nick Holz, as the two were both in Jacksonville last year,” Rapoport noted. Holz served as Jacksonville’s passing game coordinator in 2023.

Jones was released by the Jaguars last Tuesday, after producing 116 receptions, 1,144 yards and seven touchdowns with the team over two seasons and 25 appearances, including 22 starts. He was limited to nine games in 2023 due to multiple lower-body injuries, however.

Seven years into his pro career, Jones has compiled 287 receptions for 3,028 yards and 18 touchdowns.

“Beyond grateful for every memory, truly. Every teammate, every coach, every staff member, every fan I’ve encountered or felt inspired by,” Jones said via social media on Wednesday after his release from the Jaguars.

“The support of a strong community does so much for us athletes. Thank you more, Duval and Jags fans overseas.”

If he were to sign with the Titans, Jones would not be the only Jaguars’ receiver from last year to reunite with Holz in Nashville this offseason. Tennessee snatched Jacksonville’s No. 1 receiver from 2023, Calvin Ridley, with a lucrative contract offer during free agency.

After posting 1,016 yards and eight touchdowns over 76 receptions during his lone season with the Jaguars, Ridley cashed in on a four-year, $92 million deal with the Titans in March.

Analyzing the Jaguars’ 2024 wide receiver room reconstruction

Analyzing the Jaguars’ 2024 wide receiver room reconstruction

Out with the old and in with the new: Analyzing the Jacksonville Jaguars’ 2024 wide receiver room makeover.

In a somewhat unsurprising move following two free agency additions and first-round NFL draft selection to bolster the position this offseason, Jacksonville released wide receiver Zay Jones on Tuesday, after two seasons together.

His exit is the second of significance from Jacksonville’s receiver room this offseason, after fellow 2023 starter Calvin Ridley secured a massive payday from AFC South rival Tennessee, roughly an hour into free agency.

Ridley was believed to be preparing to re-sign with the Jaguars, the team he logged 1,016 receiving yards with last year after more than a season out of football, before the Titans made their contract offer.

Return specialist and depth pass-catcher Jamal Agnew hit free agency, too, not retained by the club.

Yet while Jacksonville lost its No. 1 wide receiver from 2023 just over a month ago, it appears confident in the investments it made at the position to compensate, enough to move on from the seven-year veteran Jones and pocket roughly $4.7 million in salary cap savings.

Over two seasons with the franchise, Jones caught 116 passes for 1,144 yards and seven touchdowns, adding 13 receptions for 157 yards and a touchdown in the playoffs. When healthy, he proved to be a reliable possession receiver who could make occasional clutch plays.

But Jones was far from robust in 2023, resulting in a steep drop in his production compared to 2022, when he produced single-season career highs of 82 receptions for 832 yards, with five touchdowns. Last year, he caught 34 passes for 321 yards and two touchdowns over nine games.

Jacksonville knew entering the 2024 offseason that its wide receiver room needed upgrades and improved depth, leading to a domino effect of moves that ultimately resulted in Jones’ release.

His and Agnew’s lacking availability (the duo combined to miss 14 games in 2023) and contract statuses, paired with Ridley’s departure, allowed the Jaguars to be aggressive in restructuring the position.

Before Ridley even hit free agency, the Jaguars appeared to have a replacement lined up for Jones in free agent signee and former Buffalo receiver, Gabe Davis. The same could be said for Agnew, as Jacksonville agreed to terms with former Baltimore receiver and return specialist, Devin Duvernay.

But when Ridley bounced on March 13, the day Davis and Duvernay’s anticipated signings were made official, Davis, who has started 47 games in his career, quickly became Ridley’s apparent successor. Jones remained on the roster for over another month.

Then Jacksonville took LSU wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. at No. 23 overall in last week’s NFL draft.

Carrying the 24th-highest salary cap hit among NFL receivers in 2024 yet relegated to No. 4 wide receiver status — behind slot receiver Christian Kirk, Davis and Thomas on the Jaguars’ depth chart — Jones would have been one of the most expensive backups at any position in the NFL this season if he remained on his contract.

For comparison, Jacksonville’s tied-for-fourth-highest-targeted wide receivers in 2023, Agnew and Parker Washington, were thrown to only 21 times apiece.

The Jaguars believe contributors less expensive than Jones can handle that role. Duvernay, Washington, Tim Jones, Elijah Cooks, Seth Williams, five undrafted free agent signings and even nine-season veteran Jarvis Landry will compete for that spot and others in Jacksonville’s receiver lineup this offseason.

At the top of their receiver room, the Jaguars hope the versatile trio of Kirk, Davis and Thomas, paired with tight end Evan Engram, will become quarterback Trevor Lawrence’s best as he enters a pivotal fourth season with the franchise, with their eyes also on the future.

Each player is under contract with Jacksonville through at least 2025. and Jacksonville’s front office has begun negotiations with Lawrence and his representatives regarding a long-term contract extension.

“I think the more opportunities and the more weapons you can surround your quarterback with, I think the better your chances are going to be,” Jaguars head coach Doug Pederson said after Thomas’ selection on April 25. “Now, we have to coach them and we have to play and there’s a lot of things that go into that. But it does help your chances.”

In the short term, Pederson wishes for the Jaguars’ younger, new-look receiving quartet to improve the team’s intermediate passing attack, where the team struggled in 2023 compared to 2022.

According to Pro Football Focus, Lawrence completed 58-of-123 (47.2%) of his 10-to-19-yard throws last season compared to his 84-of-138 (60.9%) mark the year before.

Receivers dropped nearly one percent more passes in that range in 2023 (6.5%) versus 2022 (5.6%). Lawrence’s intermediate adjusted completion percentage last season, accounting for throwing accuracy, was 3.2% higher than his actual completion percentage at that field level.

“That’s something that we talked about in here the last couple of days too, what these skill positions can do. It opens up that second level, intermediate zones, in your passing game,” Pederson shared on April 27.

“That’s where Evan can get a lot of his targets in there and Christian gets a lot of targets in there. Gabe, you look at his career, he’s gotten a lot of targets in there … Gabe can stretch the field a little bit, Brian now can stretch the field obviously and we’ll see once we get everybody in there and all the pieces together just how this thing unfolds.”

Although Jacksonville intended to return Ridley in 2024, it managed to restock its receiving corps throughout the offseason without making any single pass-catcher one of the highest-paid in the NFL, as it did with Kirk in 2022.

The Jaguars replaced Ridley with a first-round pick in Thomas and netted additional draft picks in the process by trading down six slots, supplanted Jones with another big-bodied and younger boundary threat in Davis, and superseded Agnew with a more productive yet less experienced rotational piece in Duvernay.

Time should soon tell if Jacksonville upgraded the unit. But at least, the Jaguars’ wide receiver room is younger, cheaper (aside from Kirk, whose cap number rose by over $12 million this offseason) and arguably deeper in talent now than in 2023, and how it could have been in 2024.

WR Zay Jones thanks Jaguars, fans following release

WR Zay Jones thanks Jaguars, fans following release

The Jaguars and former Jacksonville wide receiver Zay Jones exchanged farewells via social media on Wednesday following his Tuesday release from the team, ending his two-year stint in Duval County on a nice note.

“Beyond grateful for every memory, truly. Every teammate, every coach, every staff member, every fan I’ve encountered or felt inspired by,” Jones wrote, responding to a team graphic thanking him for his time with the Jaguars.

“The support of a strong community does so much for us athletes. Thank you more, Duval and Jags fans overseas.”

Jones signed a three-year contract with Jacksonville in 2022, worth $24 million with $14 million guaranteed. His 2024 salary cap hit was slated to be $10,752,628.

Jones, fellow receiver Christian Kirk and guard Brandon Scherff restructured their deals with Jacksonville in 2023, converting part of their salaries into signing bonuses as the Jaguars created cap space.

Per Over the Cap, Jones’ release will save the team nearly $4.2 million in cap space this season while leaving behind almost $6.6 million in dead money.

Over two years and 25 regular season games with the Jaguars, Jones compiled 116 receptions for 1,144 yards and seven touchdowns, increasing his career marks to 287 receptions for 3,028 yards and 18 touchdowns in seven seasons, with Jacksonville, Las Vegas/Oakland and Buffalo.

He reached multiple single-season career highs during the 2022-23 campaign with Jacksonville, catching 82 passes for 823 yards in the regular season and 13 passes for 157 yards in the playoffs.

Zay Jones may make sense as another Raiders reunion for Saints

The Saints are already flush with former Raiders, but Zay Jones may make sense as a safety net in case one of their young wideouts slips and falls:

The NFL draft is always tough on older players. Teams come out of it flush with young talent, which often leads to redundancies —  that are quickly dealt with in a wave of cuts around the league.

And that’s exactly what Zay Jones experienced with the Jacksonville Jaguars this week. Jacksonville drafted former LSU wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. in the first round of this year’s draft, and a few days later chose to make room in the receiving corps by letting Jones go. Now he’s a free agent, and the former Las Vegas Raiders wideout could make sense for the New Orleans Saints.

Sure, the Saints are flush with Derek Carr’s former teammates already. But they could use another veteran at receiver, and Jones is better-accomplished than other free agents they’ve picked up over the last month. Jones caught 34 passes for 321 yards last season. The Saints’ trio of Cedrick Wilson Jr., Stanley Morgan, and Equanimeous St. Brown combined for 27 receptions and 358 yards on their previous teams in 2023. Add up their careers and Jones outpaces them by 118 catches and 802 yards.

Signing him could make sense. The Saints don’t have much to hang their hats on after Chris Olave and Rashid Shaheed. A.T. Perry has a ton of potential but we should remember he only caught a dozen passes last year. It would be wise to invest in a safety net in case one of those youngsters slips and falls. Jones isn’t likely to be expensive, and he already has a connection to Carr. If the money makes sense there’s no reason not to bring him into training camp and see if he can compete for a roster spot.

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WR Jarvis Landry previews Jaguars rookie minicamp workout

WR Jarvis Landry previews Jaguars rookie minicamp workout: “I believe that it’s not always the fastest dog, it’s about the one that bites the hardest, too.”

Between 2019, his final Pro Bowl year in Cleveland, and 2022, wide receiver Jarvis Landry experienced a concussion, a hip injury, a fractured rib, a knee sprain, and most recently a nagging ankle sprain during his one-season stint with New Orleans.

Landry, 31, didn’t play football in 2023. He took the year off to recover from his hurts, spend time with his family, hire a new agent and focus on an NFL comeback in 2024.

Jacksonville will offer Landry an opportunity to re-emerge in the pros next month. It was revealed on Monday that the Jaguars invited the nine-year veteran to their rookie minicamp in May.

“You know it as well as I know it that this league is in a way only getting younger. But there’s guys like myself that’s still making headway in this league,” Landry told NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero in a Tuesday interview.

“I believe that the preparation I’ve put in — I believe that it’s not always the fastest dog. It’s about the one that bites the hardest, too. So I’ll be out there just competing at a high level … I’m very excited about the opportunity. I’ve got a lot to show.”

One day after the report surfaced, the Jaguars released wide receiver Zay Jones and kicker Joey Slye while filling the roster with 13 undrafted free-agent signings.

Although Jacksonville returns Christian Kirk, selected receiver Brian Thomas Jr. in the first round of the 2024 NFL draft, and signed receivers Gabe Davis and Devin Duvernay in free agency, Jones’ release could create room for Landry to latch on with the club, so long as his workouts go well.

Landry noted that Jacksonville is not the only team to have expressed interest in his services and recovery, even dating back to last season. He didn’t rush into a particular situation, though, as he’s eyed an organization offering a legitimate opportunity for him to compete and earn respect.

The Jaguars appear willing to give Landry that chance.

“I wanted to be in a position to be valued in an offense. I wanted an opportunity to be valued on a team and earn that, have the opportunity to earn that, more so,” Landry said. “That’s kind of what we’re figuring out, that’s kind of what we’re going through right now to just try to figure out where we can go and get the value.

“It’s not about the money. It’s not about money, really it’s about having the opportunity to truly earn value on a team, and play good football.”

Landry, a five-time Pro Bowler and second-round draft pick by Miami in 2014, has tallied 713 receptions for 7,870 yards and 38 touchdowns over his nine-season NFL career, adding 233 yards and five touchdowns rushing.

But since his 83-catch, 1,174-yard, six-touchdown 2019, his numbers in each receiving category have regressed every season, down to 25 receptions, 272 yards and one score over nine games in 2022.

Refreshed and rejuvenated now, Landry is confident that his potential return to football will allow him to conclude his career on his terms.

“I want to go out and just play, you know, with these opportunities I’ll get here in the near future,” Landry expressed. “To really leave the mark that I wanted to leave.”

Should Titans sign WR Zay Jones after release from Jags?

The Titans should have interest in recently released wide receiver Zay Jones.

The Tennessee Titans could still use more depth options at wide receiver, even after adding one in the 2024 NFL draft in Tulane product Jha’Quan Jackson.

And there’s a new option on the open market they should be interested in after the Jacksonville Jaguars released veteran wide receiver Zay Jones on Tuesday.

Jones is coming off an injury-riddled year in which he appeared in just nine games and finished with 321 yards and two touchdowns.

But the year before that, Jones had a career-best 823 yards to go along with five touchdowns. He also had a notable game against the Titans that season, reeling in eight catches for 77 yards and one touchdown in a thrashing of Tennessee in Week 14.

Jones, 29, offers inside/outside versatility and can make plays at all three levels of the field. He’d be a solid addition to a wide receivers room that could use more competition thanks to a slew of question marks behind DeAndre Hopkins and Calvin Ridley.

The former Jaguar also has a connection to Titans offensive coordinator Nick Holz, who was his passing-game coordinator in Jacksonville last season, and he was teammates with Ridley in 2023. Perhaps Ridley can get on the phone and convince his former teammate to climb aboard, assuming the Titans are interested.

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Former Bills WR Zay Jones released by Jaguars

Former #Bills WR Zay Jones released by Jaguars:

The Jacksonville Jaguars have released veteran wide receiver Zay Jones.

Jones, 29, signed a three-year contract with the Jaguars before the 2022 season. His release saved the Jags about $4.2 million against the salary cap but also created a dead-money hit of more than $6.5 million, according to Jaguars Wire.

Jones was selected by the Buffalo Bills out of East Carolina with a second-round pick in the 2017 NFL draft.

Jones slowly came along during his career in Buffalo, eventually leading the Bills with 56 receptions for 652 yards and seven touchdowns in 2018.

After off-field issues, Buffalo traded Jones to then-Oakland Raiders, where he played for two-and-a-half seasons.

Because of his connections with the Bills, there could be a possibility he’s added to Buffalo’s receiving room. The Bills selected only one receiver in the 2024 NFL draft, landing Keon Coleman via a second-round pick.

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Former Saints WR Jarvis Landry to try out for the Jaguars

Jarvis Landry is back in the NFL. The former New Orleans Saints wideout is expected to try out at the Jacksonville Jaguars’ upcoming minicamp:

Jarivs Landry is back in the NFL after taking a year off to heal up from an injury-plagued season with the New Orleans Saints. NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reports that Landry is expected to try out for the Jacksonville Jaguars at their upcoming rookie minicamp.

While these rookie minicamps are intended for, well, rookies — it’s common for veteran free agents to try out alongside first-year pros in hopes of landing a contract through training camp. If Landry looks like a better option than other players auditioning in Jacksonville, he could spend his summer catching passes from Trevor Lawrence.

Landry’s one year with the Saints didn’t go as planned. After rushing out the gates with 7 receptions for 114 yards in Week 1, he only caught 18 passes for 158 yards the rest of the season. A persistent ankle injury kept him out of eight games in 2022.

Maybe things will go smoother in Jacksonville. The Jaguars released veteran wideout Zay Jones after the 2024 draft, in which they picked Brian Thomas Jr. in the first round, so there aren’t many roster spots to go around.

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Jaguars release WR Zay Jones

Breaking: Jaguars release WR Zay Jones

The Jaguars have released veteran wide receiver Zay Jones following two seasons with the team, Jacksonville announced on Tuesday.

Jones, 29, signed a three-year contract with the Jaguars before the 2022 season, worth $24 million including $14 million fully guaranteed. He was slated to account for $10.7 million on the Jaguars’ salary cap table in 2024, according to Over the Cap.

Jones’ release without a post-June 1 designation will save Jacksonville $4,183,294 in cap space this season while leaving behind $6,569,334 in dead money.

The Jaguars released kicker Joey Slye alongside Jones, they announced. Slye signed with Jacksonville during free agency in March.

Of note, Jacksonville selected wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. and kicker Cam Little in the first and sixth rounds of the 2024 NFL draft last week, respectively.

Following six previous pro seasons — three with Buffalo, which selected him in the second round of the 2017 NFL draft, and three with Oakland/Las Vegas — Jones reached new career heights in his first campaign with Jacksonville in 2022.

Operating as the Jaguars’ No. 2-targeted pass-catcher that year, starting alongside fellow 2022 free agent signee Christian Kirk, Jones set single-season career-highs with 82 receptions for 823 yards, hauling in five touchdowns. He added 13 grabs for 157 yards and a score in the postseason.

But Jones took a step back during his second season in black and teal, limited to nine appearances, seven starts, and 34 catches for 321 yards and two touchdowns.

He dealt with a lingering posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) injury that caused cartilage damage to the femur on his right leg, according to Juston Lewis of the Florida Times-Union. But Jones returned to action by Week 10 and caught 20 passes for 196 yards in five games, before suffering another injury, a hamstring hurt in Week 15. He missed the next two contests.

Off the field, Jones was arrested in Jacksonville during the 2023 season, charged with misdemeanor domestic battery on November 13. He was released from jail on a $2,503 bond the next day, and the state attorney’s office in March declined to pursue the count further.

In his NFL career, Jones has totaled 287 receptions for 3,028 yards and 18 touchdowns. He accumulated 399 catches for 4,279 yards and 23 touchdowns over four seasons with East Carolina in college and maintains the Pirates’ records for single-game (22), single-season (158) and career receptions.

This is a breaking news story that will be updated.