ESPN’s Seth Walder didn’t follow the crowd when he sized up the Jacksonville Jaguars’ offseason.
Most analysts have come away with a harsh read on what James Gladstone and Liam Coen put together, pointing to the departures of Travis Etienne and Devin Lloyd and a draft class that drew plenty of skepticism. Walder went the other way, handing Jacksonville a “B” and making it clear that only one major move really kept the grade from climbing higher.
He started by praising the Jaguars for locking up Travon Walker and Cole Van Lanen on extensions, with Van Lanen drawing especially strong approval after his 2025 growth.
"If he keeps up that pace going forward, he'll be a steal at $17 million per year," Walder wrote.
Walder also backed one of the offseason’s most debated decisions: letting Etienne and Lloyd leave in free agency. That’s not the popular view, but he argued Jacksonville made the right call.
"I think letting each of them walk was probably the correct decision," he said. "Lloyd was the hardest to see go, but as productive as he was on splash plays last season he wasn't an every-down player. Jacksonville is projected to gain fourth-, fifth- and sixth-round compensatory picks for those three, per OverTheCap.com."
The biggest issue in Walder’s evaluation was the Jaguars’ first selection in the 2026 NFL Draft, Nate Boerkircher. He viewed it as a reach and a sign of a messy process, especially because Jacksonville could have moved down and still had a decent shot at landing him later. He also noted that the league at large clearly didn’t value Boerkircher at that spot.
Still, the Jaguars’ own people see it differently. Coen and Grant Udinksi believe Boerkircher can reshape the offense, and the second episode of "The Hunt" showed that he was their target from the start, not just a beneficiary of a run on blocking tight ends.
Boerkircher has already backed up some of that confidence during the offseason, earning mention as an " instant impact" candidate. With Brenton Strange alongside him, Coen sees a path for the offense to take a step forward. If that happens, the Jaguars’ offseason grade could look a lot better in hindsight.
In Other News...
Jaguars Fans Are Stunned By The News Involving Calais Campbells Family
The Jaguars community is reacting to heartbreaking news involving one of the franchises most respected former players, as Calais Campbells family has been thrown into mourning. Nateal Campbell, his mother, was found dead in her Atlanta home, a development that has stunned fans who remember Calais not just for his play, but for the steady presence and leadership he brought to Jacksonville.
The Campbell family has since released a statement expressing grief and asking for privacy while the investigation continues. For Jaguars fans, the story lands far beyond football, a painful reminder that some news cuts deeper than anything that happens on a field, and that the focus now is on the familys loss and the uncertainty still surrounding it. [Read more 🡒]
Travis Hunters Comeback Just Put One Big Jaguars Question In Focus
Travis Hunters rookie year ended before it ever really got going, but the Jaguars are already looking ahead to what comes next. The first-round pick was lost after an Oct. 30 practice injury and has since gone through surgery, while Jacksonville has kept the focus on his long-term role rather than the setback itself.
Hunter is documenting the rehab process on YouTube, giving fans a clearer look at the work behind his comeback. The bigger question for the Jaguars is whether the plan that made him so unique in the first place still holds, because the team continues to view him as a two-way player and expects him back in time for training camp. [Read more 🡒]
Jaguars Face A Tough Parker Washington Decision They Can't Ignore
The Jaguars have made a habit of getting ahead of the market with young players, locking up key pieces early in their careers and trying to keep their roster costs manageable before they balloon. That approach has already shown up with names like Jakobi Meyers and Cole Van Lanen, and it is now putting Parker Washington in the spotlight after he emerged as a much more productive part of the offense once he was moved into a starting role last season.
Washington did not spend the first stretch of the year as a full-time player, but injuries changed his path and his role grew quickly from there. With the receiver market continuing to climb, the timing of any extension matters for Jacksonville, and the front office has a chance to decide whether Washington is the kind of player worth securing before the price tag gets any steeper. [Read more 🡒]
