Two of the biggest questions hanging over Jaguars training camp are the ones tied to the most visible offseason changes: linebacker and running back. The running back conversation will come later, but at linebacker, the spotlight is already fixed on who steps into Devin Lloyd’s old spot.
For now, Ventrell Miller looks like the front-runner. The Jaguars’ former All-Pro linebacker signed with the Carolina Panthers in March, and Miller has been the obvious name to watch ever since. Still, camp is where that pecking order gets tested for real.
Miller has a strong case. He started games for the staff last season after first getting spot starts in 2024, and he’s shown himself to be a reliable run defender with flashes that have stood out. The Jaguars also didn’t bring in much competition at the position beyond seventh-round pick Parker Hughes, which says plenty about how they view the room.
“Yeah, I think there's a lot of room for growth there. I think that Ventrell, when Ventrell was asked to play a lot of meaningful snaps last year, I think we saw some really good things and then there's some things we can continue to coach off of.
And I think anytime you give a player confidence without telling them anything, like right now if you're him and we haven't signed anybody yet, you should say, well, at least they believe in me. At least they think I can do it," Coen said in March at the owners meetings about Miller.
"And now it's on him and us to go do it together but also like dude now it's time. Now it's time to truly go take it over. There's going to be an opportunity there and I think Ventrell is made of the right stuff and I think he cares enough about it from a we above me standpoint that he's going to put the time in to do it and I'm excited about what that could look like.”
That said, Miller isn’t walking into camp with the job locked up. He spent last season battling Lloyd for the starting role all the way through Week 1 before Lloyd separated himself with a few big takeaways. This time around, Miller is the one in position to win it outright.
There are other names in the mix, too. Branson Combs made noise during the offseason program and looked noticeably more confident and improved than he did last year, when he saw some action in blowout wins.
Parker Hughes, the Jaguars’ final pick in their 10-player draft class, could wind up as more of a special teams piece as a rookie. Jack Kiser, a fourth-round pick a year ago, appears headed for a backup role behind Foyesade Oluokun in the starting defense.
Combs, though, is the name that keeps coming up as a real challenger. He spent a good chunk of last season on the practice squad after signing as an undrafted free agent, but his offseason work made him hard to ignore. The Jaguars’ staff took notice of his pass coverage, and that could matter a lot in a room that just lost Lloyd’s playmaking.
That part of Lloyd’s game is impossible to overlook. He was a difference-maker for the Jaguars’ defense last season, and while there’s room to debate how much of that was scheme or Anthony Campanile-related, his impact was obvious. He was central to some of the Jaguars’ biggest wins, including turnovers against the San Francisco 49ers and Kansas City Chiefs that helped fuel comeback victories.
His 99-yard pick-six against Patrick Mahomes was one of the season’s signature moments, and according to NextGen Status it swung the Jaguars’ win probability by 42 percentage points, from 28% to 70%.
Whoever ends up replacing him - Miller, Combs or someone else - will inherit that pressure. They don’t have to duplicate Lloyd’s exact production to make the job work, but the Jaguars are clearly hoping the drop-off at linebacker is minimal.
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Lawrences final round included an 87, and he managed to trim down the double bogeys that had piled up earlier in the tournament. It was not the kind of leaderboard run that threatened former tennis player Mardy Fish, who won with 72 points, but for Lawrence it was a cleaner ending and a small sign of progress in a field that can expose even the most competitive athletes. [Read more 🡒]
