Jaguars Safety Battle May Already Be Decided Before Camp Begins

As the Jacksonville Jaguars gear up for training camp, the safety position stands out as a well-established unit amid ongoing positional battles.

Training camp is still about a month away for the Jacksonville Jaguars, but the safety picture already looks pretty clear.

This is one of those position groups where the real drama may never quite materialize. Eric Murray and Antonio Johnson are the expected starters, Caleb Ransaw looks lined up for the third safety role in Anthony Campanile’s defense, and Jalen Huskey and Rayuan Lane add depth while bringing special teams value. That’s five spots right there, which is usually right around the number of safeties teams keep on a 53-man roster.

If there is a battle to watch, it may be Huskey trying to make a push for Ransaw’s third-safety job.

Johnson’s spring only reinforced why the Jaguars are comfortable with him in such a flexible role. He turned in a breakout 2025 season, and Campanile pointed to Johnson’s ability to handle multiple assignments as a major reason for that growth.

"Cool thing about him is he's had a lot on his plate," Campanile said. "Maybe more than even some other guys because Antonio plays both safety positions, nickel, dime, he does a lot. So when you do that, it's hard to learn all that stuff, but in the end, the silver lining is you know the defense as good or better than anybody and I think he's at the point now here he can coach a lot of the techniques that we're asking the guys to play, which is cool."

Ransaw also made a strong impression after missing his rookie year with a foot injury. His return this spring gave the Jaguars another option at the back end, and his presence as the third safety should keep him on the field regularly in Campanile’s scheme. That role also helps preserve Johnson’s versatility by allowing him to move around more often.

Murray gives the group its steadying force. Beyond his experience, his communication stands out, especially in a role where pre-snap adjustments and assignment checks matter so much.

"Huge," Coen said of having Murray's experience on defense. "It allows us to be able to move Antonio around and that in the back end we've got consistency.

A guy that's going to come down and make plays in the run game, get us in the right checks and balances in the back end from a coverage standpoint. Eric plays the game nasty.

He plays this game violently. He's made some plays on the ball."

For now, the projection is straightforward: Murray and Johnson on top, Ransaw working into the third safety role, and Huskey and Lane filling out the group while doing plenty of work on special teams.

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