Arik Armstead has heard the talk all offseason, and he’s still standing in the middle of the Jaguars’ defensive line as training camp arrives.
The speculation was easy enough to understand. Armstead is in the final year of his contract, carries a $19.385 million cap hit and has no guaranteed salary this season.
On paper, a post-June 1 release would have created $14.48 million in cap space for 2026. In reality, that kind of move would not have given Jacksonville any extra flexibility when free agency opened in March.
Armstead said he knew the chatter was out there.
“That’s the nature of the business,” Armstead told Ryan O'Halloran of the Florida Times-Union, via Pro Football Talk. “It’s impossible to ignore the chatter. Everyone has social media and there is no ignoring anything and even if you’re not on social media, somebody will tell you about it or ask you about it.”
For the Jaguars, keeping him made more football sense than cutting bait. The defensive tackle group already looks like a major question mark, and Jacksonville still needs more juice in the pass rush. Letting Armstead go would have stripped away one of the few proven pieces in that room without solving the bigger issue.
The production was there early last season. Through 12 games, Armstead posted 41 quarterback pressures, which ranked third among defensive tackles over that span. He was also near the top of the position in sacks.
The finish, though, was not as clean. A hand injury forced him to grind through the back half of the year, and the numbers dipped. From Weeks 13-18, he ranked 60th in pressures.
That’s why the Jaguars need the version of Armstead who can stay on the field and keep producing from Week 1 through Week 18. His consistency matters as much as his presence.
“My focus is being my best self and the best player I can be. That’s all I can control,” Armstead said.
For Jacksonville, that focus is crucial. If Armstead delivers, the whole defensive tackle unit has a better chance to hold together. If he doesn’t, the questions in that room only get louder.
In Other News...
Jaguars Send 3 Pass Rushers To Sack Summit With NFL Elite
The Jaguars are sending three of their top pass rushers to the 2024 Sack Summit from July 9-11, a gathering for NFL edge defenders hosted by Maxx Crosby, Cameron Jordan and Von Miller. Josh Hines-Allen, Travon Walker and Arik Armstead will be among the players in the room, giving Jacksonville a chance to keep its front-line pressure group around some of the leagues most established names while the offseason still has room to shape their next step.
For Hines-Allen, it is another marker of a season in which he was among the leagues most productive pressure players. Walker arrives with the momentum of a recent extension that underscored how strongly the Jaguars still believe in his trajectory, while Armstead enters with a different kind of motivation after a hand injury affected his late-season production. The summit does not answer every question about what Jacksonvilles pass rush will become, but it does put three important pieces of it in the same place at the same time. [Read more 🡒]
Jaguars Veteran Is Forcing A Tough Backfield Decision In Camp
Ameer Abdullah has spent long enough in the league to know how camp battles work, and he is leaning on that experience in Jacksonville. Entering his 12th NFL season, the veteran running back is giving the Jaguars something every training camp needs: a steady hand in a crowded room, plus the kind of versatility that can help in more than one phase of the game. Coaches and teammates have taken notice of the way he works, especially as he helps guide a young backfield.
What makes Abdullah interesting is that his value is not limited to carries. He can help as a pass catcher and on special teams, which gives him a path to stick even as the Jaguars sort through their backfield mix. For a team that has to balance depth, roles and weekly game-day value, Abdullahs case is the kind that can make a late-summer decision tougher than it first looked. [Read more 🡒]
