Jaguars Suddenly Have One Big Problem In The AFC South

Three division champions from the 2025 NFL season face uphill battles in 2026 to defend their titles amid rising division rivals and internal challenges.

The 2026 NFL season could be another year where the standings get shaken up fast, and a few division winners from 2025 already have reason to look over their shoulders.

That’s the reality in a league that keeps getting tighter. New England and Seattle both missed the playoffs in 2024, then reached the Super Bowl in 2025, which is the kind of leap that makes it hard to rule anything out. If that kind of trend keeps rolling, some of last year’s division champs may not be nearly as safe as they look on paper.

Chicago is one of the first teams that fits that warning label. The Bears came out of nowhere in 2025, won 11 games, and took the NFC North with room to spare.

But the division around them was no joke. Green Bay, Minnesota, and Detroit all finished with nine wins, and that matters because the NFC North has been a heavyweight fight for years.

From 2017 through 2024, the division winner never had fewer than 12 wins. From 2019 through 2022, the champion finished with exactly 13.

The Bears had a top offense, but the defense was very flawed, and with the rest of the division still competitive, it’s hard to see Chicago repeating without adding another win or two in 2026. Detroit, in particular, has already shown what it can do, winning 12 games in 2023 and 15 in 2024 while taking the division both times.

Jacksonville is another team that may have enjoyed its peak a little early. The Jaguars won 13 games in 2025 in the first season of the Liam Coen era, and Trevor Lawrence caught fire over the final six games, finishing the year as one of the MVP candidates.

But the roster took hits in free agency, with Travis Etienne and Devin Lloyd both leaving for the NFC South. Even before those departures, the Jaguars didn’t look better than Houston, and the Texans only strengthened their case this offseason.

General Manager Nick Caserio added Wyatt Teller and Braden Smith to the offensive line, brought in David Montgomery in a trade, and still watched his team win 12 games in 2025 after opening 0-3. There are concerns about C.J.

Stroud, but Houston still looks like a team that could have won 13 or 14 games last season with a cleaner start. The Texans won the division in 2023 and 2024, and they’re built to chase it again.

Philadelphia rounds out the list, and the warning signs there are more about stability than raw talent. The Eagles won 11 games in 2025, but the season still felt dysfunctional.

This offseason brought more change, including the trade of A.J. Brown and the hiring of Sean Mannion as offensive coordinator.

Jalen Hurts remains the quarterback, but the source material is blunt about his limitations as a passer. Dallas, meanwhile, made serious upgrades.

The Cowboys revamped the defense and brought in Christian Parker to run it, with Parker described as a Vic Fangio disciple. That matters because Dallas already has a top-7 offense, and if the defense can just settle in at average, that’s enough to make things interesting.

The Cowboys won seven games last year and stayed in the race deep into the season, so this isn’t a team scraping the bottom. With Philadelphia still searching for offensive consistency, Dallas has a real chance to take the NFC East.

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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 🡒]

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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 🡒]

Jaguars Still Have One Huge Arik Armstead Question Up Front

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Jacksonville weighed its options, but Armsteads presence on the defensive line still matters to a group that needs stability in the trenches. He also played through a hand injury late last season, and his production tailed off after a strong start, so the Jaguars are left balancing cost, health and value as they head deeper into camp with the decision still hanging over the front of the defense. [Read more 🡒]