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3 things we learned from Jaguars vs. Giants

NFL: Jacksonville Jaguars at New York Giants Vincent Carchietta-USA TODAY Sports

The Jacksonville Jaguars we saw win 20-15 against the New York Giants is pretty much the Jaguars most fans expected to see. Dominating defense with a grindy offense that can struggle in the passing game. There were a couple of things we learned in Week 1, even if we already knew them.

The defense might be better

Really outside of a single play that had at least three missed tackles, the Jaguars defense stifled the Giants offense the whole game. Sure, Eli Manning went 11 for 11 to start the game, but nothing was really gained from all of that and the Jaguars ran a lot of soft zone to keep everything in front of them. Odell Beckham Jr. has 110 yards on 11 receptions, most of which came rub routes or a chunk of yardage short of the first down marker on third and long. The defensive line was disruptive all game long and forced the Giants into a quick passing offense with the run game being shut down. That great Jaguars defense from 2017 is back, but it might be better against the run.

Myles Jack is a budding superstar

We’ve known this and it’s amazing what he’s doing on just one knee since he plummeted on draft day, but Jaguars middle linebacker Myles Jack is on his way to being a household name in the NFL. He was all over the place on Sunday, even before his pick-six. He’s settled into the middle linebacker role and gives the team a true sideline-to-sideline player. His most impressive play was actually running across the field to stop Evan Engram short for a first down on a play that appeared like it was going to gain about 15 more yards.

Jaguars offense still struggles behind the sticks

The Jaguars offense was up and down on Sunday, but in the second half in particular it just died. The team punted seven straight drives, didn’t score a single point and struggled to kill clock late with the lead. It wasn’t all just because they went run-run-pass, either. They actually passed the ball to start five of those seven drives, but penalties, struggles by the quarterback and inability for guys to make a play bogged them down. The Jaguars offense showed they’re still an offense that is going to struggle playing behind the sticks. Holding penalties and the like are often called drive killers, but for a passing attack like the Jaguars and with Leonard Fournette out of the game, they truly are drive killers.