SAN FRANCISCO — The turnaround wasn’t just impressive; it was violent. One year after a lifeless 4-13 finish, the Jacksonville Jaguars have stormed the Golden Gate City with serious hardware on the line. Tonight at the Palace of Fine Arts, quarterback Trevor Lawrence and head coach Liam Coen aren’t just attendees—they are the headline act for a franchise starving for national respect.
For the first time in team history, the Jaguars boast finalists for MVP, Coach of the Year, and Comeback Player of the Year simultaneously. The backdrop? A frenzied Super Bowl LX week in the Bay Area, where the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots are preparing for Sunday’s clash at Levi’s Stadium.
The Resurrection of Trevor Lawrence
Forget the “generational prospect” label—Lawrence finally played like the predator the league feared. After a shoulder surgery that erased half his 2024 campaign, Lawrence returned with a vengeance in 2025. He didn’t just manage games; he dictated them.
- Total Touchdowns: 38 (Franchise Record)
- Passing Yards: 4,007 (6th in NFL)
- Rushing Scores: 9 (T-2nd among QBs)
He faces a gauntlet for the MVP trophy. The competition includes San Francisco’s touchdown machine Christian McCaffrey and the resurgence of Matthew Stafford. But Lawrence’s dual candidacy for MVP and Comeback Player of the Year speaks to the sheer magnitude of his rally. He dragged Jacksonville from the cellar to the AFC South crown with a 13-4 record that silenced every critic in North Florida.
Coen’s Instant Impact
Liam Coen didn’t need a transition year. The rookie head coach took a broken roster and turned it into a buzzsaw. History suggests rookie coaches stumble; Coen sprinted. He is the first rookie head coach in NFL history to inherit a four-win team and immediately rip off 12+ victories.
His offensive scheme unlocked Lawrence, but his culture shift saved the locker room. Coen goes toe-to-toe with established giants like Kyle Shanahan and Mike Vrabel for Coach of the Year tonight. If he wins, he becomes the first Jaguar to ever hold the title.
“We heard the noise last August. ‘Same old Jags,’ they said. Coach Coen walked in day one and torched that script. He told us we weren’t rebuilding—we were reloading. Tonight isn’t just about awards; it’s about respect.” — Josh Hines-Allen, Jaguars Edge Rusher
Playoff Implications & What’s Next
While the Seahawks and Patriots handle the media circus in Santa Clara, Jacksonville’s presence tonight signals a power shift in the AFC. The 13-4 record wasn’t a fluke; it was a warning shot. With punter Logan Cooke also up for the Walter Payton Man of the Year, the Jaguars are representing excellence across the board.
Regardless of tonight’s vote count, the message is clear: The window is wide open. Lawrence is healthy, Coen has the blueprint, and the AFC South belongs to Jacksonville until further notice.
Watch It Live: The 15th Annual NFL Honors airs tonight at 9 p.m. ET on NBC and NFL Network. Jon Hamm hosts.

