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The Jaguars were one of the worst-performing NFL teams last season. With their offense ranking 25th, Jaguars owner Shahid Khan did not have any option but to sack head coach Doug Pederson and general manager Trent Baalke. And when the Jaguars hired Liam Coen as their HC, the NFC team was prepared to make some hard decisions. Knowing how poor Jax’s offense was last season, Coen has made it his priority to improve the offensive line before entering the 2025 season. “I think we would all agree that it needs to improve,” said Coen about the Jaguars’ offensive line. While Coen wants to improve Jax’s roster, the former Bucs’ offensive coordinator did not have enough cap space ahead of the 2025 free agency—just $16.9 million as per Spotrac. So what could Coen do? Well, the 39-year-old has just freed up to another $27 million cap space. But at what cost?

The recent developments in Jacksonville may be just a glimpse of a new era for the Jaguars. Coen is willing to do anything that takes to make the Jaguars a Super Bowl contender. “Everybody goes through adversity in life, whether it is a town, a community, a city, or an organization, but we are all at a point right now that we need to see some results,” Coen said. “We have got to get this thing back on track… I am very committed to trying to get this thing right for this city and this organization.” Now, with the 2025 free agency just 4 days away, the newly-appointed Jax HC has let go of the core offense of the Jaguars.

While many expected that Jaguar would release their wide receiver, Christian Kirk, who missed most of the 2024 season because of a broken collarbone sustained in October, is headed to the Texans in a trade. But this is not the shocking part yet. In another move, Coen has released four other players to free $27 million cap space.

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James Gladstone, who succeeded Baalke as Jax’s new GM, has announced the departure of TE Evan Engram, WRs Devin Duvernay and Josh Reynolds, and CB Ronald Darby being the latest.

“The Jaguars have freed up $27M in cap space today with Christian Kirk, Evan Engram, and Ronald Darby,” tweeted NFL rumors. The #Jaguars also informed veteran CB Ronald Darby they’re releasing him, per source.” NFL insider Tom Pelissero dropped a financial grenade that sent Duval County into a frenzy.

Christian Kirk, Trevor Lawrence’s security blanket, shipped to Houston for a 2026 seventh-round pick (originally the Rams’—because nothing says “rebuild” like trading a star for pocket change). Kirk’s 2022 season? Chef’s kiss: 84 catches, 1,108 yards, 8 TDs. But after a quiet 2023 (787 yards, 3 TDs) and a core muscle injury, 2024 became his cursed sequel—a collarbone fracture in Week 9 ended his campaign at just 8 games, 379 yards, and 1 TD. Suddenly, his $16.5M salary felt less like a steal and more like an anchor. Jags fans could only chant “Why’d it have to end like this?” like Tony Soprano mourning a lost ally.

Then there’s Evan Engram, the tight end who redefined “clutch” with a franchise-record 114 receptions in 2023. But injuries turned his 2024 into a blooper reel—hamstring woes, a torn labrum, and finally, release papers. Add Ronald Darby, the Super Bowl LII champ whose 106 career pass deflections couldn’t save him from cap casualty purgatory, and return specialist Devin Duvernay, and voilà—$27M saved.

So, what’s all of this adding up to beyond just the numbers?

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From Duval to H-Town: Kirk’s new playground, Liam Coen’s Play

Now, let’s talk plot twist: Kirk swapping teal for Texans red. Houston GM Nick Caserio, channeling his inner Wolf of Wall Street (I’m not leaving! The show goes on!), snagged Kirk despite his $16.5M salary. Why? Because the Texans’ WR room looked like an ER: Tank Dell (ACL/MCL surgery) is likely out for 2025, Stefon Diggs hitting free agency, and Robert Woods’ future is murky. Kirk’s job? Be C.J. Stroud’s new BFF. “The way he sees the field… he’s quarterback-friendly,” Lawrence once said, and Stroud’s about to learn that firsthand.

But let’s not gloss over the feels. Kirk’s departure stings Jacksonville like a missed two-point conversion. Remember 2022? Kirk and Lawrence were peanut butter and jelly, slicing defenses with route-running so crisp it could’ve been directed by Spielberg. Now, Houston inherits that chemistry—plus Kirk’s swagger. (“Been doubted since I first stepped in the league… nothing new to me,” he tweeted.) Meanwhile, the Jags’ 2024 collapse (4-13, third in AFC South) looms large. Imagine Fred Taylor’s 90-yard TD run in 2000—iconic, right? Now picture the inverse: a season that felt that long.

Yet, hope flickers. Rookie Brian Thomas Jr. sprinted into history with 1,000+ yards, and Parker Washington’s 96-yard punt return TD in London? Chef’s kiss with a side of fish and chips. The Jags’ culture that Liam Coen is stepping into? It’s a phoenix—always rising, even when the ashes include cap casualties. As Engram once mused, “God gonna pull up every time right when He’s supposed to.” Translation: Trust the process, even when it hurts.

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So here we are. Jacksonville’s roster rebuild reads like a haiku: Salary cap sighs / Stars depart, whispers of rebirth / Autumn leaves will grow. And for Houston? Kirk’s arrival is a mic drop. As Darby would say, “Chase the vision, not the money.” But hey, a seventh-round pick and $27M later, both teams are chasing something. For the Jags, it’s redemption. For Kirk? Proof that Texas-sized comebacks are his specialty.

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