Sep 28, 2025; Santa Clara, California, USA; San Francisco 49ers defensive coordinator Robert Saleh walks off of the field after the game against the Jacksonville Jaguars at Levi's Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

49ers DC Robert Saleh clarifies remarks about Jags coach Liam Coen

San Francisco 49ers defensive coordinator Robert Saleh blamed his own word choice for sparking a postgame tiff with Jacksonville Jaguars coach Liam Coen after the teams’ Sunday game.

Days before the contest, Saleh discussed Coen and the Jaguars being adept at “legal signal stealing.”

Jacksonville went on to beat San Francisco 26-21. As the teams met at midfield postgame, Coen sought out Saleh. Video from Action Sports Jax showed Coen saying, “Keep my name out of your mouth. Keep my name out of your f–ing mouth.” Saleh responded, “I will f– your world up.”

Saleh took a much different tone on Tuesday.

“It is all good,” the former New York Jets head coach said. “Whatever happened on Sunday doesn’t change how I feel. In my heart, I genuinely was trying to give a compliment, and I own the fact that I probably used the wrong choice of words, but however you want to word it. …

“Obviously, I did a poor job with the words. I mean, if I said the words ‘film study,’ I don’t think we’re really talking about this. But I used ‘signal stealing’ and that’s why I was so adamant about ‘legally.’ I was just struggling for the words, but for Sean (McVay, the Los Angeles Rams’ head coach), same thing. These guys are the best in the world and that’s why they’re there.”

Saleh added of the Jaguars, who are off to a 3-1 start, “I think Liam’s doing a hell of a job. I really do. You can tell that that team’s really taking on his personality and I hope they came out of the game healthy, and I wish him the best of luck throughout the rest of the season. I wish I could have found a better choice of words, but my intent was always to compliment that football staff.”

San Francisco head coach Kyle Shanahan added of his assistant, “Saleh’s too nice usually but seemed like someone struck a chord the other day. I don’t think there’s any fights going on. It was kind of comical now to look back at it.”

The 49ers (3-1) are preparing to oppose the Rams (3-1) on Thursday in Inglewood, Calif.

–Field Level Media

Jacksonville Jaguars wide receiver Travis Hunter (12) takes a breath while warming up before the start of an NFL football game between the Carolina Panthers at Jacksonville Jaguars at EverBank Stadium Sunday September 7, 2025. [Doug Engle/Florida Times-Union]

Jaguars’ Travis Hunter to play more defensive snaps vs. Bengals

Two-way rookie Travis Hunter will see more defensive action on Sunday when his Jacksonville Jaguars visit the Cincinnati Bengals.

The No. 2 overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft only played six snaps at cornerback in the season-opening victory over the Carolina Panthers, adding a team-high six catches for 33 yards on 42 snaps as a wide receiver.

Head coach Liam Coen said the plan all along was to gradually increase Hunter’s defensive involvement, a process that will accelerate this weekend against Bengals wideouts Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins.

“Going into Week 1, it was, ‘OK, we know that it’s not going to be a ton on defense,’” Coen said Wednesday. “The goal is to increase and continue to increase (his defensive snaps). It just so happens that we’re playing Cincinnati with two good wideouts this week.”

Chase and Higgins were held to a combined five catches for 59 yards in Cincinnati’s season-opening 17-16 victory against the Cleveland Browns.

Hunter, 22, won the 2024 Heisman Trophy as a two-way standout at Colorado, where his defensive numbers included seven interceptions and 16 passes defensed in two seasons.

–Field Level Media

Jacksonville Jaguars wide receiver Travis Hunter (12) catches a pass during an NFL training camp session at the Miller Electric Center, Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2025, in Jacksonville, Fla. [Corey Perrine/Florida Times-Union]

Jags to use Travis Hunter at WR and CB, play starters vs. Steelers

Travis Hunter will play both offense and defense for the Jacksonville Jaguars on Saturday in their preseason opener at home against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Head coach Liam Coen announced Hunter’s two-way status on Thursday and also said his starters will play, though how many series they see will be an in-game decision.

“We’ll play everybody,” Coen said.

Hunter has maintained since before he was selected with the No. 2 overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft in April that he wanted to line up at both wide receiver and cornerback after doing it in college at Colorado. The Heisman Trophy winner has seen action at both positions in training camp.

As for the starters playing, Coen said he was swayed by conversations he had with center Robert Hainsey and quarterback Trevor Lawrence.

“Ultimately those guys have a pulse so much more for what the locker room is than I do on a daily basis,” Coen said. “So it was good to hear from those guys.”

The 39-year-old Coen will be making his debut as a head coach. The Jaguars hired him on Jan. 24 to replace Doug Pederson, who was fired earlier in the month following a 4-13 season.

The Jaguars finished 22-29 in three seasons under Pederson, reaching the playoffs once.

Coen was the offensive coordinator of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers last season.

Jacksonville opens the season Sept. 7 at home against the Carolina Panthers.

–Field Level Media

Jaguars GM James Gladstone, 34, is bringing a revolutionary draft approach to the downtrodden franchise. [Doug Engle/Florida Times-Union]2025

Jaguars wunderkind GM punts scouting norms to find ‘intangibly rich’ prospects

If you were looking for the new brass of the Jacksonville Jaguars at on-campus pro days or pondering which prospects came to town for “top 30” face-to-face visits, here’s the short answer to those questions: They weren’t there.

As a new direction takes shape in Jacksonville with first-timers in the general manager and head coach seats for the 2025 NFL Draft, most commonly held beliefs and traditional protocol for draft preparation and player acquisition won’t make the cut.

Very few have insight into where the surprising unique turns at the direction of James Gladstone, Jacksonville’s 34-year-old general manager hired to replace Trent Baalke, might lead in the draft or beyond.

“It’s still familiar territory. You’re talking football,” Gladstone said Tuesday. “My mind remains rooted in a lot of the same things it always has been — focusing with intention on intangibly rich human beings and allow that to be our north star.”

Gladstone and 39-year-old head coach Liam Coen, who was offensive coordinator the Tampa Bay Buccaneers last season, are charting their own decidedly new-school course to resurrect a franchise with 58 losses the past five seasons.

Gladstone, a member of the Rams’ front office and scouting staff the past nine years, has a degree in education and held sway in Los Angeles with a title of director of scouting strategy the past three years.

That strategy is unlike any other in the NFL.

He punted the in-person, on-site “top 30” visits with draft prospects, downplaying the importance stressed by other franchise scouting operations — additional face time with a player, private on-field workouts, follow-up or extension to conversations at the NFL Scouting Combine or Senior Bowl — with the belief the time is less vital than the biblical biography his scouting staff has on hundreds of players, literature and insight on each prospect gleaned over multiple years.

“There’s a lot of layers to not doing those facility visits,” Gladstone said. “That goes back awhile for me and my experience. Let’s take it this direction: the implicit bias that can come to life this late in the process. The last player you might sit down with and how that might differ from the first player you sit down with knowing that it’s closer to the decision that’s upcoming.”

Right down to the cadence of his speech and use of data as part of a brain-driven approach, Gladstone borrowed from the vocabulary and approach of his mentor, Rams GM Les Snead, in touching on reasoning for avoiding traditional draft preparation metrics and protocol to prepare and get to know prospects.

For example, the Jaguars use player-tracking data to determine on-field speed and all but dismiss coveted NFL Scouting Combine numbers like the 40-yard dash. Gladstone doesn’t attend pro days.

He’s willing to listen to input from scouts and coaches who have gleaned a scouting opinion from those workouts, but instead falls back on a more “global” collection of data and “sourced” information from a player’s peers, friends, family, teammates and coaches.

Gladstone admitted he embraces the reality that his first pick will send a message and “set the tone” for who the Jaguars want to be as a team.

He said the sourced intel his scouting staff gathered from “those who have lived with these individuals” is likely to be more accurate than any assessment he might be able to glean from a short visit. He also feels the inevitable leak of information identifying prospects who visit a team can often expose strategic plan and direction.

Coen said the Jaguars are definitely looking for pass rushers who can “burn an edge” but stressed adaptability as he becomes more acclimated in his new role.

“Just having a larger appreciation for every position on the grass,” Coen said. “That’s been excited to learn more about from James, from coaches, and seeing their vision for these players.”

–Field Level Media

Jacksonville Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence (16) speaks during a press conference at Miller Electric Center Wednesday, April 9, 2025 in Jacksonville, Fla. [Corey Perrine/Florida Times-Union]

Jags: Trevor Lawrence to be limited in spring, ready for Week 1

The Jacksonville Jaguars said Wednesday that quarterback Trevor Lawrence will be on a “pitch count” during spring activities but is expected to be ready by Week 1 of the 2025 regular season.

Lawrence continues to rehab from AC joint surgery in December, an injury that cut short his 2024 season.

Lawrence told reporters Wednesday that he’s been throwing and is “very optimistic” about being ready for the season.

“[I]’m kind of progressing and working my way up further distance, more throws — just trying to be smart and not just jump off into the deep end right away, just trying to work up to it,” he told reporters.

New head coach Liam Coen said the former No. 1 overall pick will have limited reps in spring camps.

“As we lead in, we’re optimistic that we’ll get there in terms of where we need to go,” Coen said in his Wednesday press conference. “He’ll be on a pitch count for those things in terms of the where he has to get to – because he has little touch points he needs to reach before he can obviously get out on the grass and do it full speed.

“Everything’s moving forward. He feels really good right now. So, excited about that.”

Under Coen, Lawrence will be playing for his third head coach in five NFL seasons, following the dismissals of Urban Meyer and Doug Pederson.

Lawrence was 2-8 as the starter in 2024, completing 60.6 percent of his passes for 2,045 yards with 11 touchdowns and seven interceptions. He missed seven games due to the shoulder injury and a concussion. Pederson was fired after the season.

Lawrence has thrown for 13,815 yards and 69 TDs against 46 INTs since the Jags selected him first overall in the 2021 draft.

–Field Level Media

Sep 8, 2024; Tampa, Florida, USA;  Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield (6) talks with offensive coordinator Liam Coen against the Washington Commanders during the first half at Raymond James Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

Florida man: Liam Coen turns down Jaguars, gets big bucks from Bucs

Liam Coen stepped out of consideration as a candidate to become head coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars to remain offensive coordinator with Tampa Bay, according to multiple reports.

Coen, 39, was scheduled for a second interview with the Jaguars on Wednesday. But instead of the in-person huddle with Jacksonville’s leadership, he signed a new contract with the Buccaneers that will make him one of the highest-paid assistants in the NFL, per reports.

The value of the contract was not immediately known, but multiple offensive coordinators were in the $3 million range last season.

One day after the top offensive coordinator candidate — Lions play-caller Ben Johnson — was named head coach of the Chicago Bears, Coen was considered a top candidate to replace Doug Pederson in Jacksonville as the 2025 coaching carousel continues.

Coen teased the potential for his return after the Buccaneers’ season-ending loss to the Washington Commanders in the NFC wild-card round of the playoffs.

“I do believe I’m ready,” Coen said of whether it was time to become a head coach in the NFL. “I don’t think you’re ever truly fully ready. But yeah, that is a dream. Does that need to happen when I’m 39 years old and having probably the most fun of my life coaching, working and being here? No, that doesn’t mean that needs to occur right now. But yeah, that is the goal. That is absolutely the goal. But like I said before, that goal can hold off for a while here and continue to do what we’re doing. That would be pretty special.”

Johnson made a similar decision a year ago with the Lions competing for the NFC Championship. He opted to withdraw from consideration to become coach in Washington, where he was viewed as a prevailing favorite to be hired by the Commanders. The job went instead to Dan Quinn, who had declined multiple interviews in previous coaching cycles to remain a high-paid coordinator with the Cowboys.

Johnson, 38, was to be introduced formally at a press conference by the Bears on Wednesday morning.

Coen just completed his first season with the Buccaneers, who won the NFC South title at 10-7.

Jacksonville has other options and completed interviews with Lions defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn, Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator Todd Monken, former New York Jets head coach Robert Saleh and Las Vegas Raiders defensive coordinator Patrick Graham. The Jaguars announced Monday they would host Coen, Saleh and Graham in Jacksonville this week to meet face-to-face with owner Shad Khan and general manager Trent Baalke.

Tampa Bay averaged 29.5 points per game, fourth in the league in 2024. The Buccaneers ranked third in averaging 399.5 yards per game, third at 250.4 passing yards and fourth at 149.2 rushing yards. They led the league by making 50.9 percent of their third-down attempts (110 of 216). Their total of 395 first downs was second in the league.

Coen in recent years has bounced between the NFL and the University of Kentucky, where he was offensive coordinator in 2023 and 2021. He was the Los Angeles Rams’ OC in 2022, and he worked under head coach Sean McVay as the Rams’ assistant wide receivers coach (2018-19) and assistant quarterbacks coach (2020).

–Field Level Media