JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- The Jacksonville Jaguars needed that one.
Staring down the barrel of a second loss they let slip through their fingers, the Jaguars rallied late and put the Houston Texans away in an ugly 17-10 win.
So, what do we make of the Jaguars' Week 3 win? We break it down below.
Frankly, we learned more about the Jaguars during this game than we did in their Week 1 blowout of the Carolina Panthers and their close loss last week to the Cincinnati Bengals. The Jaguars had to truly stay the course and show their mettle for all 60 minutes on Sunday, and they won in a fashion that the franchise has simply lost over and over again in recent years.
The Jaguars did not make it look pretty. It was far from easy. But the Jaguars proved they can finally win the tough ones, because they got all the evidence they needed from this bar room brawl of a game against a hated rival.
The Jaguars' passing game was so-so in Week 1. In Week 2, it got better but still needed to be more consistent. In Week 3, it fell off a cliff until Brian Thomas' big redemption catch to set up Travis Etienne's game-winning touchdown. And the biggest issue for the Jaguars is that it seems like they can't really point to just one thing.
From penalties to drops to misfires from Trevor Lawrence, the passing attack failed on multiple levels on Sunday. The Jaguars will need to have all hands on deck to turn this part of their team around quickly, because they can't rely on the defense to continue to generate turnovers at this high of a clip. It is just not sustainable.
It is hard to think of any team that a single Jaguars player has had more success against in recent years than the success Josh Hines-Allen has had against the Texans. Hines-Allen has been dominating the Texans' offensive line for years now, and he continued the trend on Sunday with one of the most impactful games of his career.
Hines-Allen's 0.5-sack, three-quarterback hit stat line does not even come close to telling the story. There were several drives where he alone got the Jaguars off the field, and the fact he was the one to tip CJ Stroud's final pass into the hands of Antonio Johnson was a poetic ending to his elite showing.
Outside of the passing game, the Jaguars have to be concerned with the state of their special teams unit. It has been arguably the strength of the team for a few years now, but it has had a slow start to 2025 and on Sunday it finally came to a head.
Cam Little missed a very makeable field goal that he normally hits in his sleep, while Logan Cooke had several short punts that put the Jaguars' defense in bad field position. The Jaguars will need to see this unit improve quickly.
The play of the day has to be Tyson Campbell's forced fumble on Nico Collins. Without it, the Texans take a late 13-10 lead and a struggling Jaguars offense would have had to put together a drive without any momentum.
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