Article 6D1SN 2023 Jacksonville Jaguars betting preview: Big year for Lawrence-Pederson collab

2023 Jacksonville Jaguars betting preview: Big year for Lawrence-Pederson collab

by
Matt Russell
from on (#6D1SN)
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No matter what you think about the Jaguars, your understanding of their place in the betting market should start with a reminder that they were a home underdog in their wild-card game in January.

Their division is projected to be the easiest in the league. Adding up the regular-season win totals for the four teams in the AFC South gives you just 30 expected wins. Take out the Jaguars' 10 projected victories, and you're left with three teams expected to win 20 games out of 51 in total - a sub-.400 win percentage.

To their credit, Doug Pederson's influenced a culture change that helped the Jags storm back to beat the Chargers after falling 27-0 early on that Saturday night in Jacksonville. This likely had more to do with the confidence instilled in Trevor Lawrence after it was eroded during the brief Urban Meyer experiment. In Year 2, hopes should be high in Duval County.

2023 season odds
MARKETODDS(O/U)
Win total10.5 (+140)
Division-155
Conference+1300
Super Bowl+2500
Estimated rating55/100

While the teams in the AFC North got a ratings bump for the difficulty of their division, the Jaguars' rating got knocked down after we had them in the high-50s in mid-May because 10 wins out of a division with the Colts, Titans, and Texans wouldn't be all that impressive. Last year's 9-8 record and 8-8-1 mark against the spread also suggests mediocrity.

Schedule outlook
WEEKOPPONENTLOOKAHEAD LINE
1@INDJAX -3.5
2KCKC -3
3HOUJAX -7
4ATLJAX -4
5@BUFBUF -3.5
6INDJAX -6.5
7@NONO -1
8@PITPIT -1
10SFSF -1
11TENJAX -5
12@HOUJAX -4.5
13CINCIN -1
14@CLECLE -1
15BALJAX -1
16@TBJAX -3.5
17CARJAX -5
18@TENJAX -2.5

No, the point-spread machine isn't stuck on repeat; that's a lot of 1-point spreads. The Jaguars are otherwise favored in nine other games this season - six in their division and three against the also sub-par NFC South. The last we saw Jacksonville, it was a 10-point underdog in Kansas City. The Jaguars host the Chiefs in Week 2, but a 7-point flip in the spread seems like too much.

What's to like about the Jaguars

The biggest advantage any team has over another in the NFL is whatever continuity they can manufacture. Jacksonville is in the early stages of creating that. The less you have to work on the basics - the stuff you've already perfected - the more you can work on the hard stuff. Pederson and Lawrence haven't had to spend time getting to know each other this offseason. Instead, they have a history of what works for Lawrence and can build on that with all the other pieces that the Jags added a year ago.

It took much of last season for Jacksonville to figure out what they had in tailback Travis Etienne, as he opened the year playing fewer snaps than James Robinson in the first four games. Robinson isn't even on a team as of this writing. Evan Engram, Christian Kirk, and Zay Jones are back as primary targets for Lawrence, and a former first-round wide receiver joins them.

What's not to like about the Jaguars

Calvin Ridley is coming off a season-long suspension for gambling violations and is a younger replacement for Marvin Jones. Ridley had 90 catches for 1374 yards in his last full season, but there are few success stories of players who miss large chunks of time in the NFL.

The bigger issue is a current suspended player: left tackle Cam Robinson. The Jags went out of their way to extend Robinson before last season, opting not to draft a first-round tackle in 2022, but he'll be out the first four games due to a performance-enhancing drug suspension. With the other 2022 starter at tackle - Jawaan Taylor - having departed, the rest of the group is neither particularly talented nor deep, even after adding Oklahoma's Anton Harrison in the draft.

Other notable betting markets
PLAYERMARKETODDS
Trevor LawrenceMVP+1400
Offensive POTY+4000
Most passing yards+2200
Most passing TD+3500
Travis EtienneOffensive POTY+5000
Rushing yards+3500
Rushing TD+3500
Calvin RidleyOffensive POTY+6000
Most receptions+6500
Most receiving yards+5000
Most receiving TD+2200
Comeback POTY+3500
Christian KirkMost receptions+7500
Most receiving yards+6000
Most receiving TD+5000
Travon WalkerDefensive POTY+7000
Josh AllenDefensive POTY+15000
Most sacks+5000
Doug PedersonCoach of the Year+2200

Lawrence is the sixth choice in the MVP market, with only Patrick Mahomes, Joe Burrow, Josh Allen (BUF), Jalen Hurts, and Justin Herbert ahead of him. That sounds incredibly optimistic until you start looking at the list of players behind him. Outside of Lamar Jackson (+1500), it's hard to make a better case for anyone else.

Coming out of college, Etienne was supposed to be more of a threat in the passing game, so an optimistic view of his second full season would be a modest increase in both rushing yards (from 1125 to 1400-plus) and receiving yards (from 316 to 500-plus). Two thousand-plus all-purpose yards isn't out of the question, which would put anyone in the Offensive Player of the Year conversation.

Neither player should be relied upon in any of the big yardage markets, but it's interesting to note that there seems to be a belief that Ridley will have a bigger season than Kirk. The latter legitimized the big contract the Jaguars gave him last year, and would seem to have a better chance at a big season.

Matt Russell is the lead betting analyst for theScore. If there's a bad beat to be had, Matt will find it. Find him on Twitter @mrussauthentic.

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