Home US SportsNFL Culture Shift Confirmed: Jaguars Earn Major Bump in 2026 NFLPA Grades

Culture Shift Confirmed: Jaguars Earn Major Bump in 2026 NFLPA Grades

by

Kalyn Kahler of ESPN dropped the NFL Players Association’s 2026 report card results this week, the annual survey in which players anonymously grade their organizations from A-plus to F-minus on the prior NFL season (2025). While the NFL recently succeeded in blocking the union from officially publishing the full findings and detailed improvement areas, the results still, unsurprisingly, made their way into the public.

Finally, without access to the full survey details, we can’t know each team’s exact placement among all 32 franchises in each subcategory beyond what has been publicly reported. We can only sort by individual grades, meaning it’s impossible to determine precise rankings from 1/32 to 32/32 when multiple teams share the same letter grade in a given section. We do, however, know that Jacksonville is currently rated as the fifth-highest graded team, a major jump from 18th in 2025.

Advertisement

Dramatic One-Year Improvement

The results reveal that Jaguars significantly improved year-over-year in at least 10 of the 11 core 2025 categories (categories previously surveyed in 2024). The most dramatic shifts came in family treatment, coaching, travel, and organizational support in year one of the Tony Boselli, James Gladstone, and Liam Coen leadership swap from Trent Baalke and Doug Pederson. These improvements suggest players viewed the Jaguars’ culture and facilities much more positively in 2026 compared with the prior report.

Jacksonville Jaguars

2025 Grades

2026 Grades

Treatment of Families

F (31st)

B+

Food/Dining Area

C+ (23rd)

B+

Nutritionist/Dietician

B (24th)

A-

Locker Room

B+ (10th)

A-

Training Room

B+ (7th)

A

Training Staff

B- (24th)

A-

Weight Room

A (9th)

A

Strength Coaches (Eric Ciano)

B (25th)

A

Team Travel

B+ (14th)

B+

Head Coach (Liam Coen)

C (31st)

A-

Team Ownership (Shad Khan)

B+ (15th)

A

Biggest Areas of Improvement (2024 to 2025)

  • Treatment of Families: F to B+ (3 letter grades)

  • Head Coach: C to A− (2 letter grades)

  • Food/Dining Area: C+ to B+ (1 letter grade)

  • Training Staff: B− to A− (1 letter grade)

  • Strength Coaches: B to A (1 letter grade)

Treatment of Families

In 2025, the Jaguars’ biggest opportunity for improvement was in family treatment, with the NFLPA offering the following detailed feedback for the team, which ranked 31st in this category at the time:

Players rate the post-game family area 5.41 out of 10, ranking them 30 out of 32 teams.

The players feel that the team organizes family events a couple of times per year which ranks them 26 out of 32 teams.

Treatment of families was the team’s lowest graded category. Players believe that many changes need to be made. They would like more access to sideline passes so they can see their families pregame. During the game, players want a family room so their families can escape the heat and allow mothers to change/nurse babies. Finally, players want their post-game family area upgraded.

It appears Jacksonville’s leadership listened to player feedback, posting a dramatic one-year leap from an F to a B+ in this category. Notably, only the Raiders and Vikings earned an A in this year’s survey for Treatment of Families, placing Jacksonville in the group just beyond the top two.

Advertisement

Strength Coaches

Eric Ciano, Jacksonville’s Director of Strength and Conditioning, joined the team ahead of the 2025 season after 15 years with the Buffalo Bills. Interestingly, the 2024 NFLPA Report Card had already awarded Ciano an A with Buffalo, a pattern that continued in Jacksonville, with the Jaguars earning the same top mark in 2025. Ciano, the 2020 strength and conditioning coach of the year showed consistency in action, quickly validating Boselli’s decision to not allow him to get on another plane before accepting Jacksonville’s offseason offer. Jacksonville ended 2025 as one of the league’s healthiest teams, entering the playoffs with just seven players on IR.

Head Coach

Finally, the transition from 2024’s Doug Pederson to 2025’s Liam Coen appears to have reinvigorated the team, both schematically on the field and culturally in the locker room. In the prior Pederson survey, Jacksonville earned a C (31st out of 32), with the following NFLPA survey details standing out:

57% of Jaguars players feel their former head coach Doug Pederson is efficient with their time, a rank of 31 out of 32.

The players felt that Pederson was somewhat receptive to locker room feedback on the team’s needs, ranking him 32 of 32 head coaches in the league.

Interestingly, 12 head coaches graded out higher than Coen’s A- in this year’s report, with a few shocking names on the list:

Advertisement

  • Los Angeles Rams: Sean McVay (A+)

  • Washington Commanders: Dan Quinn (A+)

  • Minnesota Vikings: Kevin O’Connell (A)

  • Pittsburg Steelers: Mike Tomlin (A)

  • Seattle Seahawks: Mike Macdonald (A)

  • Chicago Bears: Ben Johnson (A)

  • New England Patriots: Mike Vrabrel (A)

  • Detroit Lions: Dan Campbell (A)

  • Kansas City Chiefs: Andy Reid (A)

  • New York Jets: Aaron Glenn (A)

  • Philadelphia Eagles: Nick Sirianni (A)

New Categories Surveyed

Each season, the NFLPA adds new survey categories to provide extra insight for free agents evaluating potential landing spots, and for teams identifying possible blind spots. This year’s report card introduced six additional areas, including separate grades for coordinators, position coaches, the general manager, and home field conditions. Jacksonville performed reasonably well across these new categories, continuing their 2026 trend of strong organizational marks.

Jacksonville Jaguars

2026

Home Game Field

B+

Position Coaches

C

Offensive Coordinator (Grant Udinski)

B+

Defensive Coordinator (Anthony Campanile)

A

Special Teams Coordinator (Heath Farwell)

A+

General Manager (James Gladstone)

A-

Home Game Field

The EverBank Stadium home field earned a B+, a grade that feels like both a nod to Jacksonville’s grounds crew and a compliment to the current natural grass surface.

Source link

You may also like