Trevor Lawrence has faced pressure before—he entered the NFL as a generational prospect, labeled “can’t miss” since high school. But entering year five, the expectations feel different. The excuses are gone. The roster is improved. And for the first time in his pro career, Lawrence has a head coach in Liam Coen who’s building an offense around him, not in spite of him.
Coen, hired after years of acclaim as a coordinator and quarterback developer, didn’t walk into Jacksonville to install a system—he came to construct a vision. And that vision starts with simplifying the game for his quarterback without shrinking the field.
Gone is the bloated playbook that asked Lawrence to be a magician behind a collapsing pocket. In its place: a tightly organized offense emphasizing tempo, defined reads, and real-time adaptability. Coen doesn’t want Lawrence to force the ball—he wants him to trust the timing and take what the structure gives.
But structure doesn’t matter if defenses aren’t stressed. That’s why the Jaguars’ offseason moves made waves. The drafting of Travis Hunter signaled a bold shift—not just for the receiver room, but for the offense’s identity. Hunter isn’t a traditional wideout—he’s a chaos agent. Motion, jet sweeps, slot fades—he thrives on unpredictability, which is exactly what Coen’s system demands.
Then there’s Dyami Brown, a speed merchant signed in free agency. Brown isn’t just a deep threat—he’s the kind of receiver who pulls safeties out of frame. With Hunter stretching defenses horizontally and Brown stretching them vertically, Lawrence is finally operating in a cleared-out, clean pocket of decision-making.
The ripple effect is huge. No more stacked boxes suffocating Travis Etienne. No more collapsing protection because the ball won’t come out. With defenses forced to cover every blade of grass, Coen is crafting an offense that lives on efficiency and punishes overcommits.
This isn’t just about Xs and Os—it’s about recalibrating confidence. Coen’s daily collaboration with Lawrence is building rhythm, trust, and game-day autonomy. Lawrence is being empowered to control protections, adjust tempo, and identify mismatches—not because he has to, but because the structure is finally built to support it.
Year five won’t be about raw talent anymore. It’ll be about refinement. For the first time in Jacksonville, Trevor Lawrence has a real shot to command an offense that reflects his skillset. Under Liam Coen, he’s not chasing success. He’s architecting it.





















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