Is Trevor Lawrence Married? Get to Know the Jaguars QB’s Wife Marissa Mowry, and Kids

Married in 2021 and now a father, Trevor Lawrence enters the 2025 season with a lot of family support. Know more about the Jaguars QB's wife.

The Jacksonville Jaguars quarterback, Trevor Lawrence, is married to longtime partner Marissa Mowry. They wed on April 10, 2021, and welcomed their first child, a daughter, in January 2025. Here is a look at their relationship and family.


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Trevor Lawrence and Marissa Mowry’s Relationship Timeline

Lawrence and Mowry grew up in the Cartersville, Georgia area and began dating in high school. They stayed together through college, with Lawrence starring at Clemson and Mowry playing soccer at Anderson University in South Carolina, navigating a long-distance relationship during those years.

Lawrence proposed in July 2020 on the field at Clemson’s Memorial Stadium, sharing the moment publicly with photos that quickly circulated across team and personal social channels. The pair married the following spring on April 10, 2021, just weeks before Lawrence was selected first overall by Jacksonville in the 2021 NFL Draft.

Throughout Lawrence’s early NFL seasons, Mowry was regularly present at key moments, from draft week to home openers and postseason pushes. Between 2021 and 2024, the couple marked anniversaries and birthdays with public posts.

In late June 2024, the couple announced they were expecting their first child, sharing sonogram images and family photos. A subsequent gender reveal in July confirmed they were expecting a girl, with images from a small family gathering.

Their daughter’s birth followed on January 4, 2025, with the parents posting her name and birth details and sharing the first photos of their family of three. Since then, both have shared occasional updates during the 2025 season, reflecting routine family life alongside the Jaguars’ schedule.

Does Trevor Lawrence And Marrisa Have Kids?

Trevor and Marissa’s daughter was named Shae Lynn Lawrence. The couple shared her arrival publicly and has continued to post periodic family updates throughout 2025, including snapshots from training camp periods, off-days, and community events. No additional children have been announced as of October 2025.

Read More: Trevor Lawrence’s Wife Marissa Shares Daughter Shae’s Adorable Moment With ‘Grandpa & Papa’

Lawrence’s late‑2024 injuries included a concussion and a left‑shoulder AC joint procedure, after which he returned to team activities ahead of the 2025 campaign. The family is reportedly based in the Jacksonville area, and Mowry remains a familiar face at EverBank Stadium on game days and at team‑adjacent events.

It’s a story of companionship for the books. The couple got engaged in July 2020, married in April 2021, announced their first child in June 2024, and welcomed their daughter in January 2025. Lawrence has returned to the Jaguars’ regular‑season grind, while Marissa, frequently spotted at EverBank Stadium with their daughter, continues to be a visible presence around the team.

Jaguars Players’ Fantasy Outlooks for Week 7

Here’s what PFSN’s Kyle Soppe wrote about the fantasy outlooks of the notable Rams players for their Week 7 matchup against the Los Angeles Rams:

Trevor Lawrence

Trevor Lawrence ran for multiple scores in Week 5 and threw for multiple touchdowns on Sunday against a tough Seahawks defense (his second such game of the season).

It would appear that he is starting to develop a connection with Brian Thomas (8-90-1 on 10 targets), and that has to be the case if he’s going to provide us with streaming value the rest of the way.

I wouldn’t be inclined to go this direction this week in a tough matchup while abroad, but there are three favorable matchups in November, and that’ll hold value as injuries at the position continue to pile up.

Brian Thomas Jr.

Some people are concerned about whether a groundhog will see its shadow, while others watch patiently for their second-round pick to score a touchdown.

Those of us who fall into the latter bucket were finally satisfied over the weekend, as Seattle’s offense treated Brian Thomas Jr. in a similar fashion to Trevor Lawrence for chunks of this season and completely ignored him.

When it works in this direction, it’s a big gain for us (21-yard touchdown). This was his second double-digit target effort of the season, and he’s now totaled 170 receiving yards in October (September: 164).

The production was better, but the role? Not so much. He’s been in that 23-24% target-share range for three straight weeks, and the aDOT has been consistent; he just happened to turn it into fantasy points in this spot.

I don’t think we are out of the woods at all, and I’m not sure I’ll buy it until we see some consistency from Lawrence. Thomas is the only Jaguar pass-catcher I’m interested in at this point, and he’s a viable flex, but not the lineup lock we drafted him to be after he exploded in the second half of his rookie year.

Travis Hunter

I can post the participation report weekly, and I do, but this is a production-based business, and I can’t recommend adding Travis Hunter to your flex radar until we see something that changes.

Weekly Participation Report

  • Week 1: 27 routes, 6 defensive snaps
  • Week 2: 27 routes, 39 defensive snaps
  • Week 3: 27 routes, 41 defensive snaps
  • Week 4: 23 routes, 9 defensive snaps
  • Week 5: 26 routes, 25 defensive snaps
  • Week 6: 44 routes, 22 defensive snaps

Last weekend was encouraging, and the seven targets earned were his most since his debut. Still, the majority of his looks carry next to no upside and rely on his special athletic talents to generate any fantasy value.

He had the jump-ball win in Week 5 against the Chiefs, but outside of that, we are looking at 5.1 yards per target and an end zone once every three weeks.

It would take this offense clicking on all cylinders to provide that profile with enough opportunities to be interesting, and… well, I think we can agree that Trevor Lawrence isn’t exactly in the MVP conversation.

Hold him for the raw ability, but with the understanding that you’re assured of nothing weekly.

Trevor Etienne Jr.

Travis Etienne holds the lead back duties for one of the more surprising teams of the season, but it’s hard to feel great about plugging him in with anything more than low-end RB2 expectations.

The past two matchups have been tough (Chiefs and Seahawks), I’ll grant you that, but 31 touches for 113 yards, no touchdowns, and no 10-yard gains?

The Rams are the seventh-best YPC run defense against running backs this season, and, given that Jacksonville at least flirted with the idea of a committee approach early last week by handing the ball to a different RB on each of their first three attempts, the ceiling doesn’t feel nearly as high as it did just a few weeks ago.

A 15-18 touch role is hard to find and, for now, that much appears to be safe for Etienne, thus keeping him in lineups. That said, this is lining up to be more of a “you got what you paid for” type of season than the season-altering type.

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