If there was any lingering doubt about where the Jacksonville Jaguars were headed, it vanished early Sunday. By the second quarter against the Tennessee Titans, the tone was clear. This wasn’t a team hoping to survive Week 18. This was a team finishing something it started months ago, with its quarterback entirely in control.
Marissa Lawrence Underscores a Defining Stretch for Trevor Lawrence
From the opening drive, the Jaguars played like a group that knew the stakes and embraced them. Trevor Lawrence was decisive, calm, and aggressive when it mattered. The 41–7 win over the Titans wasn’t just a blowout. It was a controlled dismantling.
Lawrence accounted for 255 total yards and three touchdowns, but the numbers only tell part of the story. His rhythm stood out above all else. Quick reads. Confident throws. No hesitation. That poise pushed his season total to 38 touchdowns, the most ever in a single season in franchise history, breaking the previous mark held by Blake Bortles.
After the game, the Jaguars shared a celebratory post on Instagram highlighting the milestone. It didn’t take long for Marissa Lawrence to reshare it. Her message was short and telling. “So proud of you,” she wrote.

That reaction captured the tone of Lawrence’s season. Not flashy for the sake of it. Not forced. Just steady growth, week after week. He also crossed the 4,000-yard passing mark after Week 18 and helped the Jaguars lock up its 13th win and the AFC South title. The reward is a postseason matchup against the Buffalo Bills, a test that will quickly measure how real this momentum is.
Advanced metrics help explain how the Jaguars arrived at this point. According to PFSN’s QB Impact metric, Lawrence finished with an Impact Score of 77.6, earning a C+ grade and ranking 16th for the season.
He started all 17 games and completed 341 of 560 passes for a 60.9 percent completion rate. This wasn’t a season built on highlight efficiency. It was built on the principles of availability, trust, and volume. Lawrence stayed upright, took responsibility, and let the offense function without panic.
Off the field, the spotlight followed him as well. A premium jewelry company unveiled a custom, hand-set diamond grill designed for Lawrence, which Marissa shared with a playful caption. “Steezy Trev fr,” she wrote.
The balance matters. The same week Lawrence was breaking records, the family celebrated their daughter Shae’s first birthday, a reminder that the quarterback’s calm demeanor doesn’t disappear when the cameras turn off.
Looking ahead, the biggest question isn’t whether Lawrence can produce. It’s whether this version of the Jaguars can carry its composure into January against elite competition. The Bills will pressure him differently. They’ll close windows faster. One thing to watch is how Lawrence responds when the first drive stalls or a pass is intercepted.
Still, this season has already changed the conversation. Lawrence isn’t chasing potential anymore. He’s delivering results. If this level of control carries into the playoffs, the Jaguars won’t just be a division winner. It’ll be a problem.

