Jaguars TE Lewis Signs 5-Year, $35M Contract

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Pro Bowl tight end Marcedes Lewis has signed a five-year contract worth about $35 million with the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Lewis will get nearly $17 million guaranteed.

The Jaguars placed the franchise tag on Lewis after he caught 58 passes for 700 yards and 10 touchdowns — all career highs — in 2010. The 6-foot-6, 262-pounder signed a one-year tender worth $7.28 million, the average salary of the five highest-paid tight ends in the league.

The NFL lockout prevented Lewis’ agent and the Jaguars from working out a long-term deal, and Lewis skipped the first five days of training camp while waiting for a new deal. He reported Monday, but sat out full-contact drills while the contract was being negotiated. He signed it Friday morning and should practice soon.

A Meaningful December for the Colts

But next Sunday, , should provide an answer to a question that has hung over much of the season: Is this the end of the ’ remarkable playoff streak with ?

The ’ on Sunday set up that rarest of events: a meaningful late-December game for the Colts. At this time last year . The answer came on Dec. 27, when the Colts pulled Manning in the third quarter against the Jets. That allowed the Jets to come back to win and begin their stunning playoff run, which made them Super Bowl favorites — perhaps prematurely — this season.

Not this year for Indianapolis. The Jaguars are 8-5 and lead the A.F.C. South, one game ahead of the Colts, who must win out to ensure themselves a playoff spot. In peril is the Colts’ postseason streak, which stretches to eight seasons. That puts Manning in league with , who took the to the postseason eight straight times; , who did it with the 49ers seven times; and Terry Bradshaw, who went with the eight times, although in 1974 Joe Gilliam wound up as their leading passer.

Still, Manning’s struggles in the Colts’ recent three-game losing streak — he threw 11 of his 15 interceptions (including four that were returned for touchdowns in two games) — have captivated an audience that is used to his machinelike consistency. , which included a familiarly flawless Manning performance (25 of 35 for 319 yards, 2 touchdowns and no interceptions), pulled some fingers off the panic button, but Sunday’s showdown with the Jaguars, who have given the Colts trouble in the past, will stand as the litmus test of the season.

The Colts’ biggest concern this week is probably not how their offense will perform — it generally does well against Jacksonville — but how often it will get the ball. The Jaguars, with an impressive running game and quarterback David Garrard excelling on third down, can play keep-away better than most opponents. When they met in Week 4, each team had nine possessions. But against the Giants — the Colts’ best performance of the season — the Colts had 12 possessions. Against the , they had 10.

Still, , the former quarterback who is now an analyst, watched every one of Manning’s passes from four games this season and saw “absolutely zero” indication that Manning might be losing something off his throws.

“I watched mechanics and ball speed and all that stuff,” Dilfer said. “There’s nothing. There’s not one iota of drop-off.”

That should not be surprising. Manning started the season with 15 touchdown passes and 2 interceptions, and there were early-season murmurs that this could be his best season.

The problem, then, seems to be something Manning’s former coach distilled simply on : Manning is pressing because since that early-season run, the Colts have been decimated by injuries, forcing young, inexperienced players into critical roles and making the Colts even more reliant on Manning than they traditionally have been.

The Colts are passing on 64.1 percent of plays, a significant uptick from the 61.3 percent they passed last season, when they went to the Super Bowl. They were especially lopsided during the three-game losing streak as Manning threw 52, 48 and 48 passes, versus 20, 13 and 17 runs.

“They’re not running the ball real well,” Giants quarterback said. “He’s in a tough spot having to throw it every down, and teams know it.”

That’s a bad formula no matter who is playing offense. It’s especially dangerous when there is a rotating cast of characters, some of whom, Manning acknowledged with a laugh after Thursday’s game, are so unfamiliar that if he had been told before the season they would be playing, he would have said the Colts were in trouble.

The Colts have 16 players on injured reserve, including tight end Dallas Clark, receiver Anthony Gonzalez and six safeties. Running back Joseph Addai has missed seven games, and receiver Austin Collie has missed five.

The Colts have a staggering 19 undrafted free agents on the active roster (including seven undrafted rookies, part of their 14 rookies). And there are 10 players who were not on any team’s active roster on opening day, including receiver Blair White, who against the Titans , earning what appeared to be a screed from Manning that would make his ears bleed. Things may even get worse.

THE FIFTH DOWN; Magical Jaguar Mystery

Chase Stuart contributes to the Pro-Football-Reference.com blog and to Footballguys.com.

Three months ago, the sports media had three things to say about the Jaguars:

1) Can you believe Jacksonville drafted Tyson Alualu instead of Tim Tebow?

2) When is this team moving to Los Angeles?

3) How is Jack Del Rio still the coach?

Jacksonville might have been the blandest team in the league, with possibly the most apathetic fan base. But with an 8-5 record in mid-December, none of the above matters. With a win on Sunday against the Colts, Jacksonville would wrap up its first division title since Tom Coughlin’s squad won its third straight A.F.C. Central crown in 1999. With the Jaguars all but ignored in the national media, you might be wondering how the Jags are winning games this year.

There’s only one answer to that: unconventionally. Jacksonville’s pass defense is miserable, fluctuating weekly with the Texans for last place in net yards per attempt allowed and adjusted net yards per attempted allowed. The Jaguars are tied with the Broncos and the Vikings for the honor of worst turnover margin, unthinkable for an offense that leads the league in rushing attempts. And Jacksonville has been outscored by 36 points, after being blown out by three touchdowns or more in four games this season. If the Jaguars win one more game, they’ll become just the fourth team since 1940 to have a winning record despite four losses of 21 points or more.

Despite a terrible pass defense, its struggles to hold on to the ball or to take it away from its opponents, and the decision to seemingly skip every third game, Jacksonville can clinch the division with two weeks to play. How? The obvious person to look to is Maurice Jones-Drew, the running back who ranks second in the league in both rushing yards and yards from scrimmage. But Arian Foster leads the league in those two categories, and the Texans’ pass defense is just as bad, so there’s more to the story.

David Garrard is having a solid but unspectacular season. His best attribute this season has been the ability to limit all his bad plays to games the Jaguars are going to lose anyway. In losses to the Giants, Eagles and Chargers, Garrard has thrown six interceptions with one touchdown while averaging just 5.0 yards per attempt. He was injured early in the Jaguars’ flop against the Titans and didn’t play when the team allowed 42 points to the Chiefs. Meanwhile, in seven of Jacksonville’s victories, Garrard has thrown for 17 touchdowns with just two interceptions while averaging 9.0 yards per attempt.

For the most part, Jacksonville has had the benefit of good fortune and good timing. In Week 1, Brandon Lloyd’s second foot grazed the end zone sideline, negating a potential game-tying touchdown late in the fourth quarter. Three weeks later, the Jaguars defeated the Colts thanks to Josh Scobee’s 59-yard field goal as time expired. In Week 10, it was Glover Quin and Mike Thomas teaming up to convert a desperation pass to beat the Texans. The next week they turned the ball over six times, but Maurice Jones-Drew picked the right time to rev up his ESPY campaign. With just over two minutes left, Jones-Drew took a screen pass 75 yards to the Cleveland 1-yard line, weaving across the field and breaking four tackles in one of the highlights of the year.

Their overall numbers are underwhelming. But so far, the Jaguars have been able to consolidate the bad plays to a few games, while making their biggest plays when it counts most. Both Jones-Drew and Rashad Jennings rushed for over 100 yards against the Raiders on Sunday, but the team still needed Deji Karim’s 65-yard kickoff return in the final minutes to put away the Raiders. The unquestioned strength of the team is red hot; the Jags have topped the 200-yard rushing mark in each of the last three weeks. Awaiting them on Sunday: the 29th-ranked rushing defense in Indianapolis.

If Jacksonville makes the playoffs, what can we expect? Since 1990, only three teams have made the playoffs despite being outscored by 25 points or more. The 2004 Rams, playing in one of the league’s all-time terrible divisions, went 8-8 and earned a wild card berth. The Rams swept the Seahawks in the regular season and then defeated them in the first round of the playoffs, before getting steamrolled by Mike Vick and the Falcons in the second round. The 1998 Arizona Cardinals — perhaps the worst playoff team ever — played the easiest schedule in the league and were outscored by 53 points. But then the Cards managed to go into Dallas, where they had lost by 28 points in Week 1, and upset the Cowboys in the first round of the playoffs. They lost, 41-21, to the Vikings the next week. The ’94 Bears were outscored by 36 points but went into Minnesota and won in the first round of the playoffs. They were obliterated by the 49ers the following week, 44-15. Like those three teams, the Jaguars have been inconsistently good, and are prone to surprise wins and blowout losses in the regular season. There’s nothing to say that that trend won’t continue in the playoffs.

Going up? Going Down