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Ex-Jacksonville Jaguars player Josh Lambo alleges Urban Meyer kicked him; Trevor Lawrence says drama has to stop for team to win

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- If the Jaguars are going to turn things around and start winning games and competing for the playoffs, the drama that has engulfed the franchise has to stop. That's coming from the most important person on the roster: quarterback Trevor Lawrence.

"You're always going to have some form of drama. I've learned that the NFL is just more drama in general than college, no matter where you're at," Lawrence said Wednesday. "But you're right. There's been a lot. To your point, I do think that has to change and that's something that we need to work on for sure.

"So you can't always be in the headlines. You just got to go play football and that's where we're trying to get and I have no doubt we'll get there, but for sure [it has to change]."

But it doesn't look like it will any time soon.

Just hours after Lawrence made that comment in his weekly news conference, a report surfaced from the Tampa Bay Times in which former Jaguars kicker Josh Lambo alleged that coach Urban Meyer kicked him in the leg while he was stretching in warm-ups before a practice during the week of the final preseason game.

Lambo said Meyer told him, "Hey Dips---, make your f---ing kicks!" and then kicked him in the leg. Lambo characterized the kick as a five out of 10 and then told the Tampa Bay Times he told Meyer: "Don't you ever f---ing kick me again!" Lambo said Meyer told him, "I'm the head ball coach. I'll kick you whenever the f--- I want."

Meyer's agent provided the Tampa Bay Times a statement in which the coach said Lambo's "characterization of me and this incident is completely inaccurate and there are eyewitnesses to refute his account."

Lambo had missed two kicks in the preseason before the incident but made both of his field goal attempts in the final preseason game against Dallas. Lambo missed all three of his field goal attempts in the first two regular-season games against Houston and Denver.

The day after the loss to the Broncos, Meyer said the team was going to stick with Lambo.

"I talked to Josh [Lambo] today. In '17, '18, '19, you go back, and I know that was recent history, but he's one of the best in the NFL," Meyer said. "The thing that I told him is that since I got here in February, since our staff got here, he's as hardworking [of a] guy as any guy on the team. I have confidence he's going to work through this. I know the GM and personnel department's job is to see what's out there and all that, I'm just convinced this guy can come through it. I just, I see the way he works, I see the way he hits it. I've stuck with kickers before and it's been great dividends, so as of now we're going to stick with him."

Lambo missed two PATs the following Sunday against Arizona and did not play in the next three games before the team cut him on Oct. 19.

Lambo told the newspaper he reported the incident to his agent, who contacted the Jaguars' legal counsel the following day.

"Jaguars legal counsel indeed acknowledged and responded immediately to the query made by Josh Lambo's agent Friday, August 27, 2021," the Jaguars said in a statement to the newspaper. "Counsel offered to speak with Josh, or to assist Josh in speaking with coaching or any other football personnel, if he was comfortable with her sharing the information. Any suggestion otherwise is blatantly false."

As was the case with the Lambo incident, nearly all of the drama has revolved around Meyer. It ramped up last weekend after an NFL Network report that receiver Marvin Jones Jr. yelled at Meyer and left the facility for a bit and that Meyer called his assistant coaches losers during a meeting. Meyer denied the report following Sunday's 20-0 loss at Tennessee, but that has been far from the only instance of drama since the season started.

Meyer was caught on video behaving inappropriately with a woman who wasn't his wife at his restaurant in Columbus, Ohio, in the days after the team's loss in Cincinnati on a Thursday night. There reportedly has been tension between Meyer and his assistant coaches. At certain times, Meyer has not realized which players are on the field. And there was the James Robinson fiasco: He was benched for 19 and 20 plays, respectively, in consecutive weeks after a pair of fumbles, and Meyer said he didn't realize how long Robinson was on the bench and that it was best to ask running backs coach Bernie Parmalee.

Before the season there was the hiring and quick resignation of director of sports performance Chris Doyle (who reached a separation agreement with Iowa in the wake of allegations that he made racist comments and bullied Black players), the signing of Tim Tebow, the faux competition between Lawrence and Gardner Minshew for the starting job and the NFLPA saying it would investigate Meyer and general manager Trent Baalke after Meyer said vaccination status was one of the things they considered when making final cuts.

Add in the fact that the Jaguars' offense has been terrible since the bye week -- averaging 9.1 points per game -- despite having a generational talent in Lawrence, and it only heightens the adversity.

Lawrence's comment Wednesday is the second time he has responded publicly to the upheaval. He said last week, after Robinson's second benching, that the running back needs to be on the field as much as possible because he's one of the team's best players.

Lawrence said it's just part of him growing into his leadership role as a 22-year-old rookie.

"Obviously there's been a lot of drama," he said as the Jaguars (2-11) began preparations for Sunday's home game against Houston (2-11). "Like, whatever has caused everything, who even knows at this point, but there's been a lot of drama and for me I think it's important to be truthful. But with that, you can't say everything that's on your mind. You have to have a filter and you've got to be careful.

"I have a lot of appreciation for all those guys in there that've been working to try to get this thing right and it hasn't been easy. So I have a lot of appreciation for the players, for the coaches, for everybody. ... Obviously you can't, like I said, always say exactly what's on your mind, but the truth is in there somewhere always with me, so that's what I try to do."

Jones tried to defuse some of the tension earlier Wednesday when he downplayed the incident with Meyer that he said happened 2½ weeks ago after he grew upset with the coach's criticism of the receivers -- specifically that they struggle to win one-on-one matchups and don't gain enough separation.

"There was something that was brought to my attention that I didn't like too well," Jones said. "I approached him about it and we talked and we handled it like grown men. And that's all I have to say about that.

"... When you lose, you're always going to be the center of attention in a negative way. That just is what it is."