Jags' Del Rio says he's staying in Jacksonville
After conducting his most extensive review in 15 years,
Jacksonville Jaguars owner Wayne Weaver decided to stick with coach
Jack Del Rio.
At least for another year.
Weaver held a half-day meeting with Del Rio on Tuesday, then
said the two would continue their rebuilding project with the
Jaguars.
"I believe in Jack, that's he's the guy,'' Weaver said two
days before his 75th birthday. "After going through this process,
Jack is the guy that can get us there. The fans have to have enough
trust in me to believe that I'm making the right decision for the
franchise.''
The announcement came amid reports that Del Rio was a
candidate to succeed Pete Carroll at Southern California. Later
Tuesday, it was revealed that Lane Kiffin would leave his job as
coach of the Tennessee Volunteers to replace Carroll at USC.
Carroll left USC to become the Seattle Seahawks coach.
The L.A.
Daily News had reported Monday that Del Rio, an
All-America linebacker for the Trojans in 1984, had been sent a
contract to sign.
"Didn't even talk about that,'' Weaver said. "I wasn't
interested in that. I was interested in if Jack wanted to be here
and was committed to this franchise and that he shared my vision
and my goals for this franchise and how we go forward. That was the
substance of the conversations.''
Del Rio said early Tuesday that he had not been offered the
USC job, but declined to address the media following his meeting
with Weaver. The owner, however, said, "I assure you he's not going
to Southern Cal.''
Instead, Del Rio will try to get the Jaguars to the
postseason for just the third time in the last 11 years.
Jacksonville looked like it was on track for a playoff berth
in 2009, but the team lost its final four games, faded from
contention and finished last in the AFC South for the second
straight season. It was a significant setback for a small-market
franchise known more for empty seats than postseason prowess.
Many Jaguars fans have expressed frustration with Del Rio,
who is 58-57 in seven seasons and has just one playoff victory.
But Weaver blamed the team's recent struggles on a series of
first-round draft busts and poor free-agent signings.
"Over the past seven years, we've had our ups and down and
we've been an average football team,'' Weaver said. "We've had some
good seasons, but if you look at the body of work, we've been
average. ... Had we hit on two or three of those draft choices,
we'd be a different football team than we are today. I have to
accept responsibility for that.''
Weaver cleaned house last year, parting ways with several
veterans and turning control over to new general manager Gene
Smith. He kept Del Rio, though, and said he was confident he would
turn things around.
Smith and Del Rio took an aggressive approach to revamping
the roster. Four rookies started most of the season, and several
more played significant snaps.
The result was a 7-5 start that had Jacksonville in line for
a wild-card spot. The losing streak ended all the team's postseason
chances.
Weaver acknowledged that he never expected to reach the
playoffs with more than 30 new faces on the roster, but made it
clear that Jacksonville should be a playoff contender in 2010.
"My expectations are that we're going to be better than
average and we're going to be competing for the playoffs - not just
for next year, but for years to come,'' Weaver said. "If you do it
the right way, there's no reason that you can't compete for the
playoffs every year, and I think we've got the team in place.''
Weaver also said money had nothing to do with his decision to
keep Del Rio. The coach just completed the first year of a contract
extension and would be owed nearly $16 million if fired - a huge
payout for a team that blacked out nine of 10 home games because of
slumping ticket sales.
"Money is never a factor,'' Weaver said. "It's a lot of
money. I'm not going to say it's not, but money is not a factor. I
want to win. I want one of those rings.''
And he believes Del Rio can help him get one.
"The definition of insanity is to keep doing the same thing
over and over and expect a different result,'' Weaver said. "I
don't think we're at that point.
"We know there's things we have to do differently and things
we have to do a lot better than we have in the past, and I think
we're all on the same page and have our sights on the same goals.
I'm excited about where we're going with this football team.''