The LA Rams took the early lead against the Jacksonville Jaguars and never looked back, cruising to a multi-score victory.

Jacksonville will now head into their bye week at 4-3 on the season.

With the dust having settled on Sunday’s game, let’s take a look at the three things we learned from the Jaguars’ performance.

A disjointed performance in the passing game

Overall, there was a lack of efficiency and an inability to generate chunk plays through the air. As the headline says, things for the Jaguars were quite disjointed.

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There were some off-target throws from Trevor Lawrence, instances where he and the pass-catchers weren’t on the same page, routes not being won quickly enough, and drops.

Not helping the passing game is that the Jaguars were down by multiple scores early on. This left the offense playing catch-up and, oftentimes, in predictable passing situations.

Trailing for much of the game also hurt Jacksonville’s ability to lean on the run game and that element is an important aspect of Liam Coen’s offense that can help create opportunities through the air.

The struggles in the passing game can’t be attributed to any one thing — right now, there’s a lot that has to be corrected.

Penalties, penalties, penalties

This, unfortunately, isn’t anything new. The Jaguars have been dealing with penalties all season long. Jacksonville entered this game averaging 8.7 penalties per game, which is the third-highest mark in football.

That was again an issue in this game. Jacksonville was penalized a whopping 13 times for 119 yards.

One negated a Parker Washington punt return, while several others put the Jaguars’ offense behind the sticks, and others helped out the Rams’ offense.

Winning games in the NFL is already difficult. Doing so while being one of the most penalized teams in football makes that an even more challenging feat to accomplish.

A career day for Travis Hunter on offense

Coming into this game, Coen said that he wanted to get Hunter more involved on offense. Well, that’s exactly what he did.

Hunter had targets at each level of the field and led the Jaguars in receiving. He finished the game catching 8-of-14 passes for 101 yards and a touchdown.

This was Hunter’s first career NFL touchdown and his first game with over 100 receiving yards.

Getting Hunter more opportunities isn’t only about more targets, but as Coen described earlier in the week, it’s also about where on the field he’s targeted and making sure he’s an earlier read in Lawrence’s progressions more often.

Hunter also had one rushing attempt that didn’t go for any yards.