5 Jaguars with a shot at earning Pro Bowl nod in 2022

Jacksonville Jaguars fans are asked to give a hearty "Duuuuuuuuval," at TIAA Bank Field in Jacksonville. Boselli was honored at halftime with his Jacksonville Jaguars number 71 retired. Boselli was enshrined in Canton, Ohio this past August after his seven season career all with the Jaguars. The Texans won 13-6. The Texans won 13-6. [Corey Perrine/Florida Times-Union]Jki 100822 Texans Jags Cp 107
Jacksonville Jaguars fans are asked to give a hearty "Duuuuuuuuval," at TIAA Bank Field in Jacksonville. Boselli was honored at halftime with his Jacksonville Jaguars number 71 retired. Boselli was enshrined in Canton, Ohio this past August after his seven season career all with the Jaguars. The Texans won 13-6. The Texans won 13-6. [Corey Perrine/Florida Times-Union]Jki 100822 Texans Jags Cp 107 /
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Andre Cisco #38 of the Jacksonville Jaguars at TIAA Bank Field. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images) /

No. 4 Jaguars player who can make the Pro Bowl: Andre Cisco, S

The Jaguars are getting plenty of production from their 2021 draft class but you could make the case that safety Andre Cisco isn’t getting as much attention as his peers because he was selected in the third round.

The former Syracuse Orangeman tumble down draft boards because he dealt with a series of injuries in college but he’s managed to remain healthy and hasn’t missed a single game in his NFL career. After spending most of his rookie season on the bench, he’s become a key cog in the Jags’ secondary, logging 52 total tackles, seven passes defensed and three interceptions, one of them against the Kansas City Chiefs in Week 10.

Cisco is currently displaying the ballhawk skills that made him such a difference-maker in college and if he can register a few more picks, Pro Bowl voters will have a hard time snubbing him.

No. 3 Jaguars player who can make the Pro Bowl: Tyson Campbell, CB

Andre Cisco isn’t the only Jaguars’ defender that could earn a Pro Bowl berth in 2022. The NFL is experiencing a wave of young cornerbacks and Jacksonville has a promising one in Tyson Campbell, who has progressively gotten better over the last two years.

A second-round pick in last year’s draft, Campbell struggled early in the 2021 campaign but has progressively gotten better. He had a team-high two interceptions last season and has already registered as many this season.

Having said that, Campbell might be a long shot to make the Pro Bowl when you take into account how many talented cornerbacks there are in the AFC, including but not limited to fellow sophomore Patrick Surtain Jr., rookie sensation Sauce Gardner, and veteran Stephan Gilmore.