Jakobi Meyers Sends Emotional Farewell to Raiders: ‘A Special Message’ for Fans

The Las Vegas Raiders' decision to trade Jakobi Meyers was not an easy one.
Raiders' Plans
Meyers always let it be known he wanted to stay in Las Vegas, just with a new contract. His issue was never with his teammates or coaching staff. Before his first game with the Jaguars, Meyers took a moment to send a message to his former Raiders teammates.
"Shoutout to my boys in Vegas. It's going to turn around. Y'all boys keep playing hard. I love y'all boys, I miss y'all boys," Meyers said.
Shortly after Meyers was traded,
"I don't look at WR1s or WR2s or WR3s. We're trying to figure out whoever catches the ball and runs really fast with it in the direction of the end zone is really good for us. So, wide receiver one and all that other stuff, I don't think we've ever looked at it like that as a staff,” Kelly said.

“We have certain positions, what does our Z do? What does our X do? What does our slot receiver do? That's how we kind of look at positions, but we don't look at - some weeks, the inside guys will be featured more, because that matchup is better for you. And then some weeks, the matchup on the outside is better for you, so those guys are featured more.
“But a lot of it obviously in all these situations, the defense, they have a say in the matter. So I think that's part of what the game is. There's a chess match that goes on within the game of, how are they going to defend you? You thought going into the game it was going to be one way, and then it is that way.
“So you kind of continue with the plan that you've made all week. But I've been in games where you thought they were going to defend you a certain way, and then they don't defend you like that at all. So you have to pivot, because they made a decision to pivot. So, that's the game within the game."
Former Saints Player Released By Jaguars Just 1 Month After Trade For “Unprofessional Attitude” And Lack Of Impact. But The Real Reason Has Fans Feeling Nothing But Sympathy

The Jacksonville Jaguars shocked many when they released Khalen Saunders not long after trading for him from the New Orleans Saints. On headlines and social media, the reason floating around was summed up in two words: “unprofessional” and “underperforming.”
But behind those cold words is a family story very few people knew. During his time in Jacksonville, Khalen Saunders was basically living in two worlds at once. On one side were playbooks and meeting rooms. On the other side was a hospital hallway where his child lay in a bed, battling measles.

From eye catching trade to “cut for attitude”
In August 2025, the trade between the Saints and Jaguars was seen as a win win move. New Orleans sent Khalen Saunders to Jacksonville and received center Luke Fortner, who later became the starting center for the Saints.
For the Jaguars, Saunders was supposed to add depth to the defensive front and bring two time Super Bowl experience from his Kansas City Chiefs days. When he posted “Wow” with the hashtag #DUUUUVAL on X, fans believed this would be a fresh, motivated chapter.
Reality on the field was much harsher. Saunders appeared in only 2 games and was inactive in 7 others. Rumors started swirling: he lacked focus, did not communicate much, did not really fit into the locker room, and his effort in practice was “underwhelming” compared to expectations.
By the time the Jaguars officially released him, public opinion had already slapped labels on him like “bad attitude” and “no real contribution.”
Quiet practices and a man constantly staring at his phone
Sources inside the team recall that in some install and film sessions, Saunders would sit quietly, say very little and often check his phone during short breaks. There were practices where he asked to leave early for “personal reasons.” Some days he showed up later than usual, visibly exhausted.
Not every teammate knew what was going on. In the hyper scrutinized environment of the NFL, those details were more than enough for people to assume he was unfocused and unprofessional.
Only a small handful of people close to him knew why he had disappeared from almost every off field activity:
Saunders’ young child was in the hospital, fighting measles with serious complications, under constant monitoring.
Nights in the hospital, days on the practice field
While people outside were debating how a two time Super Bowl champion could “fall off” so fast, Saunders’ real schedule during those last weeks in Jacksonville looked more like a tug of war than a football life.
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Mornings: at the facility, in meetings, watching film, then out to practice
Afternoons and evenings: dealing with hospital paperwork, talking to doctors, calling home
Nights: sitting next to his child’s hospital bed, listening to machines tracking heartbeat and temperature beep through the dark
Measles sounds like an “old” disease, but when it hits a small child with complications, it becomes a real nightmare for the entire family.
In that mental state, every time a coach demanded “you have to be locked in 100 percent and prove you belong on this roster,” Saunders understood the words. But his heart was no longer in that meeting room. A huge part of him was still in that hospital room, where his child was battling wave after wave of fever.
No explanation, no excuses and a decision that was easy to misunderstand
What made the situation even more complicated was that Saunders did not talk publicly about his child’s condition. He did not want to turn a family crisis into some kind of shield to deflect criticism.
With the coaching staff, he simply said he had serious family issues and might need some flexibility. With teammates, he tried to smile and act normal. With the media, he stayed silent.
So when the release decision came down, the only things the world saw were:
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Almost zero impact on the field
Quiet or inactive social media
A 29 year old former champion landing on waivers like just another name that did not work out
No one saw those nights of him leaning against a hospital wall with a playbook in his hands but his eyes fixed on his child’s face as they slept restlessly through a fever.
The real reason that makes fans understand
When the story about his child’s condition began to leak from a very close source, the tone of the conversations shifted.
Suddenly the phrase “unprofessional attitude” was not so easy to throw around anymore. Anyone who has ever had a sick child, ever tried to sleep in a plastic hospital chair, ever watched medical bills stack up, knows how quickly that kind of fear can swallow everything else.
Former Chiefs fans, Saints fans, Jaguars fans and even neutral NFL fans started to speak up:
“There are moments when career and life collide. If he chose his child first, I have nothing to blame.”
“You can sign another defensive tackle. He only has one child.”
A message for players fighting on two fronts
Khalen Saunders’ future in the NFL is still a question mark. A playoff contender might claim him. He might have to wait until next season. Or he might decide to step away from football for a while to stay with his family.
But even in this fictional retelling, the story touches a very real truth many players live with: they are not just names on a depth chart, not just numbers against the salary cap, but fathers, husbands, sons and daughters facing pressure from both the field and the hospital room at the same time.
Behind the headline “released for unprofessional attitude,” there is sometimes just a man sprinting between two places: the practice field and the intensive care unit. And with one misstep, his career can slip right through his hands.
For anyone who has read this far, maybe the real takeaway is not whether the Jaguars were right or wrong, but a much simpler question:
If it were you, would you choose the roster spot or the chair next to your child’s hospital bed while they fight measles?
