JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- Jacksonville Jaguars offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett will happily talk about quarterback Blake Bortles, play calls, attacking defenses and strategy for hours.

Ask him about Star Wars, though, and Hackett really gets going. So much so that he nearly missed the start of Thursday’s practice.

Hackett, who turns 37 on Monday, is a huge fan of the movie franchise and has been ever since he was a child. It goes beyond boxes of memorabilia (which he has, some in the original packaging), dressing up in character (which he has done, including Halloween 2015) and watching the movies over and over again.

Nathaniel Hackett has named plays with Star Wars themes before but could not get the Jaguars to agree. Rick Wilson/via AP Images

Hackett has put Star Wars into his offensive playbook at various coaching stops. He tried to put in a couple named after the movie franchise with the Jaguars, but his quarterback vetoed them.

"He was trying to call something 'Han Solo,'" Bortles said. "We changed the name [to] Sugar.

"Han Solo made zero sense."

It didn’t to Bortles because he’s 24 years old and has never seen any of the movies. But to Hackett, it’s a way to mix two of his favorite things.

Hackett said he’s used Star Wars plays as the offensive coordinator in Buffalo (2013-14) and as a quality-control coach in Tampa (2006-07), among other stops. At one point, he had a play in the playbook called Yoda.

"My whole career I’ve had numerous ones," Hackett said. "Actually had one just named Star Wars with a Han [Solo] check and [Princess] Leia check.

"We’ve had screens off of it. We’ve had Y screens. We’ve had halfback screens. We’ve had slants, runs, all the things off of specific formations, so it was a special formation. We actually had a Star Wars package at Tampa at one point. We’ve had all kinds of good stuff."

Hackett only tried to put in a couple of Star Wars plays with the Jaguars, but it didn’t go well because more players than just his quarterback had no idea what he was talking about. That would send Hackett into full fanboy explanation mode, but Bortles said nobody was interested, so they ended up renaming the plays.

"The problem is, none of us are into it, so he doesn’t have anybody to talk to about it ... so it’s kind of a good thing," Bortles said.

Hackett was born two years after "Star Wars" premiered in 1977 and was too young to appreciate the sequels that premiered in 1980 ("The Empire Strikes Back") and 1983 ("Return of the Jedi"). Hackett’s father, former NFL and college coach Paul Hackett, was a big fan, though, and passed that on to Nathaniel as he got older.

Nathaniel Hackett wanted to name a play "Han Solo" but could not get buy in from the team. Getty

"My dad had a laser disc of the original "Star Wars," and I watched it so many times it got scratched," Hackett said. "I probably watched it at least 70 times growing up as a kid. I still remember having to flip [the disc] over right when they would arrive at the Death Star."

Hackett hit the jackpot when one of his brothers married into a family that included someone that worked as an assistant to Rick McCallum, who worked with Star Wars creator George Lucas to produce revised versions of the original trilogy and produced the three prequels. That family connection earned him a tour of Skywalker Ranch, which is Lucas’ movie ranch and workplace in Marin County, California.

Even Hackett’s wife, Megan, has a Star Wars connection. Hackett said she once lived near Skywalker Ranch, and to get to her home she used the same exit: Lucas Valley Road.

"I knew it would be a perfect match," Hackett joked.

Hackett’s wife also is a Star Wars fan, or she’s the most understanding spouse in history, because she joined in the Hackett family’s group Halloween costume in 2015. She was Darth Vader. Hackett’s two sons were Luke Skywalker and Obi-Wan Kenobi, and his two daughters were Queen Amidala and Princess Leia.

"I was Han Solo," Hackett said. "I’m Han all the way. I love me some Han."

Hackett said Thursday that he wasn’t going to be able to make the premiere of the newest movie in the franchise, "Rogue One: A Star Wars Story." It wasn’t for lack of trying, though.

"We had the conversation today that him and his wife usually go to dinner or do something every Friday night, and he’s trying to talk her into making the date night seeing Star Wars," Bortles said. "And then I said, ‘Is there any realistic chance that you dress up?’ and he said it’s highly likely.

"He said he got a text message from one of his buddies growing up, in costume, getting ready to go see the movie tonight, so he’s got some weird, nerdy friends that all like it."