Jaguars coach Gus Bradley was hired in January 2013 and in three and a half seasons, he's gone 14-41. That record, by any reasonable measure, is grounds for termination. But owner Shad Khan, following another demoralizing Jaguars loss, says there won't be a coaching change.

On Thursday night, Jacksonville looked like what it is: One of the worst teams in football. When it was over, Tennessee cruised to a 36-22 win and Khan was left to defend the nearly indefensible.

This is what he came up with: "Actions speak louder than words," Khan told the Florida Times-Union. "Very little for me to say."

"I worry about this team and why did we perform like that in the first half, and figuring out, OK, how can we get it right?" Jaguars coach Gus Bradley

Meanwhile, Bradley was asked whether he's concerned about his job security.

"No," he said after the game. "I worry about this team and why did we perform like that in the first half, and figuring out, OK, how can we get it right?"

For a man who has lost 41 of the 55 games he's coached, that's a lot of worrying. Of course, when the losing is that pervasive, you probably become accustomed to the weekly speculation about getting canned. We were talking about this a month ago, we were talking about this last December, as the Jags were putting the finishing touches on a five-win season, and we were talking about this twelve months ago when CBSSports.com's Pete Prisco wrote that the organization would accomplish little by firing Bradley after a 1-5 start.

We sense a theme developing.

The Jaguars are now 2-5 on the 2016 season and alone in last place in the NFL's worst division. In nine days, the team will travel to Kansas City to face the 4-2 Chiefs, an outfit many consider the second-best team in the AFC behind thePatriots.