For much of the team’s history, the Jacksonville Jaguars have been the butt of many jokes.

Since they joined the league as an expansion team in 1995, most of their seasons have ended in their inability to make it to the playoffs. They made four playoff appearances in the first five seasons of their existence, but since then the Jaguars have only made it to the playoffs three times. They picked in the top five of the NFL draft every year from 2012 to 2017, and overall just failed to compete in the AFC South.

That changed last year, though, as they won their division with a 10-6 record and managed to make it to the AFC Championship game. With an all-around dangerous defense and an offense aided by a reliable run game, Jacksonville enters the 2018 season as the favorites to win the AFC South. It’s exciting to see them doing well again, especially after how much terrible football their fans have witnessed for most of the 2010s.

With bad records typically come high draft picks, and part of the Jaguars’ failures were due to poor drafting with early picks. Players like Justin Blackmon, Luke Joeckel, Derrick Harvey, Blaine Gabbert and, to some extent, Blake Bortles were all players picked in the top 10 of their respective drafts and flopped.

That doesn’t mean that the franchise hasn’t made some good draft picks, though. Here are the five biggest draft steals in Jacksonville Jaguars history.

1. QB David Garrard | 4th round | 2002

Mark Brunell may be the best quarterback in Jaguars history, but Garrard is easily the best quarterback that the team actually drafted.

Garrard was a backup for Brunell and Byron Leftwich for the first few years of his career. He stepped in for Leftwich in 2005 and led the Jaguars to a 4-1 record in the five games that he started. He started in 10 games in 2006 and showed enough promise to prompt Jacksonville to cut Leftwich in 2007, leaving the starting quarterback position all to himself.

The strong-armed Garrard started in 12 games in 2007 and won nine of those games en route to an 11-5 regular season record. He led the Jaguars to the playoffs and was even able to beat the Pittsburgh Steelers in the Wild Card round before losing to the then-undefeated New England Patriots in the Divisional round. Garrard’s best year of his career came in 2009, when he made the Pro Bowl – the last Jaguars signal-caller to do so – after throwing for 3,597 yards and 15 touchdowns.

Over the span of his career, Garrard threw for 16,003 yards and 89 touchdowns on a 61.6 completion percentage. He officially retired in 2015, but he didn’t play a snap in the league after his time with the Jaguars came to an end in 2011. He ended up with a career record of 39-37. He also had some value as a runner, tallying 1,746 rushing yards and 17 rushing touchdowns in nine seasons.

Jacksonville’s quarterback history isn’t very impressive, but Garrard is in the team’s upper echelon of signal-callers. The Pro Bowl gunslinger far outplayed his draft stock, and is the biggest draft steal in Jaguars history.