Inside Travis Hunter’s Debut: The Progress and the Pause
Let’s be real — Travis Hunter landing in Jacksonville was never just another draft pick. It was a swing for the fences, the kind that either makes a franchise or keeps fans up at night wondering what could’ve been. The Jaguars didn’t ease into the two‑way experiment. They went all‑in, betting that the former Colorado superstar could actually pull off the impossible: impact games from both sides of the ball in the NFL.
Coming off a Heisman campaign and a college career built on freakish versatility — receiver’s feet, corner’s instincts — Hunter felt like a walking jolt of energy for a team that badly needed one. You could feel it in the draft room celebration, you heard it in the early pressers, and you saw it when he lined up in the slot one snap and at corner the next.
Then came the gut punch. A routine practice rep, no contact, just bad luck — and suddenly the season that was supposed to announce Travis Hunter to the league was over before it ever really got going.
The Big, Bold Bet
Jacksonville didn’t just “happen” into Travis Hunter. They went up and got him, pushing all their chips to the middle for a guy they believed could tilt the field in ways every other prospect simply can’t. Call it bold, call it risky, call it whatever fits your timeline, but it was obvious the Jaguars were tired of patchwork pieces. They wanted a true problem‑solver.
And I really respected how, for all the hype and all the excitement, the coaching staff didn’t fall into the trap of treating the two‑way idea like a toy. They didn’t try to recreate the college highlight reel or overload him on his first season as a pro. Coen and his staff built Hunter’s rookie year on actual structure — slowly building up on both sides, shrinking the playbook for him so he wasn’t trying to learn two NFL playbooks at once, and acknowledging that an NFL season is a different planet compared to Saturdays in Boulder.
The message was clear from the jump: this wasn’t about turning him into some 80‑snap Marvel character. It was about maximizing impact without burning him out, and honestly, you could see that philosophy paying off with him starting to settle in before the injury hit.
The Slow Build
When Week 1 rolled around, the Jaguars didn’t play coy with him or stash him on the sideline for a handful of feel‑it‑out snaps. They put him out there — heavy on offense, selective on defense — exactly the way they’d hinted all offseason. And across seven games, he logged roughly two‑thirds of the offensive snaps and about a third on defense.
The Steady Reps on Offense: How His Role Started Taking Shape
Most of Hunter’s offensive work came from the slot — roughly 65% of his snaps — and honestly, that felt like the right place for him as a rookie. They gave him a role with purpose: stress the quick game, punish soft coverage, be the guy who keeps the offense on schedule. Screens, option routes, pivots, speed‑outs — nothing wild, but all things that let him get comfortable at NFL speed.
Across seven games, he put up 28 catches on 45 targets for 298 yards and a touchdown. Not eye‑popping, but the important part was how clearly, he was trending upward. His targets started creeping deeper, his confidence after the catch grew, and you could feel the staff slowly expanding what they trusted him with.
And here’s the part that really stood out when digging into the numbers: he’s probably going to be used very differently next season. He had just 11 third‑down targets, and well over half of them came with him running short of the sticks. I get the logic — he’s electric after the catch — but his real superpower is winning at the catch point, especially down the field. That’s where he’s special. So getting him past the chains more often feels like a must.
Same deal with the vertical game. He was only targeted nine times on true vertical routes all year. Nine. That can’t be the plan moving forward for a guy with his tracking skills and big‑play ability.
And to be fair, some of that isn’t on him — this has been far from Trevor Lawrence’s cleanest season. There were plenty of reps where Hunter did his job but the timing or protection just wasn’t there.
Breaking in on Defense: Package Corner with Real Upside
Defensively, the Jaguars weren’t chasing headlines. Hunter played about 36% of the snaps (154 plays) and turned those into 15 tackles and 3 PBUs. Targeted 18 times, he surrendered 11 completions for 121 yards and no touchdowns. And look — for a rookie corner splitting meeting rooms and bouncing between roles, that’s not nothing. But it also wasn’t the “he’s a better corner than receiver” narrative people kept trying to push. The athletic traits are there, the instincts flash, but the game is still speeding up on him.
He’s not the fastest guy on the field, but he closes better than a lot of rookies. The issue is, he just didn’t trust it enough yet. He gave way more cushion than he needed to — the kind of five-to-seven‑yard pillows that invite easy hitches and outs — and a few of those completions he allowed weren’t because he got beat, but because he played the rep like someone who didn’t want to make a mistake. That’s life as a rookie defensive back, though. You’re surviving more than thriving early on.
And to be fair, he wasn’t exactly playing behind a well‑oiled machine either. Watching the Jaguars’ defensive tape, the amount of communication mix‑ups and flat‑out missed assignments was… surprising. You just don’t see that many “wait, who’s got that guy?” moments at the NFL level. That’s a tough environment for anyone, let alone a rookie trying to stack situational snaps.
A Rookie Campaign Cut Short
You never want to hear the words “non‑contact” and “knee” in the same sentence — especially not tied to a rookie who was just starting to find his footing. On a routine defensive drill, no less, nothing dramatic, no awkward collision… and suddenly he’s down. Right knee, isolated LCL. The Jaguars didn’t waste time either — he was placed on injured reserve the next morning, which told everyone this wasn’t some minor tweak he could put a brace on and push through. And when the team made the call to shut him down for the year and proceed with surgery, the gut feeling fans had was confirmed.
The surgery itself went well, and the team laid out a pretty reasonable six‑month recovery timeline, which puts him in line to be fully involved sometime in the late‑spring window. That gives him a legitimate shot to ramp up during OTAs, ease back in during minicamp, and hit training camp without playing catch‑up. For a non‑contact knee injury in late October, that’s about as good a scenario as you could hope for.
All stats courtesy of NFL Pro.