Travis Hunter Says He 100% Will Play Offense & Defense In The NFL?! | Pat McAfee Show
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Top Comments (10)
Jags got kamala harris writing their statements
Who let that 12 year old boy sit next to Travis?
this speech is ridiculous
As a Jags fan I haven't been this excited for a season since the early 2000s
1. Balanced movement patterns = less imbalance risk A wide receiver trains explosive forward sprinting, sharp cuts, and vertical acceleration. A cornerback trains a lot of backpedaling, lateral shuffling, and sudden changes of direction from a backward stance. Doing both means you’re strengthening your quads, hamstrings, glutes, hip flexors, calves, and core in a much more symmetrical way than someone who only trains one style of movement. Athletes who train mostly in one movement direction (like always sprinting forward) can develop muscle imbalances that lead to overuse injuries. 2. Multi-directional conditioning = joint protection Mixing forward, backward, and lateral training increases hip stability, ankle mobility, and knee resilience. This is important because ACL injuries often come from awkward decelerations or direction changes your body isn’t conditioned for. A cornerback’s constant backpedaling and lateral movement builds eccentric strength in muscles that protect ligaments when decelerating or reacting. 3. Old-school multi-sport advantage Old-time athletes who played football, basketball, baseball, track, etc., naturally trained in multiple planes of motion. That variety reduced repetitive strain on the same joints and muscles while boosting coordination. Modern athletes who over-specialize early (e.g., just playing WR their whole life) miss out on that balance, which can lead to a narrower skill set and higher injury risk. 4. Neuromuscular benefits Switching between WR and CB teaches the brain and body to react quickly in both offensive and defensive movement patterns. This cross-training keeps your proprioception (body awareness) sharp, which is one of the biggest preventers of non-contact injuries.
Could you imagine going to an NFL function and a GM gets carded at the bar😂
" Drafted 2 Overall - 2 Do It All ! "
Jags will get the last laugh... Best move in Jags history was putting Toni B. In the front office!
6:22 I would say if he’s a top 15 receiver, which is a lot of good players. And a top 10 corner that’s overly good. If he gets 1000 yards in a season and he’s a full-time starting corner that is truly the most amazing thing who will ever see in NFL history.
My projections for Travis Hunter rookie year: Wr: 67 rec 732 yards 4 tds DB: 4 PBU 1 INT 30% field time
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Top Comments (10)
Jags got kamala harris writing their statements
Who let that 12 year old boy sit next to Travis?
this speech is ridiculous
As a Jags fan I haven't been this excited for a season since the early 2000s
1. Balanced movement patterns = less imbalance risk A wide receiver trains explosive forward sprinting, sharp cuts, and vertical acceleration. A cornerback trains a lot of backpedaling, lateral shuffling, and sudden changes of direction from a backward stance. Doing both means you’re strengthening your quads, hamstrings, glutes, hip flexors, calves, and core in a much more symmetrical way than someone who only trains one style of movement. Athletes who train mostly in one movement direction (like always sprinting forward) can develop muscle imbalances that lead to overuse injuries. 2. Multi-directional conditioning = joint protection Mixing forward, backward, and lateral training increases hip stability, ankle mobility, and knee resilience. This is important because ACL injuries often come from awkward decelerations or direction changes your body isn’t conditioned for. A cornerback’s constant backpedaling and lateral movement builds eccentric strength in muscles that protect ligaments when decelerating or reacting. 3. Old-school multi-sport advantage Old-time athletes who played football, basketball, baseball, track, etc., naturally trained in multiple planes of motion. That variety reduced repetitive strain on the same joints and muscles while boosting coordination. Modern athletes who over-specialize early (e.g., just playing WR their whole life) miss out on that balance, which can lead to a narrower skill set and higher injury risk. 4. Neuromuscular benefits Switching between WR and CB teaches the brain and body to react quickly in both offensive and defensive movement patterns. This cross-training keeps your proprioception (body awareness) sharp, which is one of the biggest preventers of non-contact injuries.
Could you imagine going to an NFL function and a GM gets carded at the bar😂
" Drafted 2 Overall - 2 Do It All ! "
Jags will get the last laugh... Best move in Jags history was putting Toni B. In the front office!
6:22 I would say if he’s a top 15 receiver, which is a lot of good players. And a top 10 corner that’s overly good. If he gets 1000 yards in a season and he’s a full-time starting corner that is truly the most amazing thing who will ever see in NFL history.
My projections for Travis Hunter rookie year: Wr: 67 rec 732 yards 4 tds DB: 4 PBU 1 INT 30% field time