The Travis Hunter Date Jaguars Fans Really Should Care About

As Travis Hunter makes strides back onto the field, the Jacksonville Jaguars are weighing immediate training camp participation against ensuring his readiness for their season opener.

The Jacksonville Jaguars are closing in on the moment everyone has been waiting for with Travis Hunter, but the real checkpoint isn’t July 29 when training camp opens. It’s Week 1 against the Cleveland Browns on Sept. 23.

That’s the date that matters most for a player coming off last year’s season-ending injury. Hunter is expected back on the practice field during camp, and the offseason program pointed in that direction from the start.

But the Jaguars don’t need him to be a full-speed, every-rep presence the second camp begins. They need him ready when the games count.

Head coach Liam Coen and general manager James Gladstone have kept the specifics vague, though Gladstone offered the clearest update back on April 9: "Yeah, for all intents and purpose, he'll be a limited participant through the offseason program with eyes on return to play at full tick in training camp."

That’s basically how it played out. Hunter was around every day during the offseason work, involved mentally and present on the field, but he didn’t take part in team periods or drills. Physically, the most he did was catch a few passes while Trevor Lawrence warmed up early in practice.

More recently, NFL Network/ESPN reporter Cameron Wolfe painted a much more encouraging picture of where Hunter stands heading into camp.

"Yeah, look, the Travis Hunter show is just getting started. I know there's been a lot of talk about where he will and won't play and how much usage.

Look, he's ready to be unleashed and show why they drafted him number two overall. Talking to people there down in Jacksonville, he's running over 20 miles per hour, which was faster than he ran before that knee injury," Wolfe said.

"He's cutting. He's in great shape.

He should be full go for training camp, and he is still going to play both sides of the ball. The cool thing for Travis Hunter and the Jags is now they can unleash him as a starter on defense, and the goal is to eventually have him play nearly all the snaps on defense in a particular game.

And they think he can be elite on that side of the ball."

Even with that upbeat report, the Jaguars still have every reason to be careful. Hunter’s return to full work may not mean a full workload right away, especially once camp opens. The bigger picture is the season ahead, not the first few days of practice.

The Jaguars clearly expect Hunter to matter in a major way this year. Their actions and comments have pointed to him as a difference-maker at cornerback who can still add value on offense. But there’s no need to push him hard on day one of camp if the goal is to have him available and effective when the Browns come to town.

That also fits with how Coen has talked this offseason about preseason usage. He has made it clear that important players are unlikely to be used much in those games, with joint practices serving as the better place to get work while avoiding unnecessary injury risk.

So while Hunter’s return will be a big moment for the Jaguars, the true measuring stick is still Sept. 23.

That’s when the team will want to see him unleashed for real. The camp timeline is nice.

The Week 1 timeline is the one that counts.

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Jaguars Fans Have Every Reason To Watch Travis Hunter Closely At Camp

Travis Hunter is heading into Jaguars camp with plenty of attention already attached, and not just because of the buzz that followed him into the league. Jacksonville is planning to be careful with his workload as he comes back from a right lateral collateral ligament injury and surgery, a sensible approach for a player the team wants to ease back into practice rather than throw straight into a full camp workload. Hunter also had limited two-way work in last years camp before being shut down after only a few practices, which only adds to the anticipation around how the Jaguars will handle him this time.

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The bigger subplot for Jacksonville was how Lawrence stacked up against familiar company. He finished ahead of Baker Mayfield for the second straight day, while Larry Fitzgerald was the best performer in their group and landed well in front of both quarterbacks. For a player still shaping the Jaguars next chapter, even an offseason event like this can carry a little extra meaning when the competition includes names fans know so well. [Read more 🡒]