NFL Exec Predicts Travis Hunter to Play Only WR or CB 'As Soon As He Gets One Injury'

Amid all of the excitement about Travis Hunter's ability to play on both sides of the ball as he prepares for his rookie season with the Jacksonville Jaguars, people within the league want to see how long the team sticks with it if he gets injured.
One executive told The Athletic's Mike Sando they expect the Jaguars will end the two-way experiment with Hunter "as soon as he gets one injury" that keeps him out for multiple weeks.
"I can’t name a dual-threat guy who played both ways at the level they are drafting him at," the exec said. "Deion Sanders? Rod Woodson? They all settled into whatever their position is. As soon as he gets one injury and is out for three weeks, he is going to one side of the ball."
Deion Sanders was never really a full-time two-way player in the NFL. The one time he got regular reps at wide receiver was in 1996. He recorded 36 receptions, 475 yards and one touchdown.
That one season accounted for more than half of his total career receptions (60) and receiving yards (784). He never had another season with more than 10 catches of 106 receiving yards.
First-year Jaguars general manager James Gladstone and head coach Liam Coen made a big bet on Hunter. They traded the No. 5, No. 36 and No. 126 picks this year, plus a 2026 first-rounder to Cleveland for pick Nos. 2, 104 and 200.
Coen told reporters after drafting Hunter that he will primarily play offense to start, while getting acclimated to the defense.
One of the main concerns about Hunter playing both ways in the NFL is related to his size at 6'0" and 188 pounds. That puts him in the 36th percentile in height and 20th percentile in weight among wide receivers.
The measurables are a little more favorable to Hunter at cornerback, at least by height where he ranks in the 56th percentile. His weight is in the 19th percentile at the position.
When you combine those measurements with the difference in playing against Big 12 players and NFL players, there is a physical toll that Hunter's body will take unlike anything he's dealt with thus far.
This is why the Jaguars' plan has to prioritize making Hunter the best version of himself at whatever his primary position is going to be, then ease him into the other spot to see if he can handle both the physical and mental grind of playing two ways.