Travis Hunter Will Enter 2026 With More Questions Than Answers
Just when you thought the Travis Hunter rollercoaster couldn’t get any wilder, it screeched to a halt. The Jacksonville Jaguars’ electrifying two-way rookie is done for the season after undergoing knee surgery, leaving a cloud of questions hanging over Duval County. The biggest one? What in the world do they do now with their human Swiss Army knife?
The initial word was that the Jags fully intended to keep their foot on the gas, deploying Hunter as both a top-tier receiver and a lockdown corner. Before his non-contact knee injury in practice on October 30, the plan wasn’t to scale back—it was to unleash him.
And we all saw the flashes, right? That game in London against the Rams was supposed to be his coming-out party. Hunter went toe-to-toe with Davante Adams on defense, then flipped the script and torched the Rams’ secondary for a career-high 101 yards and his first NFL touchdown. It was the kind of performance that makes GMs look like geniuses.
Then, a pop in practice. What was first thought to be a minor tweak turned into season-ending surgery for an LCL tear. The hype train, for now, is in the station.
The Great Two-Way Debate For Hunter
So, should the Jaguars pump the brakes on the two-way experiment? It’s the million-dollar question, or more accurately, the multi-first-round-pick question. Let’s be real: asking a guy to be a No. 1 receiver and a No. 1 corner in the modern NFL is like asking a unicorn to also breathe fire. It’s a beautiful idea, but is it sustainable?
The early-season data was a mixed bag. When Hunter was splitting snaps almost evenly, he was good, but not great, at either position. But as the season wore on, the Jaguars started leaning into his offensive talent, and his numbers exploded. In the four games leading up to his injury, he was on a 17-game pace for nearly 1,000 receiving yards. That’s not just good for a rookie; that’s star-in-the-making territory.
Head Coach Liam Coen is playing it cool, calling any talk about Hunter’s future “very premature.” He’s focused on the next game, as he should be. But you know the conversations are happening behind closed doors. You don’t trade a king’s ransom for a player like Hunter without a plan A, B, and C.
Was the Hunter Gamble Worth It?
Looking back, the trade that brought Hunter to Jacksonville was a blockbuster. The Jags sent a treasure chest to the Browns to move up to No. 2, a move unheard of for a non-quarterback in this era. Cleveland, meanwhile, is looking pretty smug. They’ve already built a punishing backfield with Quinshon Judkins and Dylan Sampson and snagged a stud defensive tackle in Mason Graham. They also still have the Jags’ 2026 first-round pick in their back pocket.
For Jacksonville to “win” this trade, Hunter can’t just be good. He needs to be a generational talent at one position, with the ability to be a game-changer at the other. It’s a monumental ask.
The smart money might be on making him a primary wide receiver who can step in on defense in high-leverage situations. It maximizes his offensive potential while minimizing the wear and tear that clearly has the front office sweating.
For now, Hunter will rehab and watch from the sidelines. But make no mistake, the clock is ticking. The decisions the Jaguars make this offseason will define not just Hunter’s career but the future of the franchise.
