JACKSONVILLE, FL — Jacksonville is pivoting. After a season where the “unicorn” Travis Hunter split his time between scoring touchdowns and breaking up passes, the Jaguars are tightening the reins. NFL Network’s Cameron Wolfe reported Friday that Hunter will serve as the team’s full-time starting cornerback in 2026, relegating his offensive fireworks to a part-time, rotational role. This isn’t just a depth chart shuffle; it’s a strategic calculation for a team coming off a 13-4 season and an AFC South title.
The Logic Behind the Flip
Last year, the hype was all about the two-way phenom. Before a torn LCL ended his rookie campaign in late October, Hunter logged 324 offensive snaps compared to just 162 on defense. He was the focal point of the passing attack until the injury bug bit during a Week 8 practice. But the landscape has shifted. The stadium shook when Hunter went down, but the team’s resilience proved they could win without him as a primary target.
The Jaguars’ wide receiver room isn’t the barren wasteland it once was. The mid-season trade for Jakobi Meyers proved to be a heist, especially after his December extension. Combine that with Parker Washington’s massive breakout—58 receptions for 847 yards—and the offense has weapons to spare. Meanwhile, the secondary is staring at a vacuum. With Greg Newsome II and Montaric Brown expected to test the open market, the Jaguars need an alpha on the outside. Hunter, with his rare instincts and twitchy athleticism, is the clear answer.
“He’s a football player, plain and simple. We were fluid with it last year, but looking at our roster, we have to put him where we need him most. He’s going to be an elite corner in this league, and we still get to use that explosive gear on offense when the moment is right.”
— Liam Coen, Jaguars Head Coach
The Heisman Pedigree Meets NFL Reality
There is some pushback from the fantasy football crowd, and understandably so. Hunter was a cheat code when healthy, putting up 298 yards and a touchdown in just seven games. However, his ceiling on defense is arguably higher. In limited defensive snaps, he showed a “ball-hawk” mentality that cannot be coached. He recorded 15 tackles and three pass deflections before his season was cut short.
General Manager James Gladstone hinted at this transition back in January. The move allows the Jags to let expensive veterans walk and reallocate cap space to protect Trevor Lawrence, who finished 2025 with a franchise-record 38 total touchdowns. Hunter’s rehab is reportedly ahead of schedule, with the team expecting him to be “100% full-go” by the time training camp opens this summer.
What’s Next for the Jaguars
Don’t expect Hunter to disappear from the highlight reels. While he’ll be tasked with erasing the opponent’s WR1, Coen is too creative to let that 4.3 speed sit idle on third downs. By anchoring the defense, Hunter provides a foundation for a unit that finished 21st in passing yards allowed last year. He becomes the cornerstone of a secondary that needs to be playoff-ready to handle the heavy hitters in the AFC.

