Jalen Travis surrounded by family and friendsย  Credit: Courtesy

Itโ€™s been a few weeks since Jalen Travis took his first steps as a professional football player.  He was the only Minneapolis native drafted in Aprilโ€™s NFL draft (fourth round, Indianapolis).

โ€œIโ€™m doing well, feeling good,โ€ said Travis, the Minneapolis De La Salle and Princeton graduate, who played his final season of eligibility at Iowa State. The 6โ€™7โ€ nearly 340 pound offensive lineman recently talked to the MSR while at home for a spell before heading back to Indy for training camp later this month.

Travis went through OTAs (Organized Team Activities), which each NFL club typically conducts during the off-season. โ€œIโ€™ve enjoyed it,โ€ he reported. 

โ€œOTAs move super-fast. I think that was the real welcome to professional football. This is my full-time job, and itโ€™s something that I think Iโ€™m realizing Iโ€™m more blessed to do [this] by the day.โ€

Expectedly, Travis and his fellow rookie teammates had to quickly learn the ropes. โ€œI think for every rookie in terms of coming in, getting caught up to the vets, learning the playbook, getting used to the speed of play, the schedules,โ€ he pointed out. โ€œWe had some pretty long days โ€” 10-hour days, 12-hour days in the facility.

โ€œIt was likeโ€ฆfall camp 2.0,โ€ stressed Travis. โ€œI thought it was awesome. I had the chance to connect and play along [with] some of the vets, and started building chemistry from the jump, which was super beneficial for me.โ€

The Colts rookies also did some off-field team bonding during the scheduled OTAs in late May and early June: โ€œWe spent some time at the Indy 500 race track as a rookie class. We had a chance to go behind the scenes at the Indianapolis Zoo. [The] other rookie team-building and workshop activities was pretty awesome.

โ€œSpending time with some guys in the offensive line roomโ€ฆand working just to get to know them and them to know me, I think brought some light to a relatively intense setting.โ€

NFL teams are permitted to run 7-on-7 and 11-on-11 drills but no live contact during the OTAs, which is strictly voluntary as part of the NFLโ€™s offseason program. Later this month, Travis will return to Indianapolis to report to fall training camp, which starts on July 23 and runs through August 14. He said he canโ€™t wait.

โ€œPeople will tell you that the hardest part about playing in the NFL is not necessarily getting there but staying there,โ€ said the Colts rookie. โ€œI think wanting to realize sooner and sooner by the day as someone who aspires and dreams of playing a long time in this league, I want to hold that dream as closely as I can, and really nurture it and give it everything that it needs so I can live it out day in and day out.

โ€œI think it is extremely humbling that I have the privilege and the opportunity, the blessing to play a game that I love for a living,โ€ concluded Travis. โ€œThat I am able to change not only my life but a lot of those around me, my family, my community, those I love in the long term, and thatโ€™s something that I think motivates and drives me every single day.โ€

Charles Hallman welcomes reader comments to challman@spokesman-recorder.com.

Charles Hallman is a contributing reporter and award-winning sports columnist at the Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder.

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