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2025 NFL Combine

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What we heard at the combine (2/27): Top tight ends & defensive backs

WILL-JOHNSON-HSS

Defensive backs and tight ends took their turn in front of the podium on Thursday at the NFL Scouting Combine. The group featured five of Daniel Jeremiah's top 11 prospects in the draft, including the reigning Heisman Trophy winner.

Below is everything you need to know from the day, which also included news about the 2025 salary cap.

Travis Hunter wants to keep playing both CB & WR; it's up to NFL teams to figure out how that works

Travis Hunter stepped up to the podium Thursday morning for what was the most crowded media session of the 2025 NFL Scouting Combine so far. He wore a black hooded sweatshirt, standard issue for the more than 300 prospects gathered in Indianapolis. Each one has a number and position printed in purple. Hunter's is emblazoned with "15" and "DB."

Don't read into it, though. The past and future football story of the two-way Heisman Trophy winner can't be told in two letters, and that's what he is telling NFL teams this week.

"I'm going to play both," Hunter said. "That's not my job to figure it out. I like to play both sides of the ball. If they give me the opportunity to both sides of the ball, I'll play both sides."

Hunter added: "I've got my own unique play style. I play both sides of the ball. Not that many people in the NFL have done it."

Hunter is saying the same things to NFL coaches and general managers this week in Indianapolis. They will ultimately decide how to use his rare talent.

"I did some meetings at receiver; I did some meetings at DB," Hunter said. "So, it's still up in the air."

What is his sales pitch for teams that might be skeptical about his two-way ability at the next level?

"They say nobody has ever done it for real the way I do it, but I tell them that I'm just different," Hunter said. "I'm a different person."

Hunter admitted he would try to push back if a team said he would play only one side of the ball.

"Yeah, I would hope for them to let me go out there and earn the other position," he said. "But It's up to them, not me."

View photos from media sessions as some of the top prospects speak to reporters from the 2025 NFL Combine in Indianapolis.

Tyler Warren likes Theo Johnson (and Jeremy Shockey)

Tyler Warren, ranked as the fifth overall prospect in Jeremiah's top 50, will make it three consecutive years for Penn State producing a tight end in the draft (and four out of five years). The Giants are part of that trend, taking Theo Johnson in the fourth round in 2024.

Sure, he may be biased, but Warren listed his former teammate among the top five tight ends in the NFL. The others are George Kittle, Travis Kelce, Pat Freiermuth (another Penn State product), and Brenton Strange (surprise, surprise, another former Nittany Lion).

"When I got to Penn State I wasn't a fully developed tight end yet," Warren said. "I had to wait my turn and learn from the guys in front of me, understanding I was not at the point I needed to be in order to play and contribute and trusting the process. Everybody's looks different. Mine took a few years until I got into the flow of college football. But Theo came in when he was playing his freshman year. We had a great relationship. All around college you're going to see guys play right away and see guys take a few years before they really get rolling."

On Johnson, Warren added: "We have some similarities and we have some differences. Theo is as athletic a tight end as you'll find. Runs really great routes and is really a fast guy. He might be a little higher up on that scale and I do a little more of everything. He helped me out and I can't say enough good things about what he's meant to me through my process."

Johnson isn't the only Giants tight end that Warren admires. This summer, he watched film of Jeremy Shockey and liked what he saw.

"The way he kind of played and his mentality running the ball," Warren said, "[it's] something I kind of liked and tried to do a little bit this year."

A native of Mechanicsville, Va., Warren wears No. 44 because of Hall of Famer John Riggins, who ran for 104 touchdowns in 14 seasons with the New York Jets and Washington Redskins.

"When I was younger, my dad put on John Riggins' film and said, 'This is how I want you to run the ball.'"

Will Johnson not participating at combine, but 'film talks a lot'

In terms of prospects who play on only one side of the ball, Will Johnson is in the running for the first cornerback taken in the draft. The former Michigan standout missed the second half of his final season with turf toe. Johnson said he is "all good" now but will not participate in drills at the combine.

"There never was a decision to sit out," Johnson said. "I physically couldn't cut, couldn't play, couldn't be out there. So, yeah, I did everything I could every day to try to get back. I was there with my teammates in meetings and at practice trying to still be very involved, but just never physically could play."

Johnson added: "I always feel like I've got something to prove to myself, that I'm the best and that all my hard work is worth it. I'm not participating here but at some point I will, and I feel like the film talks a lot too."

Jahdae Barron 'most efficient' playing all four DB roles

Labeled as a "Swiss Army Knife" and ranked as the ninth overall prospect by Jeremiah, Texas' Jahdae Barron is also eyeing the title as the first cornerback taken. The 2024 Jim Thorpe Award winner thinks his versatility puts him over the top.

"I'm definitely confident in zone and man," he said. "I played man in the slot. I played man even in our zone coverage. Our Cover 3 was a Match 3. We matched a lot of red lights [quick passes], so that's how I had a lot of PBUs on red lights. I'm most definitely confident in my ability. I'm the most efficient and most consistent DB in playing all four roles. I played dime, corner, safety and nickel. Having that in my bag and knowing I can be moved around and to benefit anybody's team I know that will help.

NFL salary cap set at record high for 2025

With free agency opening in less than two weeks, the NFL set the 2025 salary cap at $279.2 million per club. That is another record-high number after teams operated with $255.4 million in 2024.

"We have the resources to improve the roster," general manager Joe Schoen said Tuesday at the NFL Scouting Combine. "And that's what is exciting about this time of the year."

Schoen, who also holds the No. 3 pick in the draft, said the Giants are having free agent conversations this week in Indianapolis. Starters Greg Van Roten, Darius Slayton and Jason Pinnock are set to become unrestricted free agents.

"Two weeks from now, the roster will look different," he said.

In terms of the most important position in sports, the Giants will "look under every rock" for a quarterback. If they draft a young QB, Schoen would like to pair him with a veteran to show him how to be a pro.

"We're going to look at all options," Schoen said. "We're going to look at all options. It's the most important position in football. We need to look through free agency, trades, draft, whatever it is, and we need better play out of the position."

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