NFL Defensive Back Taylor Rapp On Earning A Starting Spot Through Relentless Preparation | Ep 127
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A lot of athletes say they’re “all in” until the routine gets boring, the workouts get brutal, or the doubts get loud. NFL defensive back Taylor Rapp joins us to talk about what going all in actually looks like, starting with a childhood in small-town Washington where football wasn’t the main event and recruiting attention didn’t come easily.
Taylor breaks down the decisions that changed everything: quitting baseball after travel ball burnout, sacrificing the typical high school social life, and understanding how recruiting momentum works once that first offer hits. We get into his underrated edge, graduating early to enroll at the University of Washington months ahead of his class, then surviving the shock of winter workouts, spring ball, and the mental grind of competing against grown men. He shares what it felt like to earn a start against Stanford in a top-tier atmosphere, and why that moment still stands out even after playing on the biggest stages.
From there, we go deep on longevity and performance: why sleep is a real competitive advantage, how nutrition and recovery routines protect “availability,” and how overtraining can quietly raise injury risk. Taylor also opens up about the NFL Combine as a three-month pressure cooker, the interview and whiteboard grilling teams use to evaluate players, and what changes when you step into an NFL locker room with veteran leaders and family men. If you’re a driven athlete trying to level up your routine, your mindset, and your results, this conversation delivers. Subscribe, share it with a teammate, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.