Stamford Advocate

Cashman believes bad luck behind him

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FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — Blake Cashman’s right forearm tells his story in black ink.

Tattooed images and words are sources of inspiratio­n, with the most recent addition providing a constant reminder:

“Always Bet On Yourself.”

The New York Jets linebacker got that one this past offseason and it’s especially fitting as he pushes through his third NFL training camp following two injury-marred seasons.

“I keep telling myself my bad luck ran out,” Cashman told The Associated Press after a recent practice, “and only good things will come moving forward.”

To some, the 25-year-old Cashman is a forgotten man, already phased out in their minds and replaced by newer, younger players. He’s competing for a role and a roster spot, but embraces the doubters.

It’s what he has been doing all his life.

“I felt like ever since I graduated high school,“Cashman said, “I was left out until I wasn’t.”

And that’s a big reason the former Minnesota star is even here.

He wasn’t the best, fastest or most talented. But he’s resilient, tough and determined. Cashman’s blue-collar approach on the field made him a fan favorite with the Golden Gophers. Same thing when he was drafted in the fifth round by the Jets in 2019.

Plenty of negativity has come along the way, much of it beyond his control. That includes the people who laugh and say he’s brittle and injury-prone.

“You can’t let that get to you,” he said. “I’m somebody that’s, I’m relentless. I block out the negativity. And to get by, even if you have to put on a fake smile, that’s what you’ve got to do.”

Cashman would ideally

like his play to do all the talking — and silence the naysayers. But he has had trouble staying on the field to do so.

“It has been upsetting,” Cashman acknowledg­ed. “I would be lying if I said it hadn’t gotten me down at times and had me frustrated. But those things are just another roadblock, another challenge where you’ve just got to overcome. And I’ve never been someone to quit on myself.”

Even if seemingly everyone else has.

He had shoulder issues in college at Minnesota and then another landed him on injured reserve as a rookie with the Jets. Cashman appeared poised to be a major contributo­r last season as a fill-in for C.J. Mosley, who opted out because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, but injured his groin during punt coverage when he his ankle was stepped on.

He came back from that, but ended up back on IR a few weeks later with a hamstring injury — relegated

to being a spectator as New York trudged through a 2-14 season.

“I had those thoughts like, ‘Am I made for this?’ ” Cashman said. “I felt like every single opportunit­y I was getting, I was getting knocked back. And I kept asking, ‘Why me? Why me?’

“But every time I’d go to that, I guess, dark place, I’d have to remind myself, I just said, ‘That ain’t me. Like, you have to remain positive. This is not how this is going to end. I refuse to let an injury like this, a soft tissue, be the end of my playing.’ ”

So he dedicated himself to getting into even better shape this offseason, arriving to camp a chiseled 237 pounds.

“There’s no question this is the biggest and strongest I’ve been in my life,” he said.

Cashman spent hours at the Fischer Institute in Tempe, Arizona, as well as ETS Performanc­e in Minnesota, lifting weights five days a week instead of four.

 ?? Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images ?? Jets linebacker Blake Cashman lines up against the Jaguars in 2019 in Jasksonvil­le.
Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images Jets linebacker Blake Cashman lines up against the Jaguars in 2019 in Jasksonvil­le.

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