Before Devon Allen debuts as an Eagles wide receiver, hell run at the Penn Relays – The Philadelphia Inquirer

Posted: April 22, 2022 at 4:35 am

Devon Allens introduction to Eagles fans wont come at Lincoln Financial Field. Instead, the Birds new wide receiver will get his welcome to the city at a stadium the team used to call home.

Allen will run in the mens 110-meter hurdles at the Penn Relays next weekend, right after he arrives in town for the Eagles first days of OTAs. The 27-year-old will get to show off his other sports passion, one that earned him trips to the 2016 and 2021 Olympics after running track and playing football at the University of Oregon.

So far, the city and the fans have shown a lot of love, Allen said Thursday during a news conference at Franklin Field. Ive had a pretty good track career, I still have a lot of things I want to accomplish, and I love track and field. But my first love has always been football, and the Philadelphia Eagles [have] given me that chance to go after that again and contribute and help the Eagles win a Super Bowl in the next few years.

The Eagles signed Allen earlier this month after he worked out for scouts at the Ducks pro day a few weeks ago. Currently the worlds No. 1-ranked mens 110-meter hurdler, he plans to run in the World Athletics Championships in July coincidentally at Oregons track stadium before returning to Philadelphia for Eagles training camp.

READ MORE: Eagles sign WR Devon Allen, a former Olympic hurdler who played football at Oregon

Allen said he grew up watching the Penn Relays on TV, and still has vivid memories of Usain Bolts legendary 2010 visit that drew Franklin Fields biggest crowd in decades.

Now that Ive got the whole city of Philly behind me, it feels like home to go to the Penn Relays for the first time, Allen said.

Of course, Eagles fans will want to know how hell transition between the gridiron and the track. He took the question head-on.

Im not going to say its like riding a bike, because its not easy, but its something Ive done so much and so often that I just need a refresher, he said. Once my body gets used to doing it again, I think Im going to have no problem going back and forth in terms of going to football when the track season is over. This season specifically is probably the fastest and strongest Ive been since being a pro.

Although there wont be a traditional USA vs. the World competition at the first Penn Relays in three years, there will be some traditional star power.

The American contingent will be headlined by track legend Allyson Felix, in her last visit to Franklin Field before she retires at the end of the year; Philadelphias Aje Wilson, a two-time Olympian who just won the World Indoor Championships 800-meter title; Penn alum Nia Akins, and Trentons Athing Mu, who won an electric gold in the 800 in Tokyo last summer.

READ MORE: Usain Bolt, Carl Lewis and 125 years of thrills: Penn Relays documentary celebrates its history

Ive gotten to come to the Penn Relays so many years in a bunch of different vantage points, said Wilson, who grew up in Neptune, N.J., and went to college at Temple. In high school, it was always a big deal driving here from Jersey wed always have our matching pants, wed make special T-shirts to come. And we loved going to the vendors village and just interacting with other athletes, and also getting to mix it up with the college athletes, asking them for advice.

Wilson has kept competing at the Relays as a pro, and noted that she even comes as a spectator in the years when she hasnt run.

Jamaicas delegation will be led by Natoya Goule, her countrys record-holder in the indoor and outdoor 800; and Omar McLeod, who won 110 hurdles gold at the 2016 Olympics and 2017 World Championships. He and Allen have competed against each other for years, and are good friends.

Remarkably, it will be Mus first time running at the Relays. She never did in college at Texas A&M, and she never did in high school because she didnt run for Trenton Central only in AAU events for the Trenton Track Club.

I think its going to be super-loud, Wilson said. To be able to have someone that people have come to recognize her performance at the Olympics was incredible I think it will just be exciting. Im sure shell be overwhelmed a bit, but any time you get that type of love from people youre running in front of, its amazing.

She also offered a local insiders advice for Allen.

If you hear people saying, Wooooo! thats the Penn Relays call to know youre about to get walked down, she said to laughter in the room. Youre going to have a lot of the Jamaican crowd because Omars in the race going loud, going hard. So just be mindful of that noise and if you hear it, run fast so its not you that gets caught.

Allen said hell be ready.

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Before Devon Allen debuts as an Eagles wide receiver, hell run at the Penn Relays - The Philadelphia Inquirer

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