Former Corona Centennial star Camryn Bynum giving back to community
For teenagers dreaming of playing in the NFL, former Corona Centennial high defensive back Camryn Bynum has first-hand knowledge of what it takes. It involves more than a star ranking or posting videos on social media.
βItβs a simple formula to make it to where you want to go,β said Bynum, who recently signed a $60-million contract with the Indianapolis Colts and will be holding a youth camp at his alma mater on May 23.
βItβs just hard to stay on the right track and do every single thing to the best of your ability and consistently do everything the right way,β he said. βYou play a few good years of high school ball, youβll get a chance to play college ball. If you become a starter, maybe one or two years and play well enough, youβll get a chance at the league, whether you get drafted in the first round, like everybody wants to, or you youβre an undrafted free agent. If you get your foot in the door, thereβs hundreds of stories about people getting in.β
Bynum says thereβs a big sacrifice that many teenagers are unwilling to accept. Itβs called avoiding distractions at all costs. At least it worked for him. He didnβt start on varsity until his junior year. He became a four-year starter at Cal, was a fourth-round draft pick of the Vikings, who immediately told him heβs switching from cornerback to safety. He was ready for anything.
βI think the best way to reach the point where you want to go is to stay distraction free,β he said. βStay working towards that goal and donβt let anything come in between. Thatβs been the biggest part of my journey, my faith, and being able to just trust that God will put me exactly where I need to be, but also putting in the work myself knowing that if I want to play college ball, I need to keep my grades up in high school, stay away from all the distractions, the parties, the drinking, the drugs, like a lot of people unfortunately fall into.β
His first major test was dealing with adversity. He started on JSerraβs freshman team, then transferred back home to Centennial. He said he was fifth string on the JV team. βI was literally not playing,β he said. He gave serious consideration to leaving. But Centennial coach Matt Logan and others made it clear he had to earn his playing time.
(Paul Sancya / Associated Press)
βCoach Logan, heβs like, βNo, you gotta work. You gotta work, figure it out and grind. Youβre good. Youβre plenty good enough, but you have to earn your spot.β And I remember a few other coaches telling me, βItβs all up to you, if you want to put the work in and you want to compete, This is a competitive program, you got to figure out how to earn your playing time.ββ
Bynum went to a private coach and started training morning and night. He became stronger, faster and more confident. As a junior, he became a standout. He still uses that same private coach, Jordan Brown, in his training.
Bynum, born to a Filipino mother, now lives in the offseason with his Filipino wife and young daughter on the outskirts of Manila.
Asked if Manila traffic is worse than Los Angeles traffic, he said, βTheyβre both pretty bad. Theyβre just bad in different ways.β
His first youth camp will help raise funds for his foundation that is supporting causes such as teaching flag football in the Philippines. The camp will be for youth and high school-age players and provide a vehicle for exposure along with football development.
βWe want it to be a learning environment and a competitive environment to help kids get recruited and be seen more,β Bynum said.
Just remember the path is simple but the road blocks are many to overcome.