“It says they have a lot of confidence in me, just because of the position that it is,” Banks said. “It’s left tackle, your quarterback can’t see in the back of his head so it’s not like he can see every rep that’s coming from that way. [It] shows how much they trust in me and how much they believe in my talents to go out there and protect [quarterback Spencer Rattler’s] backside.”

In large part Banks’ development is owed to his father, Kelvin Sr.

Kelvin Sr. played guard and center at Aldine High in Houston, and played at Midwestern State University in Wichita Falls, Tex. “He was all right as a player. He wasn’t that good,” Kelvin Jr. said, laughing. “Nah, he was a good tutor. He actually went out there and did the stuff that he [was] trying to teach me. He taught me that ability to have an aggressive mindset, but also understand that it has to be controlled on the field as well. He was a great tutor.”

It helped that Kelvin Sr. worked out with the Dallas Cowboys — including Pro Football Hall of Fame guard Larry Allen — when the Cowboys held training camp at Midwestern State from 1998-2001. Reportedly, former Cowboys guard Larry Allen recorded a 700-pound bench press and 900-pound squat and arguably was the strongest man in the NFL at the time. “I got to train under Larry Allen,” Kelvin Sr. said. “I watched him lift all that weight.”

And he told his son that if he was going to play the sport, the goal was to be the best at it. “We’re going to perfect the craft,” Kelvin Sr. said. “That’s what I always told him — you have to perfect your craft in order to succeed and achieve the goals you want. I think it soaked in.”

But not without a little pushback.

Kelvin Jr. played quarterback and some tight end in little league. His 6-foot-3 father played at 370 pounds in college; a look at his dad and an affinity for snack cakes told Kelvin Jr. that he’d grow out of playing quarterback.

“But in my mind, I was like, ‘I’m not playing O-line,'” Kelvin Jr. said. “I really didn’t take O-line seriously until going into my 9th grade year in high school.”

“He bucked at it at first,” Kelvin Sr. said. “We tried everything. He tried quarterback, he tried tight end, he tried defensive end. I was an offensive lineman, so he was kind of bucking the system just because of that. But he ended up loving the offensive tackle spot and we just went from there.”