JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Ahead of this season of gratitude, Jacksonville Jaguars players and coaches unveiled new footwear, customized with artwork representing the individual causes they support, for the NFL’s 10th annual ‘My Cause My Cleats’ initiative. The new cleats will be worn in this week’s game against the Jaguars’ AFC South Division rival, the Tennessee Titans, Sunday, Nov. 30 in Nashville.

More than 40 Jaguars players and 15 coaches are participating in this season’s initiative which celebrates the passion they have for off-the-field causes and organizations. This year’s chosen causes range from military appreciation, disease prevention and awareness, youth development and others. To design the cleats, players and coaches collaborated with artists for their cause, and following this week’s game, many will be donated to raise funds for their charity through NFL Auction or directly to the organization they support.

For a complete list of participating players and high resolution imagery of select shoe designs, view them on the Jaguars’ My Cause My Cleats website.

Several cleat artists were commissioned to provide the footwear including long-time Jaguars partners Soles by Sir, Joe Castro and Dillion DeJesus.

For DE Josh Hines-Allen, however, giving back to the Jacksonville community introduced him to his cleat artist, Zende T. Randolph. Randolph, a 17-year old visual artist and native of nearby OUTEAST neighborhood, met Hines-Allen in 2024 when his family received a Thanksgiving basket from the Jaguars player’s Four One For All Foundation event, where they discussed Randolph’s artwork. When the time came for Hines-Allen’s 2025 cleats to be designed, Randolph got the call to put his artistry to the cleat with his design representing the Foundation and its effort to bring awareness and end childhood cancer honoring Wesley Allen’s journey. “Through these cleats, I wanted to show that every step tells a story, and together, they say that hope moves with us — on the field, in our communities, and in every family fighting childhood cancer,” said Randolph.