Camryn Bynum has been everywhere this spring: starting safety, slot cornerback or at the line of scrimmage for a morphing Vikings defense.
Hours after the Vikings' final spring practice last week, he also planned to board a flight back to the Philippines.
That's where Bynum, 24, will continue a busy offseason before reporting to training camp in late July. Aside from keeping hold of a starting job with the Vikings, Bynum got married on a white-sand beach in the Philippines in March. Two days after the nuptials, his bride, Lalaine Bynum, and family members joined him in a second year of relief efforts providing food, water and necessities to areas in the country devastated by typhoons.
"That was really our honeymoon," Bynum said. "We were able to see the same families we saw last year [after Tropical Storm Megi in April 2022]. We followed up with them and brought them whatever they needed this time around. A lot of them were able to rebuild homes and get a new neighborhood built after their neighborhoods were wiped out with the landslides and typhoons."
He started the Bynum Faith Foundation last summer after seeing firsthand the damage in the Philippines, where his family roots run to a great grandmother who grew up in one of the cities where they provided battery-operated fans, canned goods, rice and water.
"That's where I realized we have a lot of family out there affected," said Bynum, whose mother, Jennifer, is a third-generation Filipino-American. "It was a crazy coincidence. It was all God. I really found out after. It was a really cool, kind of full-circle moment."
Bynum proudly wears his Filipino heritage and the country's flag, which hangs in his locker when it's not draped around his shoulders like after his game-sealing interception against the Jets in December. He said he spent most of this offseason, "three to four months," in the Philippines, where another coincidence kept him ready for the Vikings.
The training company Bynum used to prepare for the 2021 NFL draft, Michael Johnson Performance, had a facility in the Philippines for Olympic athletes.