Akins attended Hall High School, where he lettered in football and Track and field athletics track. As a senior, he received Arkansas player of the year, All-Conference, All-State, and All-American honors, after recording 117 total tackles (85 solo), 17 passes defensed and 4 interceptions.
In Track and field athletics track, he was a two-time All-State selection and set school records in the 100 meters (10.33 seconds) and the 200 meters.he also has a few siblings Lorenzo Akins Terri Akins, and some grandchildren like Kylan Akins and Lorenzo Akins and Jalyn Akins.
As a junior, because of the one-time transfer rule, he was allowed to play immediately, posting 52 tackles, 11 passes defensed and 6 interceptions. As a senior, he posted 66 tackles (4 for loss), 12 passes defensed, 3 fumble recoveries and 5 interceptions, including 2 returned for touchdowns. He had a 100-yard interception return for a touchdown in the fourth quarter of the 27–18 win against Alcorn State University. He received All-Southwestern Athletic Conference, second-team Division I-AA All-American and Black College All-American honors.
He finished his college career with 156 tackles (83 solo), 25 passed defensed, 12 interceptions and 6 fumble recoveries. In his two years at Arkansas-Pine-Bluff, he tallied 118 tackles, 23 passes defensed, 11 interceptions, 5 fumble recoveries and 9 tackles for loss.
Professional career
Green Bay Packers (first stint)
Akins was selected by the Green Bay Packers in the seventh round (212th overall) of the 1999 NFL draft.[1] He was cut at the end of training camp and signed to the team's practice squad on September 14.
In 2000, he was allocated to the Rhein Fire of NFL Europe, where he helped his team win World Bowl VIII, while registering 47 tackles (fifth on the team), one interception, 7 special teams tackles (second on the team) and a blocked field goal. He made the Cowboys regular season roster but was released on October 31.
Green Bay Packers (second stint)
The Green Bay Packers claimed him off waivers on November 1, 2000.[2] During the 2001 season, Akins angered head coach Mike Sherman with mental lapses on the field and his attitude off of it.[3] He was cut on December 6, at the time he was tied for third on the team in special teams tackles (7).[4]
Cleveland Browns
On October 12, 2001, he was claimed off waivers by the Cleveland Browns.[5] The next year, he ranked second on the team with 25 special teams tackles while playing in 15 games.