Transcripts

Chop Robinson – April 26, 2024 Download PDF version

Friday, April 26, 2024

LB Chop Robinson

(Why don’t you take us through the last several hours since we last spoke to you. I can imagine it’s been a little busy for you.) – “After I got the call, honestly just celebrated with my family, my close ones, my loved ones. I just spent time with them, enjoyed every single second of it, listening to music and just hanging around, spending that quality time with them. Then woke up this morning, got on the flight to Miami, enjoying this weather. Walking around meeting everybody, meeting all the coaches and just enjoying this journey, that’s it.”

(So you actually slept?) – “I slept on the plane. I slept on the plane. I didn’t sleep the whole night. Once I got to the airport and got on the plane, I instantly went to sleep though.”

(When you get here and you’re seeing the facilities for the first time, what’s going through your mind knowing that all of that hard work, dreams come true, and here you are at an NFL facility with the Miami Dolphins?) – “It’s crazy. I’ve been working for this since I was five years old. I’ve been playing football my whole life. Putting everything that I worked for – I put in all the work, I sacrificed a lot of things to get here. It’s just the first step. Once you get here, you got to stay here. So I’m ready to put the work in.”

(Have you talked to any of your new teammates yet? Have they reached out to you?) – “Yeah, I talked to Jaelan Phillips earlier today. I met Bradley Chubb earlier today, too. Those are some guys I’ll be able to take some things from their games and add them on to mine so I can be an elite player.”

(Your fellow Nittany Lion T Olumuyiwa Fashanu is going to the Jets. What do you think about possibly facing off against him for years to come in the AFC East?) – “It’s going to great, just like practice. One on ones, everything we did together. I think it would be another day at practice, going against Olu (Fashanu) in a game.”

(We talked about the four sacks, but you’re incredibly disruptive. Good win rate, good pressure rate, quarterback pressures, tackles for loss. Talk to me about being disruptive in both the run and the pass game, how are you able to be disruptive and what does that do for the team?) – “Honestly, for me, I just feel like that’s me doing my job. I feel like everybody on defense, if all 11 people do their job, you’re causing disruption as a whole defense. If every man is doing their job, then the defense is doing what they are supposed to do.”

(Your skillset, the first step. Tell me about when did you first discover that? Was that 6-years-old, 5-years5old, junior high? How do you use it to your advantage?) – “I would say I discovered it in middle school. I was playing Pop Warner, and I was playing d-tackle. I was just getting off the ball so fast that I was able to just run around the offensive linemen, and that’s when I realized I had some good speed on the edge, especially for my size. That’s when I started to realize that, and I just kept working on it throughout my career.”

(Your hands, tell me about your hands and how you use that to your advantage?) – “Since I’m not the most lengthiest guy, but I have quick hands, I’m quick to react when hands are thrown in my face. So just being able to use my hands, my speed and my bend is something that is really good for my game, because I’m so fast and being able to use my hands is just very disruptive.”

(You have been comped to LB Micah Parsons. I don’t think you crossed paths with him. He was in the draft once you transferred over?) – “Yeah, I think he was 2020, the COVID year. So he was COVID year draft, but when he was coming back to Penn State, I was still talking to him here and there.”

(Is there more to the connection with him coming back? How many times did you interact with him and things like that?) – “We interacted probably like 10 times. Every single time he came back, we talked. We’d just chat. I talked to him before the Combine, asking him about the process, about interviews and everything. He gave me some advice, so we talk here and there.”

(You mentioned earlier about the sacrifices you made to get here. Can you elaborate on that? What are some of those sacrifices?) – “Honestly, just being away from my family. First, I went to Maryland my freshman year which is home, then I went to Penn State. That was my first time really being away from my family, just not partying or anything, just staying true to myself, staying inside, being a homebody, and focusing on what I wanted to do and chase my dreams and get to the next level. So sacrificing those things is the biggest thing for me.”

(You had the 4.48 40-yard dash at the Combine, which I think was tied for seventh all time among defensive ends at the Combine. Your 10’8 broad jump was the best by a defensive end at the Combine. What do those numbers mean to you having that place and again, how does that translate onto the field toward being disruptive?) – “I feel like that 10’8 broad jump shows the explosiveness I have, especially with my first step. Just jumping out like that, being able to get off the ball and show that not only doing that at the Combine results, but I can do it also on tape. So just doing that from the game and then doing that at the Combine just shows that I can do it on tape, too.”

(Where do those athletic traits come from? Is that all natural? Were you a track guy? How did the speed and all of that stuff come about?) – “I would say it’s all natural. I feel like me and my brothers were always fast, but I was able to adapt to it.”

(What’s the next order of business for you? You’ve toured the facilities. Are you trying to find a place where to be? What’s next for you to explore the city as well?) – “I wish I had an answer for you. (laughter) I don’t know what’s next to come. I’m just taking it one day at a time.”

(One guy you could probably ask is Manny Diaz, he was a head coach at University of Miami. I actually covered him when he was with the Hurricanes. Can you tell us something you’ve learned from him in your time at Penn State having him?) – “I’d just say the hard work and mindset he has. No matter what, no matter how you’re feeling, no matter how tired you are, he just always wants you to go out there and give you everything you’ve got and just push yourself to reach limits that you think you can’t get past. That’s something I picked up from him. So I was just able to learn from him, listen to him, be coachable and it helped me get to where I am today.”

(Have you picked a number yet?) – “No, not yet. I haven’t.”

(Do you have one in mind?) – “Of course, 44. But I don’t know who has 44 or if it’s open. I haven’t really looked at it yet.”

(You mentioned yesterday being inspired after losing a brother and a sister. Can you tell us about that and just the inspiration that you have and motivation you have to accomplish whatever you can for them?) – “Losing my two siblings, I knew no matter what adversity was thrown my way, nothing could make me feel worse than me losing my two siblings. I always look at that as a positive thing, just coming out there, give everything I got in what I do and just keep me motivated, because I know no matter how I’m feeling or what’s thrown my way, I can face it. Because I faced something that a lot of people would’ve been broke down, but I looked at is as a positive thing.”

(If you’re comfortable sharing, just where were you when each occurred? I think you were in the first grade when you lost one and was in freshman year of high school?) – “Yeah, I was in first grade when I lost my sister. I was actually in my room when I found out that it happened. My mom was just telling me she went to sleep, and I didn’t understand because I was so young. But I was a freshman when I lost my older brother. I was actually playing a game and then I heard my mom screaming when they came in and told her, so I ran upstairs. Seeing the tears and heard the news – I’m doing it for them two. They keep me motivated every single day, that’s who I’m doing it for.”

(We’ve seen different numbers on how many siblings you have. Can you set the record straight?) – “I’ve got nine siblings. So it’s ten of us – it’s six boys and four girls.”

(What was it like growing up in a family that big?) – “It was crazy. It was always fun though. You could never be bored; you were always bothering another sibling. The one thing (was) you’ve got to get to the kitchen table as fast as you can, because sometimes people would have to eat on the stairs if you don’t make it to the kitchen table. (laughter)

(Is that where you got your first step?) – “Basically, yeah. Yep. (laughter)

(What order are you in – what number?) – “So I’m third youngest. I have two younger siblings and the rest are older.”

(Tell us about – your chain glistening in the lights. Any special meaning to it?) – “Yeah, so it has my name and then it has the axe, which is my sack celebration that I use. I basically find the detail and put it in there, put it in the mix.”

(Did your siblings tell you anything when all this happened? What was the first thing they told you when you got signed here?) – “I mean, they were just telling me they were proud of me, because they know how much work I’ve put into this, how focused I stayed and how much sacrifice I took. They were just so proud of me. They shed tears, and that’s what made me cry also. It was just a great experience.”

(At what age and what level did you know getting here to the NFL was a possibility?) – “I would say in middle school, I figured out. I knew with the speed I had and me playing defensive end at such a young age and running around guys in that speed, I just knew I could take it somewhere. So I just took it seriously since I figured that out in middle school and it’s been that ever since.”

(Were you a chubby kid in middle school age?) – “(laughter) No, when I was in middle school, that’s when I started to slim out. I was chubby only when I was born, for real.”

(Is that where the nickname comes from?) – “Yeah, when I was born, I was 14 pounds, and then it was ‘Pork Chop’ as my nickname. Got older, slimmed down, took the ‘Pork’ out, kept the ‘Chop.’”

(Were you always a lineman? Offense, defensive line growing up?) – “Yeah, my first position I played was center, then after that I played defensive end.”

(So you liked it?) – “Yeah, I love it.”

(Has this all sunken in? Are you still in that mind of, “Wow this is really happening?” Or is it down to business, let’s go?) – “I’m kind of at both right now. Of course I’m soaking it all in because it’s a dream come true. But I know once the day is over with, it’s time to get to work once I get here. I just have been on both waves, both ways.”

(How much time have you spent, probably not a ton since you just arrived, but how much time have you possibly spent with Head Coach Mike McDaniel and Defensive Coordinator Anthony Weaver?) – “I spent a lot of time with them. As soon as I walked in and saw them, we were just chatting about how he sees me as a player. He had me on his radar for a very long time and how he liked getting to know me as a person and hearing all the good things about me. So I spent a lot of time with him, like 30 minutes, since I got here.”

(Are you talking about Head Coach Mike McDaniel or Defensive Coordinator Anthony Weaver?) – “Both of them.”

(Defensive Coordinator Anthony Weaver has a good track record of developing defensive linemen, edge rushers. So what do you think he can do for you and your game?) – “Honestly, I feel like the things he can do is just bring more cheat codes that I have, more things to my toolbox. There’s things that a lot of people say that I don’t have. I feel like I know I’ve been working on it and I feel like he can elevate my game even more.”

Chris Grier and Mike McDaniel – April 25, 2024 Download PDF version

Thursday, April 25, 2024

General Manager Chris Grier and Head Coach Mike McDaniel

Chris Grier:

(Why LB Chop Robinson?) – “He was a player that we identified early that we liked. We spent some time with him throughout the whole process and watching him work with the coaches and the scouts, he was someone we felt could impact our team and had a lot of traits we liked as a person and a player, which was important to us. So for us, the opportunity for us to get him, we couldn’t pass up. We were very excited – the defensive coaches, scouts, ownership, all of us were fired up we could get him.”

(What traits are you particularly intrigued by?) – “The one part is he plays hard. He plays his ass off, and that’s what we like. Then obviously the athletic traits and what he has, you see the first step quickness, the explosion, his ability to bend and do stuff. He’s done a lot of good things in college. We think with our coaching staff and his work ethic, we think he can even take it to another level. We’re very excited to have him.”

(I know you hate when we bring this up but his stat numbers from college don’t exactly jump off the page. What do you attribute the disconnect between the stat numbers and the actual ability for him to play?) – “Since you guys have known me over the years, we’ve talked about the stats part. For us, it’s an important part, but we’ve always talked about the ability to disrupt the passer. His disruption stuff numbers are all very high. For us, working through the analytics, watching him and what he does and contributes, sacks people always want to – the guy that comes to mind for me would be Danielle Hunter had four career sacks coming out of college, and he’s become a really good player in this league. I’m not putting that pressure on him to be Danielle Hunter, but it’s not just him; there are other players throughout the league that if you look at what their college numbers are compared to how they’ve had success in the pros – we think a lot of traits and the things you see on film translate. He has things he has to work on. He knows that. And the exciting part is the kid, and who he is, his work ethic, how much he loves ball and his toughness. We’re excited to work with him and we think he has a really good chance to be a really good player.”

Mike McDaniel:

(Mike McDaniel once told us that edge rusher is your favorite position in football, so really it is a true to form pick, I guess?) – “Absolutely. The coolest thing about the opportunity that we had at that pick is that if you have a player contributing in pass rush, those are things that you feel very fortunate to not pass up. As passing games become more and more of a focus, those players are a really, really big part of the driving force of your defense. To double down on Chris (Grier)’s point –if you’re more used to receivers, we’re not just drafting the guy with the highest amount of production goes first or next. I’m not sure if anyone can even rattle off the order of the production of the players. Disrupting the passer, there are a lot of compounding variables to a sack, whether a quarterback sees it and holds onto it or not. But disrupting the passer and taking the rhythm off the pass game, that’s a stat for him but it’s also for teammates and production comes off of that too. It’s exciting to not have to block him.”

Chris Grier:

(How close were you to making a trade?) – “We were active on the phones; I’ll just say that. So I don’t know how close we got, but we were active probably through the backend of the draft.”

(How close did the board fall that you guys had set up to what actually happened in Round 1?) – “It was pretty close. (laughter) We were sitting there, there were a couple players at the end we were excited for, so we were active even trying to get back in to get another one here in the late first.”

(There was a stretch that seven picks before you guys were on the clock, it seemed like every single one of those guys would have made sense for you. I’m not going to ask you how LB Chop Robinson compared to them, but were you kind of sweating, “Hey, player after player after player that might be a good fit here are going. Are we going to get our guy?”) – “It’s not sweat. It’s just Chop (Robinson) was someone that we identified and thought he might be there. If he wasn’t, there were other players we liked there as well. But he was our targeted player, so for us, we’re very excited to have him.”

Chris Grier:

(You guys went through some terrible luck with edge rushers at the end of last year, including your top two guys who were lost for the season. How much, if at all, did that play into selecting LB Chop Robinson?) – “No, I mean obviously you always look at your roster for what it is, but for us it was, like we’ve talked about, just adding the best players in the draft at that point. He was rated as one of the top players in this draft for us, so adding him, especially rushing the passer in this league with all the great quarterbacks and the skill, the ability to rush with four and not have to blitz every down and stuff, that creates an advantage for the defense. So for us, he was a player that we had in high regard with high grades, for us to add him, we were again very excited to have him.”

Mike McDaniel:

(Is there a scenario where you see LB Chop Robinson, LB Jaelan Phillips and LB Bradley Chubb on the field at the same time? Or do you imagine more of a rotation? I see Head Coach Mike McDaniel looks like he’s in the kitchen right now.) – “All scenarios are alive. I think it’s key to remember, man that team, ‘They just had too many pass rushers, that was their problem,’ that’s never been said. So I think that’s the common denominator, is you know that you’re adding to your team, you feel great about that and you let the players kind of set the orchestration of all the multiple things that you can do. I know our coordinator is not afraid of outside the box, so he might be playing corner, who knows?”

Chris Grier:

(To that point you had mentioned that Defensive Coordinator Anthony Weaver had brought visuals to you about some of the players you guys added in free agency. I was curious his involvement in this process and kind of how he brought his interest in LB Chop Robinson to you guys?) – “It’s been very collaborative and you’ve always heard us talk about it; that’s important because you can’t just have whether it’s just scouts or just coaches saying, ‘This is our guy.’ It’s working together, working through it, whether you see players the same or differently. And for us the collaboration, working through it with not just (Anthony) Weaver but Ryan Crow, the outside linebackers coach, was fantastic and the whole defensive staff as well as the scouts. So we meet individually, we meet as groups, and so we spend a lot of time working through it because it’s an important pick for us. So it was cool working with ‘Weav’ (Anthony Weaver) and the guys and the new guys here and seeing the work ethic. We were presented a packet the other day on Chop which was fantastic that (Ryan) Crow put together for us. So it was very collaborative and it was exciting and really enjoyed it.”

Mike McDaniel:

(On the scale of raw to polished, where do you view LB Chop Robinson’s skillset and toolbox?) – “’Rawlished’? (laughter) I couldn’t help it. I’m sorry.”

Chris Grier:

“His testing numbers are elite and you see all the tools, the things he can do. But is he a finished product? No. And I think he’d probably admit that to you as well, and not many players who come into the league are. So we think he has obviously the get off and speed that everyone talks about as kind of rare and his athletic tools. So I think again for us, he still has a runway to keep improving, but the fact that the guy works hard and has a tremendous motor and toughness to him which gives us really excitement to think he’ll reach his peak of ability that we think he can hit.”

(Do you now go into Day 2 with a focus on o-line, maybe d-tackle with the trenches?) – “I think for us we’ll get together here tomorrow. We’ll go home tonight and then we’ll get together in the morning and look at the board and see who’s up there and kind of put the plan together, but again, it’s taking the best player. Not just roster but whoever the best player is, too, so down where we’re picking, we’ll probably need to see who falls to us and then we’ll see if we’ll get aggressive to go up and get somebody.”

Mike McDaniel:

(How does it feel to finally have that first-round pick under your belt?) – “This is awesome. We should do this more often. (laughter) What was really cool is just knowing that your – just from the organization standpoint and the personnel and coaching staff – having understanding that the assets are real but they’re limited and the focus for preparation for all the different scenarios. I could feel just overall there was a deep dive on every level to be as thorough as possible. I think what was exciting for all of us is the conviction that came out and the vision and the extensive process that we went through and to have the opportunity to add to our football team a guy that has plenty of room to grow, but I think from all departments, we were very, very convicted that he can be productive and help the entirety of the defense while growing and that’s a key component for us, which we talk about disruption, disrupting the passer and all of those things. I think that’s a really cool thing to be able to do, and I hope all first rounds go like they went today because we feel very, very convicted and pumped for the football team.”

Chris Grier:

(In the first round, you had some unexpected events. Six of the first 12 selections were quarterbacks and I think the first 14 were offensive players. What happens in the draft room? Are there phone calls? Are you consulting with other people here? Are there new possibilities? What happens in the draft room?) – “It’s like everything. You do your homework and you talk to a bunch of people. So for us, we had a pretty good idea that five were going to go before our pick, and we were told the possibility of six. So we were kind of working through it. So when you do your homework and work through people and even just digging through our own analytics and going through everything, for us, it wasn’t really a surprise. The phone calls all at that point were really coming into us about people trying to move up to our spot. It was relatively quiet. We had about four or five teams that were trying to move into our spot and as the board kept falling to us, which we thought it would, like you said it kind of fell to where we had it, at that point we decided to stay where we were because the offers weren’t enticing enough for us to move.”

(Did you have any inclination to move up or was 21 kind of where you guys were going to pick?) – “No. As the board was falling, like you said, there were multiple players there that we liked at 21.”

(Just to make sure I heard you correctly earlier, you said that you were on the phone trying to trade back into the first round?) – “Yes.”

(Without a third or fourth rounder, there is a 103-pick drought between your second-round pick and your fifth-round pick. What’s the level of urgency to get back into one of those middle rounds?) – “Again, as the board falls and the players – you never want to get desperate in doing things and moving around. But if opportunities arise, we’ll take a shot and move around.”

(You had mentioned early on about getting to know LB Chop Robinson as a person as well as a player. What stands out to you both in terms of Chop as a person?) – “Really, just getting to know him and who he is as a person, just talking through some of the things that he’s been through in his life and seeing how he’s come out, and just listening to people talk about his character, just in terms of how he loves football and the passion and how he plays and his work ethic and his drive. His whole focus is football. He loves football. He wants to be great. And I think you guys saw his clip of when we talked to him on the phone, he was so excited. He’s ready to come play right now. Just when you meet kids like that who are genuine and you understand that they truly love football and they want to be great and they know that it doesn’t come easy and they’re going to have to work, that gives him a chance to be the player that everyone thinks he is. Again, we’re very excited.”

(You told us last year that we were more worried about the offensive line than maybe you were. I’m just curious 12 months later, you went pass rusher over o-line. OL Graham Barton and others were available at No. 21. What’s your level of confidence right now with where the o-line is?) – “We were talking about that coming in. Like you said last year, it was this and just the level of what (Offensive Line) Coach (Butch) Barry had done with the offensive line, we still think those guys will keep improving, and the job they did last year with how we were moving the ball and scoring and stuff. So we’re very excited. Again, the draft is not over. There’s always still free agency to add pieces to come in. We’re excited with the guys we have in the room. We added a couple of guys through free agency and we’ll keep looking at it, but we’re excited with the guys in the room.”

Mike McDaniel:

(So are you kind of saying that offensive line is a position that we continue to be over-obsessed about that you’re not really that stressed about?) – “We love your passion. (laughter) There’s a lot of good players available. We didn’t feel like there’s any sort of – you try to go into the draft, so Chris and I both share the firm belief that you position yourself as best as you can to take the best available player and allow these players to kind of shape your team. I think it comes off as we’re dismissing, and it’s quite the contrary. We have a really good orchestration of talent evaluation and coaching. With that, we have a room of passionate guys that we know are going to develop. You can only pick one guy and depending on the value relative to the class and historically what produces in the NFL, you take your shot when you recognize the opportunity for your team to get better. I think it’s more of a compliment of the development. I think the one thing you can say is there’s a history of guys getting better and you can understand how people, especially well-informed reporters and fans – if you look at a picture of a player last year, well, part of the thing that our mantra is, is if you’re signing up as a Dolphin, we’re going to invest and develop you. So what you saw last year, our bottom line we’re expecting as coaches and players is that’s a different guy the next time you see him. There’s a lot of positions. There’s a lot of players. I think when guys are continuing to develop, sometimes it can come off like – we’re investing. It’s just in a way of in-house commitment and making sure that we get the right guys that want to develop and we get the right developers.

Chris Grier:

(In college, LB Chop Robinson obviously played some linebacker, some defensive end. Do you see him as a stand-up linebacker? Do you see him as a hand-in-the-ground end? Or both in this scheme that you have?) – “I think it’s some of the versatility that we like. You see it when you watch him. He rushes kind of all over. Inside, he’s over the center, he’s two-point, three-point. So that versatility is what drew us to him initially.”

Chop Robinson – April 25, 2024 Download PDF version

Thursday, April 25, 2024

LB Chop Robinson

(I was curious, what was that conversation like? What was that phone call like with General Manager Chris Grier when he told you that you were going to be the No. 21 pick tonight?) – “It was just a quick call about ball, choosing me. He was talking about the defense I’ll be put in and everything like that, and how he was getting to know me more as a person and everything and how he had a really good feel for me. So I’m honestly just blessed and happy to be a Dolphin.”

(How much contact did you have with the Dolphins throughout the pre-draft process?) – “I had a lot of contact. I talked to them at the Combine. I talked with them the day before Pro Day, so we were honestly keeping in touch from the Combine to the Pro Day.”

(There are no questions whatsoever about your athletic ability which you showed off at the Combine, but the sack numbers maybe did not reflect that while you were at Penn State. How would you address that situation and what’s your confidence level that this kind of clicks sooner rather than later?) – “For me, it was just being inconsistent with my hands. I know I had the speed and the bend, but sometimes I forget to use my hands. But that’s something I’ve been working on this whole offseason, and I feel very confident because I’ve been working on this so much repeatedly and I know it’s going to be natural when it comes time to put my hands to use.”

(What do you think about going into a situation where you’re working in with LB Jaelan Phillips and LB Bradley Chubb on the edge and LB Shaq Barrett as well?) – “I feel like that’s going to be a great situation for me – come in there, learn from those guys, compete every day, being able to take things from them and take it to my game and vice versa. So I think it’ll be a great thing for me.”

(What all do you know about the city of Miami, about the Dolphins organization, about the fans and just how excited are you to come to Miami?) – “I know a lot of guys on the team in Miami – of course everybody wants to win, everybody is chasing greatness and that’s what I want to chase, so I feel like it’s a great fit for me. I know it’s beautiful weather in Miami. I don’t know much about the city because I’ve never been that way, but I know I’ll have a great time there just enjoying with my teammates and being part of the team.”

(To what extent do you think your game and your athleticism is comparable to LB Micah Parsons?) – “I would say just the speed and the bend that we both have. Micah (Parsons) has the speed. He ran a fast 40 (-yard dash). He plays like it. I have the speed. Micah also has a great bend. He’s able to bend around a big offensive lineman and turn tight corners, and I feel like that’s a part of my game that we both have.”

(Can you take us through this process? Obviously, this is the culmination of a long, hard journey for you of work – you’re finally an NFL player. Can you take us through what this means and maybe the most important things you went throughout this process?) – “Honestly, it means everything. I’ve been playing football since I was five years old … (inaudible) So sacrificing everything, not partying and just being who I am, working out every day, just being consistent with my (inaudible) and staying focused. I made a lot of sacrifices, being away from my family. Also losing my older brother and older sister has been my motivation to stay focused and just keep grinding, so I never stop. I’m proud to be where I wanted to be, but the work doesn’t stop.”

(Defensive Coordinator Anthony Weaver is somebody who has a lot of packages. He’s a creative defensive coordinator. How can you be used? Can you be used inside, outside? What ways can you be used and how much have you talked to Anthony Weaver about being used in different ways?) – “We haven’t talked much about it, but I know the defense he uses is the same thing we used at Penn State with putting me at nose tackle, on the edge. So I feel like that’s a good thing for me because I’m kind of familiar with already doing that, so it’ll be second nature when I’m able to go out there and do it.”

(How much do you know about the city of Miami? Have you ever been here? And what do you think about coming here as your first pro destination?) – “I think it’s going to be great. Not too far from home, but far from home far enough. Enjoy the warm weather, and just get to work and work every day. The work doesn’t change, so I’ll be able to stay true to who I am.”

(Question of the day first is what’s the first chop that you’re going to have as a celebration, a lamb chop or a pork chop?) – “(laughter) I would say the pork chop. That’s the original name, so I’ll say a pork chop.”

(How excited is your family to come to South Florida to watch you play some games?) – “They are very excited. They know they don’t have to be in the cold to come watch me, especially when I was at Penn State. So now they can come and enjoy some beautiful weather and also enjoy watching me play.”

(You’ve played up against a lot of great offensive linemen, a lot of great quarterbacks in college as well, QB C.J. Stroud is now in the NFL. Who’s one player that you would like to face up against and ultimately beat one on one?) – “Honestly, everybody who comes across me. Whoever lines up in front of me, that’s the guy I feel like that’s the guys who’s trying to take food off my plate, so whoever lines up in front of me, I’m trying to beat.”

Braxton Berrios – April 23, 2024 Download PDF version

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

WR Braxton Berrios

(What do you think of the new kickoff rules? What have you and Special Teams Coordinator Danny Crossman said to each other about it since it was implemented?) – “First and foremost, I love it. I think it brings back a really exciting play in a game where it was kind of eliminated the last few years, at least especially early in the seasons in the warmer conditions. So it’s exciting and yeah, just been bouncing off each other, strategies, what we think might happen, what we can see happening, what we think is the best way to go about it. I think Week 1 is going to be – that opening kickoff of the season is going to be very interesting all across the board. But yeah, just talking through it and seeing what we feel is best.”

(You’re a guy who has had bigger receiving numbers than you had last season. I’m wondering if you would go to Head Coach Mike McDaniel this offseason, or if there was a time you went to him last offseason, maybe just kind of nudged him and said, “Hey Mike, I can do more,” maybe we need more? Have you done that or will you do that?) – “No, I think everybody is out there doing everything they can. I think with this offense, with as much talent as there is across the board, I think everybody is grown men enough to realize you have one ball. And really all we can do across the board is when the ball comes to you, when that op – when you get it – make good on it. So no, I don’t foresee that happening.”

(What are your thoughts – and I’m not trying to pit you against the offense – your thoughts on having a more prominent No. 3 receiver whether it’s the slot receiver or the tight end, whether it’s you, TE Durham Smythe, TE Jonnu Smith? Would that help the offense? Is that necessary for the offense do you think?) – “I think that’s a question for up top and not for me. I think like I said, we have so many good elite skill guys that I think we can mix in a lot of different ways and fill ‘voids’ where we need them to, but I don’t think that’s for me to judge there.”

(I wanted to ask you based on the social media video that we saw – obviously you and the missus were very excited about rejoining the Dolphins – so I wanted to ask you just how important was it for you to be able to come back here to South Florida? Also if you could take us through what the free agency process was like?) – “The free agency process is funny, because it’s different every year and this one was just a lot of back and forth with my agent figuring things out. I’m probably not going to give up too much of what it was and what teams were involved and all of that, but at the end of the day, absolutely ecstatic to be back here. That was the hope and I’m really happy that it worked out.”

(You touched on earlier the new kickoff rule and how you and Special Teams Coordinator Danny Crossman kind of batted things around on what it might look like. I’ve got to tell you, when I looked at a chart, it almost made me dizzy trying to figure out how wild it looks. What’s your best guess on how it’s going to look and what might you be able to do to maximize your skills?) – “My best guess is just that, a guess. Like I said, opening kickoff Week 1, there’s going to be a lot of trial and error. I don’t think we’ll see much in preseason. I think everybody is going to pop it up and let your cover guys cover and see who can block on the return team. And I think Week 1 is going to be – everybody’s going to think they have the ace of cards up their sleeves. So I really truly don’t know what to expect. Obviously the zone is a lot tighter and I expect there’s going to be – there’s not as much drops on the kickoff return team. You’re going to get on guys earlier, and the cover team, they’re going to have to make decisions quicker and with way less of a running head start. So I think the good thing is, I think the holes will open up and they’ll be earlier and quicker. I think for the guys that hit them, I think it’ll be a good thing.”

(It’s draft weekend, I wanted to see your memories of your draft weekend?) – “Yeah, absolutely. Draft weekend was awesome. I hosted a bunch of my family down here actually in Miami. We rented out a house for the weekend, had everybody coming in from really all parts – my mom and them from North Carolina and my dad and them from Texas. Yeah, it was a really, really fun weekend, really cool experience obviously and something that you only get once.”

(Are you a draft follower as a player? Are you one that really engages? And if so, who do you want the Dolphins to take on Thursday?) – “No, I want them to take whoever they feel is best for this team. I really don’t. It’s kind of like college recruiting these days. It’s just a different world, and I think our focus is on who’s here right now. Obviously when we draft guys that they see fit, they’ll be inducted in a few weeks and we’ll get rolling with them. But no, I have full confidence they’ll do the best for the team.”

(I missed your first response to the kickoff rules change question so forgive me if you’ve kind of answered this part, but have you looked at or watched any of the UFL, XFL or USFL games or clips on YouTube?) – “Yeah, we have. That’s obviously the starting point for trying to figure out what’s going to happen. So in our meetings and on my own just been going through them and again, seeing what other teams did, what worked, what didn’t, trying to guess what the kickoff team is going to do to – I know the yardage is a little bit different as well. One returner, two returners, all those things are questions, but yeah, absolutely. You can try to look at that and get the best gauge. And at the end of the day, it’s kind of going to be what the kickoff team is trying to do and how do you respond to that.”

(The kickoff return percentages were much higher. How do you feel about that if in fact it happens in the NFL?) – “I think that’s what I opened (this) with – I’m very excited. The fact that I think it’s one of the most exciting plays in a game and over the last few years was definitely getting weaned out a little bit. The kickers can kick it through and you may get a little big higher percentage of returns later in the December, January, the playoffs because the weather gets colder and the ball doesn’t fly as far. But really for being down in Miami, those December, January – it’s kind of all the same. So I’m very excited, because I think it’s a big part of the game and a part that I love to do, so yeah, I want those percentages as high as possible.”

(I know everything obviously is gameplan-based and you have WR Tyreek Hill and WR Jaylen Waddle as studs playing opposite you, but your number of targets – 16 in the first four weeks, 17 after that. You’re a total team guy so you’re fine with anything, but Head Coach Mike McDaniel is obviously a communicator. Did he tell you late in the season or in your postseason meeting, “Look, I’d like to get you more involved in the passing game if we can more so than we did the final 13 weeks last year”?) – “I think that’s a question for him, and I’m obviously not going to be the one to divulge anything that we talk about in-house. I didn’t know that stat so that’s news to me, and at the end of the day – it’s kind of what I answered earlier as well – we have so many guys on this team that are elite, especially on the skill position, on the offensive skill position at that. So it becomes one of those things, it’s at the end of the day, it’s a numbers game, right. You have all these guys to feed. You have the running backs, the tight ends and obviously the two absolute elite receivers and sometimes it happens that way. And so, really that’s last year and I’m looking forward to this year.”

(Speaking of the offense, obviously some of those guys are heading into Year 3 with Head Coach Mike McDaniel and QB Tua Tagovailoa at the helm. I’m curious from your perspective, from your lens, how much different is it coming back this spring for offseason programs when you already have the year’s worth of tape and practices and you know the offense? Just how much different is it from last year to now?) – “It’s a lot. You’re learning everything for the second time. You’re getting introduced to it the second time and all the things that you harped on last OTAs, last camp and then throughout the season are just being repeated and drilled in a little bit better. So when you go out there the first day to run routes, you’re not asking which foot is up and which step is it or how deep is it. You kind of already know and from the top-down, that helps everything go more smoothly, and then more so than that, you can really get into the details of the offense, of the play, of exactly what we’re trying to do, exactly the timing. If you’re trying to pull somebody away for somebody else, you really, really get into the little details of the offense when everybody knows the basics. So I think it helps tremendously move us along throughout the spring and then camp.”

Teair Tart – April 23, 2024 Download PDF version

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

DT Teair Tart

(Agent Drew Rosenhaus said on his television segment that you had higher money offers elsewhere. What made you want to come home to Miami? Also before you signed did you and Head Coach Mike McDaniel, or Defensive Coordinator Anthony Weaver, or Defensive Line Coach Austin Clark have conversations? Did any of those talks get you excited about the role they have in mind for you?) – “I think the biggest reason why I signed back here is it’s obviously a familiar area for me. I went to college here. It’s just really great to be back in a comfortable environment, a familiar environment, a family environment. Yeah, I had a couple of conversations, but it was really through Drew (Rosenhaus). It really gave off a really good family environment here, and it was something I thought I could definitely benefit from.”

(Did they bring you in for a workout or visit first? Or was it simply a contract offer you accepted?) – “It was just a contract offer.”

(When you had those conversations early on about joining the Dolphins, was a role discussed? What do you think you can bring? How many positions on the defensive line can you play, and do you think they are going to use you all over the place?) – “There was no role discussed. Everything is earned in this league, as we all know. There was no role discussed, but they said that I will have a fair opportunity to come in here and play if I worked hard, showed up and participated, and that’s what I plan on doing.”

(Is there a spot on the defensive line that you think you’re best at?) – “I think I’m a football player first. So wherever they feel comfortable is where I’m comfortable. I’m here to help the team win – whatever it takes.”

(I know you played all over the defensive line for the Titans, but a lot of 0-technique and 1-technique. At 300 pounds, it’s pretty impressive how you’re able to hold up against some of those bigger guys in the middle. I’m curious, what is the key at that size to be able to hold up as a 0- and 1-technique?) – “I think the technique – you always rely on your technique, even through adversity, fatigue and whatever. So technique is the key thing, having a good pad level, using your hands properly definitely can give you an advantage and just being strong in there. You need a lot of nasty to play some D-line, so that don’t hurt at all either.”

(Your ex-teammate, now current teammate OL Aaron Brewer talks about being nasty on the pivot as well. I’m curious what you learned from all those practices going against up him in Tennessee?) – “Competitive, that’s my boy. Me and ‘Brew’ (Aaron Brewer) go back since my rookie year, both undrafted. Just competitive, man. Even from our rookie year, I remember some hard-fought battles, definitely some fires, some bickering, but that’s my dog, man. When you get competitive in there, it just makes you want to go a lot harder. When you do that, you just keep finding ways to improve.”

(In the NFL, interior defensive linemen are recording a lot more sacks nowadays. That’s not your thing, you are a very effective run stopper. Statistically eight tackles for loss last year and I think one sack, which means you’re effective at what you do. Do you ever feel the pressure to get more sacks, either for financial reasons or that’s because a lot of other defensive linemen are doing that nowadays?) – “I think a lot of people get confused from sacks. Everybody just thinks if you don’t get sacks, you’re not a good pass rusher, which isn’t true at all. There’s a lot of ways to affect the quarterback – obviously pressures, disrupting timing, hits, pressing the pocket, making the quarterback feel uncomfortable. Those are ways that actually translates into getting other people sacks and actually makes you an effective rusher. Getting sacks just doesn’t tell the whole story. If you watch my stats, I had almost 30 pressures a couple of years ago. Obviously, the pass rushing ability is there, just closing out on the opportunities you can get as a pass rusher on those rush downs can definitely benefit, but sacks are hard to come by in this league. Like you said, the numbers have increased. I think that contributes to the coaching and the players, definitely the IQ and the scheming up.”

(Regarding guards that you’ve faced, it seems like guards are a lot taller now a days. You see guys at 6’4, 6’5. A lot of offensive tackles shift inside. I’m wondering do you have an advantage on leverage when you play against a taller guard? Is it hard for them to keep low? Does that give you at your height and your size an advantage?) – “I think that’s all just dependent on the player honestly. I can’t really speak on every player in the NFL that’s taller than me. I guess it depends on the player and the type of player you’re going up against. Some people aren’t really good at bending their hips, so I think it would be harder for them to get as low as me. I think that’s all (individual).”

(In Tennessee, things went left for you and you got your release. Can you tell us what happened in that scenario before you ended up in Houston where things just went south?) – “I think I just needed a culture change. I think it was just better to not be a part of that situation anymore. Me personally, I just felt like I needed a culture change, honestly.”

(So you requested your release?) – “Yes.”

(Having played at FIU, what do you remember about the heat and humidity during training camp workouts in Miami and what you’re in for coming back here?) – “I know one thing – you’re going to be in shape. (laughter) I think the biggest thing I remember from college is – we don’t have a dome. So we didn’t have a dome, and I remember the second week of camp, the turf got to like 148 degrees. Y’all probably already heard this plenty of times. So the glue started melting on the cleats and stuff, we’re just sliding across. We kept spraying ice-cold water on the cleats to keep the glue from melting. That was one thing I really remember. But it’s football camp, no matter where you’re at it’s going to be tough.”

(I wanted to expand on that high tackle-for-loss rate last season that you had. How does one get to the ball carrier in the backfield that often?) – “Playing within the scheme and sometimes just taking the opportunity when it presents itself. It can definitely benefit you.”

(Some of the things coming out of Tennessee really cut to the heart of things like work ethic, which I’m sure is a sensitive area for any football player. You never want to hear that questioned. What do you want Dolphins fans to know about your work ethic, about never taking plays off and things like that?) – “I was in Tennessee four years. I never had work ethic questions or work ethic issues until I asked for a release – but coming from a (Bill) Belichick situation, you’ve got to play hard, you’ve got to practice hard – which I found really weird. I think in a lot of things, you can expect me to be competitive, spirited. I’m not afraid to show emotion out there on the field and really get after it and compete. I’m really just excited for a new beginning honestly. Tennessee is the past. I was at Houston after that, that’s the past. I’m here in Miami now. I’m excited to get to know the fans. I’m excited to play hard for this organization. I’m in awe just to be here, man. It’s a blessing, honestly.”

(When you talk about showing emotions and being excited about big plays, DT Chrisitan Wilkins just left here and he was known for some of his wild celebrations. Can we expect something like that from you whenever there is a big play made by the defense or a touchdown by the offense?) – “I’m always going to celebrate with my teammates.”

(I have not met another Teair before. What is the background on the name?) – “There’s not really much of a background on the name, honestly. I think my aunt picked out the name and my mom just ran with it; I really don’t know. There’s really not much behind it, honestly.”

(Have you ever met another Teair?) – “No, I have not. (laughter) I have not.”

(The 76ers, they have some complaints about the officiating about the series with the Knicks. I happen to be a Knicks fan, and I know you’re from Philly. Are you a 76ers person? What do you think of the officiating?) – “Philly is getting robbed. (laughter) I think it’s terrible. (laughter).

(I wanted to ask you about Defensive Coordinator Anthony Weaver. How much research did you do on him and the scheme before you decided to become the seventh defensive tackle added to the team this offseason?) – “Obviously when you’re looking into teams, you’re looking at who’s on the roster, what type of scheme they will be running. Really not to get too much into it, I just thought I would be a good fit here for what I believe they’re going to have on. I could play in multiple schemes as you’ve seen. I’ve played at Tennessee, obviously Houston was a different scheme. I felt really comfortable coming here and being a part of what they’ve got.”

(In Tennessee, you were teammates with LB David Long Jr. Wondering your thoughts on reuniting with him and what it was like being a teammate of him?) – “Dawg, he’s a dawg. David Long is all dawg, all gas all the time. I love playing with him. David gets those double teams off of you quick, man. He’s a hard worker. He’s passionate, very passionate about what he does. I missed him in Tennessee a lot, man. That was my boy, man, for sure. It’s a blessing to be here in Miami playing with him again. I know one of the first things I said, ’51!’ That’s just my boy, he plays hard.”

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