Chop Robinson – April 26, 2024
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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.”