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Posts from the ‘ACC’ Category

27
Apr
132_NEW WhitleyVT collage

133 : NFL Pro Interview : Eddie Whitley

Eddie Whitley played college football at Virginia Tech University. During his time (2008-2011) at VT, he played in 54 games, and started 28 total. He started his career playing Special Teams, and then moved into the starting free safety role. He totaled 189 tackles, six tackles for loss, four interceptions, twelve pass deflections, and forced three fumbles. He has declared entry for the 2012 NFL Draft, and is projected to either be a seventh round or undrafted free agent. He could become a key Special Teamer.

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14
Apr
125_NEW CarrollMIAMI collage

125 : NFL Pro Interview : Nolan Carroll

Nolan Carroll played college football at the University of Maryland. He played in 38 games, with six starts during his career. He totaled 61 tackles, and 9 pass breakups and he started only two games during his senior season because of a severe injury that he suffered. He entered the 2010 NFL Draft, and was selected in the 5th round, 145th overall by the Miami Dolphins. In his two years with the Dolphins, he has totaled 35 tackles, six pass deflections, and two interceptions. He has been a stud as a gunner on Special Teams. Click ‘Read More’ to check out the interview.

10
Apr
124_NEW RoseNBAMA collage

124 : NFL Draft Interview : Daron Rose

Daron Rose went to Florida State University and played in two games in 2006 (freshman year). And in 2007, he started eleven out of thirteen games. In 2008, he had to sit out from playing football and then in 2009, he attended the ASA Institute in Brooklyn, New York. He transferred to Northern Alabama in 2010 and started six games during his junior year. And last year, he started all 12 games in the season and didn’t surrender one sack. He declared for the 2012 NFL Draft, and is considered a sleeper offensive tackle. Click ‘Read More’ to check out the full interview.

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20
Jan
114_NEW TerryTB collage

114 : NFL Pro Interview : Jeb Terry

Jeb Terry played college football at the University of North Carolina and was an All-ACC selection during his senior year. He entered the 2004 NFL Draft, and was drafted in the 5th round by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He played in 30 games throughout his 3-year career with the Buccaneers. He was also a member of the 49ers briefly. He started an iPhone/Android app called Gridiron Grunts. (For more info click here)

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26
Oct
100_NEW SearcyTHEU

100 : NFL Pro Interview : Leon Searcy Jr.

Leon Searcy played college football at the University of Miami. He is one of few players who can claim that he won three National Championships in his collegiate career. He was drafted in the 1st round in the 1992 NFL Draft by the Steelers. He also played RT for the Jaguars, and retired after an 11 year career.

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14
Sep

15 : NFL Pro Interview : Darryl Tapp


Check out  Darryl Tapp’s website at www.dtapp.com

[NEW INTERVIEW as of 9/14/2011]

Strauss : How do you grade your preseason performance? 

Tapp : I will give my preseason performance a C. I am a hard grader first of all, and its my first year in this new scheme. I thought we were not as consistent as we would like to be on a day in-and-out basis, but that will come the more we practice. The lack of Organized Team Activities (OTAs) this offseason hurt us as far as learning the scheme and getting comfortable.

Strauss : What is it like to add Cullen Jenkins and Jason Babin to the defensive line?

Tapp : Cullen and Babs are huge additions to the defensive line. They both bring experience, intensity, and most importantly heart.

Strauss : What are your expectations for this season?

Tapp : I personally expect this defensive line to be the best in the league. We are a bunch of guys no one really wanted and we are out to prove we can play at a high level.

Strauss : What’s DL Coach, Jim Washburn like? 

Tapp : Coach Wash[burn] is unbelievable. Hall of Fame Dline coach in my eyes. He sees the game like players do and he breaks it down in a way that we can understand it. He is a Hard nosed, Rugged, motivator that always gets the most out of us. 

Strauss : What’s Defensive Coordinator, Juan Castillo like?

Tapp : Coach Juan [Castillo] is awesome. He is a coach to has alot of knowledge about the game. He has tons of energy and passion for coaching and its been pretty cool being lead by him.

[OLD INTERVIEW as of 5/15/2010]

Strauss :  Why do you make it important to connect to the fans?

Tapp : I make that an area of importance because the fans are special to me. I had great fans at Virginia Tech, then in Seattle, and now in Philly. I want the fans to know that I don’t take them for granted!

Strauss :  Who was your childhood star?

Tapp : My family was my childhood stars. I looked up to my Mom, my Dad, and my two older brothers.

Strauss :  If you could meet anyone in the world, who would it be and why?

Tapp : I look forward to meeting my Saviour the Lord Jesus Christ. No one is more important than him.

Strauss :  What is your favorite song to listen to before a game? What pumps you up?

Tapp : I don’t have a favorite song that I listen to before a game, because each game is different. I listen to all types of music from R&B, Rap, to Gospel.

Strauss :  What is your favorite movie of all time?

Tapp : Major Payne is my favorite movie

Strauss :  What is your favorite snack food?

Tapp : I love cookies!

Strauss :  What is your favorite type of pie?

Tapp : Sweet Potato Pie at Thanksgiving is my favorite.

Strauss :  What is your favorite TV-Show?

Tapp : My favorite TV show is the Cosby Show, classic tv.

Strauss :  What is your favorite meal?

Tapp : My favorite meal is anything my wife or mom makes.

Strauss :  What is your favorite video game?

Tapp : There is a tie between my favorite video games, God of War, NBA2k, and Madden.

Strauss :  What is the one thing you can’t leave your house without?

Tapp : The Bible.

Strauss :  How long have you played football?

Tapp : I have played football for 14 years.

Strauss :  Did you play any other sports in high school?

Tapp : I played football, basketball, ran track, in addition to playing soccer.

Strauss :  What is your favorite sport to play other than football?

Tapp : Soccer is my favorite sport to play other than football, it was my first love.

Strauss :  What was your favorite NFL team growing up?

Tapp : My favorite team was the Washington Redskins and it still is, except when we play them!

Strauss :  When did you realize that you were going to play football in college and in the NFL?

Tapp : My junior year I realized I was going to play football at the collegiate level and then, during my senior year in college I realized I was going to play in the NFL.

Strauss :  If you weren’t playing in the NFL, what would you want to do?

Tapp : I would be working for an athletic company designing commercials if the NFL was not in my future.

Strauss :  When did you see your first live NFL game?

Tapp : I have never seen a live NFL game before. I have only played in them. I always watched them on television though!

Strauss :  What is your favorite memory from VT?

Tapp : The best memories from Virginia Tech was scoring a touchdown in a rivalry game against University of Virginia in the snow and it my last home game at VT and I had three sacks, blocked a field goal, four quarterback hits, and caused a fumble.

Strauss :  How has choosing a number worked throughout your career?

Tapp : I had 55 since High School, and I am going through withdrawals now because I am not wearing it. It’s the only number I have really know until this year, and one day I will get it back.  I am now number 91.

Strauss :  What impact did your high school coach have on your football career?

Tapp : My high school coach had a major impact upon my career because high school is where I developed a passion to play football and he taught me the techniques and the skills need to play.

Strauss :  Describe the hardest change between the jump from high school to college.

Tapp : The hardest change between high school and college is the speed of the game. It gets a lot faster.

Strauss :  What impact did your college coach have on your professional career?

Tapp : My college coach had a tremendous impact because he saw the talent in me and offered me a college scholarship first and then, placed me in situations to be successful in the classroom and on the field.

Strauss :  What can you expect from playing D-1 football?

Tapp : You can expect to go to a great academic school and play top college programs and players every week.

Strauss :  Who was the hardest player for you to get past in college?

Tapp : D’Brickashaw Ferguson of University of Virginia, and now he’s on the Jets. He was the hardest collegiate player to get past. He is very athletic and very talented!

Strauss :  What’s the hardest workout for you to complete?

Tapp : Running Hills at Mt. Trashmore in Virginia during the offseason.

Strauss :  Describe the hardest change between the jump from college to the NFL.

Tapp : The hardest change between the jump from college to the NFL is the fact that you are no longer a student athlete, football is now my job and the way I provide for my family.

Strauss :  What was it like to train for the combine?

Tapp : Training for the combine was very intense!

Strauss :  What was your draft day experience like?

Tapp : My Draft day experience was a great one but felt so long. The draft started at noon and I got drafted finally in the second round at 8PM.

Strauss :  How has your game improved beyond your college years?

Tapp : I have gotten a lot smarter these past four years that I have been in the NFL. I have become a student of the game.

Strauss :  What is an experience you have had that changed your life?

Tapp : Every experience that I have had up to this point has cultivated my life.

Strauss :  How important has film been to your development? What do you look for when you watch film?

Tapp : Film study is what separates good players from the great ones. I look for offensive tendencies on formations and alignments, and I look to see what the individual player I will be up against like to do as far as strengths and weaknesses.

Strauss :  Who do you compare your game to? Why?

Tapp : I compare my game to Dwight Freeney, we are the same in weight and stature.

Strauss :  Could you have predicted how far football was going to carry you?

Tapp : I never would have expected football would expose me to many different opportunities.

Strauss :  What is your favorite quote?

Tapp : Proverbs 3:5 from the Bible, “Trust in the Lord with all thine heart and lean not on thine own understanding.”

Strauss :  For someone aspiring to play football in college and in the NFL, do you have any advice for them?

Tapp : Work hard in the classroom and on the field! Good things will come!

Strauss :  Thank you for your time.

Tapp : No Problem, Go Eagles!!!!!!!!!

10
Aug

03 : NFL Pro Interview : Carlton Powell

[UPDATED INTERVIEW AS OF 8/10/2011]

Strauss : How is camp going so far?

Powell : So far so good. I’m liking the atmosphere. Great coaches. Great teammates.

Strauss : What do you think of the Jets DL coach, Mark Carrier?

Powell : He’s awesome. He has a lot of experience. He’s played in the league before. It’s great to have him out there coaching us and helping us out.

Powell : What is something you are trying to get out of camp?

Right now, I’m just learning the system. I’m trying to take advantage of the reps I get and make sure they’re quality reps. I’m trying to show the coaches what I can do.

Strauss : On something, besides quickness, that he wants to work on during camp?

Powell : I definitely want to work on reading blocking schemes and getting off of blocks, and getting to the quarterback.

Strauss : What role do you see for yourself this year with the Jets?

Powell : Well, right now I’m just playing the support role. I’m doing what can to help the team out. If things change, I’m ready for any position that they want to put me in. I definitely want to help this team out. This is definitely a Championship caliber team, and I just want to be part of it.

[OLD INTERVIEW as of 04/09/2010]

Strauss : Who was your childhood star?

Powell : My childhood star was Mr. Brett Favre himself.

Strauss : If you could meet anyone in the world, who you have not met before, who would it be?

Powell : If I could meet anyone in the world it would be Alicia Keys, no reason necessary. LOL.

Strauss : Why do you make it important to connect to the fans?

Powell : I feel like in some cases I still am a fan so it’s not hard to relate to people when you are able to see where they are coming from.

Strauss : What was your favorite NFL team growing up?

Powell : Hands down, my favorite NFL team growing up the Green Bay Packers.

Strauss : What is your favorite movie of all time?

Powell : My Favorite Movie of all time is a toss up between Coming to America and Life.

Strauss :  What is your favorite TV-Show?

Powell : My Favorite TV Show is King of Queens.

Strauss : What is your favorite snack food?

Powell : My Favorite Snack Food is Andy Capps Hotfries.

Strauss : What is your favorite meal?

Powell : My favorite meal is pretty basic. A Porterhouse [Steak] Medium-Well, baked sweet potato, fried asparagus, and Strawberry cheesecake.

Strauss : What is your favorite video game?

Powell : Favorite Games: For Xbox 360- Call Of Duty Modern Warfare II and for PS3- Assassins Creed II and for Wii- Mario Kart

Strauss : How long have you played football?

Powell : I have been playing football since the 6th grade.

Strauss : Did you play any other sports in high school?

Powell : In high school, I participated in track (indoor and outdoor), wrestling, and basketball.

Strauss : What is your favorite sport to play other than football?

Powell : My favorite sport to play besides football would have to be basketball.  My most memorable moment would be the first time I beat my dad, thought I was the man then.

Strauss : At what age, did you realize that you were going to play football in college and in the NFL?

Powell : I was probably around 13 [years old] when my Dad’s friend started asking me what college team and NFL team I would play for, that’s when I spoke it into being and so far so good.

Strauss : If you weren’t playing in the NFL (or after retirement), what would you want to do?

Powell : My other career choices were becoming a pharmacist or physical therapist. But now, I’m getting into technology and want to do software engineering.

Strauss : When did you see your first live NFL game? Who played? Who won?

Powell : My first live NFL game was when the Denver Broncos played the Atlanta Falcons in Atlanta. Denver won 24-20 and I just remembered how weird it felt watching Matt Ryan out there because I played a lot of crucial games against him when he was at Boston College.

Strauss : What is your favorite memory from your attending college at Virginia Tech?

Powell : There are soo many good memories but 2 really stick out in my mind.

First, would be my first game I played in my red-shirt freshman year, against southern california (USC), a night game on Fed-Ex Field. It was amazing. Goosebumps the entire time, me, Chris Ellis, Vince Hall, Xavier Adibi, Duane Brown, Kory Robertson, Barry Booker, David Clowney, and Josh Hyman.  It was an epic night, I forced Leinhart to throw some bad passes and chased reggie bush around.

And secondly, our inaugural season in the ACC when we won the championship in Miami. Celebrated for at least an hour on the field, running up and down with the flags, Beamer had to come get us before the busses left.

Strauss : For someone aspiring to play football in the NFL, what’s the best advice for them?

Powell : Anyone aspiring to play D1 or in the NFL should first know that there is no such thing as working too hard, and must believe in themselves as well as have a good support network that will encourage them to be great.

Strauss : Thank you for your time.

Powell : Thank You, I hope this was informative to all the fans out there, Be Blessed…

27
Jul
94_NEW HorneSTL collage

94 : NFL Pro Interview : Tony Horne

Tony Horne played college football at Clemson. He entered the 1998 NFL Draft, but went undrafted. He signed with the St. Louis Rams. He won Super Bowl XXXIV as a KR. He was nominated to be a Special Teams Captain. He was traded to the Chiefs, but got injured and never played football for the rest of his life. Read more »

1
May
84_NEW REYCin collage

84 : NFL Pro Interview : Vincent Rey

Vincent Rey played college football at Duke University. He totaled 330 tackles, 28 tackles for a loss, 5.5 sacks, 3 interceptions, 3 fumble recoveries for TDs during his collegiate career. He entered the 2010 NFL Draft, but went undrafted. He signed with the Cincinnati Bengals and in 2011, he became a key producer on Special Teams. Read more »

26
Apr
83_NEW WilliamsUNC collage

83 : NFL Draft Interview : Deunta Williams

Deunta Williams played college football at University of North Carolina. He totaled 188 tackles and 12 interceptions during his collegiate career. He didn’t get to play during his senior season in college due to an NCAA rule violation. He entered the 2011 NFL Draft, but gave up his opportunity to play for a team due to an injury.

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5
Feb
65_NEW JonesNE collage

65 : NFL Pro Interview : Cedric Jones

Cedric Jones played college football at Duke University. He entered the 1982 NFL Draft, and was selected in the 3rd round by the New England Patriots. He was a huge role player and possession wide receiver for the Patriots. He played in Super Bowl XX, but lost. Throughout his NFL career, he had 191 receptions, 2703 yards, and 16 touchdowns. Read more »

27
Dec

56 : NFL Pro Interview : Leon Washington

If you want to download the audio interview with Leon Washington, right-click this link.


Follow Leon Washington on twitter at http://twitter.com/Leon_Washington

Follow Leon’s wife, Charity Washington on twitter at http://twitter.com/CharityLuvs

Announcement : Hello, my name is Max Strauss with http://prointerviews.org/, http://facebook.com/ProInterviews/, and http://twitter.com/ProInterviews/, and http://youtube.com/user/ProInterviews/. Please join all those, and become a part of ProInterviews. I’d like to welcome you to the interview with Leon Washington. Leon was a star at Florida State University for four years. He was drafted in the 4th round, by the New York Jets in the 2006 NFL Draft. He played with the New York Jets for the first four years of his career. He made the All-Pro and Pro Bowl team in 2008. However, he was traded during the 2010 NFL Draft to the Seattle Seahawks and has become their return specialist and situational running back. Before we get started with the interview, let’s listen to both audio clips from the game against the Chargers earlier the season. Then, we’ll get started with the interview! I Hope you enjoy the collages also!

Leon Washington Audio Clip 01 : Nate Kaeding kicking it off to Leon Washington–the return man for Seattle. And, Leon Washington’s got a lane. Leon Washington turning on the speed! Washington, he’s gone, touchdown Seahawks! 101 Yards!

Leon Washington Audio Clip 02 : And Washington will return this one from the one. Washington slowed down as he crosses the 20. And, stays on his feet, Leon Washington’s off to the races once again. Does he have the closing speed? Leon Washington is gone. Touchdown! 99 Yards! His second of the day!

Strauss : So, have you ever thought about joining twitter?

Washington : No. My wife has one. I never really thought about it. I have a Facebook page and I got on Facebook when it first came out when I was in college. So, it’s like, I know of it, and a bunch of players on it. I kind of like FaceBook… I might get on twitter one day, but I’ve never really thought about it. I might get on twitter but I don’t see players making posts once or twice a day, but it takes time, and I would probably only post once or twice a day.

Strauss : Who was your childhood star?

Washington : I wanted to be like Marshall Faulk. I adored the 28. In little league football, I wore 28. I always wanted to be like Marshall Faulk.

Strauss :  How long have you played football?

Washington : Organized football I started when I was ten years old. Since then, so eighteen years now.

Strauss : So, did you play any other sports in high school?

Washington : I played baseball also. I was a really good center fielder. I knew for sure I could have played in college. But, I could make the majors if I knew that if I could get enough coaching in college on how to hit the ball. But, I was a really good player defensively, in the outfield. I was a really good baserunner, I just couldn’t the ball well.

Strauss :  Do you have a favorite memory from any high school sport?

Washington : I would say baseball. My high school team was really bad. In my junior year, we went like 5 and 21 during the regular season. In Florida, everyone had a chance to go to a district tournament. and we ended up number 14 in the state, and winning the district championship. So, we were really bad. It was a huge upset to win the district championship! So, that was my favorite sports moment in high school.

Strauss : So, what was the transition like from high school to FSU?

Washington : For me, I think, that on the football field, playing football was a little different because the players were bigger and faster and stronger. College-wise, you had many responsibilities. You had to go to class, and you had to get up. It was a big challenge for me to be on my own and not having my mom and dad with me. So, that was the biggest challenge.

Strauss : Did you have a best friend at FSU?

Washington : Marc Simon. He was also my roommate, and the little league football quarterback. We were playing together since ten years old.

Strauss : Do you have a favorite memory from FSU?

Washington : A bunch of them. I would say my freshman year. I had a great game against University of Florida. I think I had two touchdowns, and 120 something, yards rushing. I think that would be my favorite moment. I would also say the whole college football atmosphere in Tallahassee at Florida State. I think we have the best college atmosphere of any football team in college.

Strauss : So, what about off the field, do you have a favorite memory?

Washington : I would say, Bobby Bowden’s Friday Speeches, and then we would play on Saturday. Bobby Bowden’s speeches are what got me through college, friday before the game.

Strauss : So, now going into professional, what was the most important thing you learned at FSU that helped you the most in the NFL?

Washington :  I think, becoming a better competitor. I think at FSU, some of the guys that generally were going to go to the National Football League. And, The competition helped me though.

Strauss : What is it hard to choose FSU? Did you have any other options?

Washington : Yeah, it was hard. I grew up a Gator fan. And, when I was coming out, Steve Spurrier was leaving. I wasn’t a big fan of their new coach, and then, I had fallen in love with Florida State.

Strauss : What was your whole draft day experience like?

Washington : I knew I was going to get drafted in the third or fourth round. So, I got drafted on the second day. I was with my family and friends, we had a lot of people chilling at the house. We didn’t do much. We just put the draft on pretty much.

Strauss : What were your emotions like?

Washington : First of all, I was like, ‘Wow, man! I grew up in Florida, I have a chance to go to New York. I was very excited about that.’ At the time, I get a chance to pick up some things from Curtis Martin, and it was really great. Really, really great actually.

Strauss : Now, you get drafted by the Jets, what was your first training camp like?

Washington : It was tough. The NFL is different… a lot of responsibility. It was tough to get in because the days get really long. And, we would have to focus in everyday. I had a tough time adjusting to that part of it. But after what I had gone through, it was tough. The mental aspect of the game was tough.

Strauss : What’s your favorite memory in the Jets?

Washington : It had to be that Miami game in 2006. We’re trying to get to the playoffs and I took a screen down there and got us down in field goal range. That is probably my best memory.

Strauss : What was the transition like from the Jets to the Seahawks?

Washington : It really wasn’t that bad. It definitely changed my life, having to pick up everything and move thousands of miles away. But, it was easier then I thought it would because the fans helped make me a feel at home. They really wanted me. In that respect, it was better than I thought it would be.

Strauss : So, what’s your favorite kickoff return ever, and can you take me through the play.

Washington : Oh Man, favorite kick off return ever…  I would probably say my first one with the Seahawks because there were so many great blocks on the play. When I caught the ball, I followed my lane, I see the hole, and Michael Robinson, the fullback, made a great block, and made sure to finish him off at the end. I did a great job of just going up and hitting the hole really fast. I made the kicker miss, and I just remember scoring the touchdown. That feeling… it was the loudest I ever have heard in a football stadium. I got to say that was my most favorite moment, I’ve had a bunch of kickoff returns, but that was a little different.

Strauss : Do you have a favorite punt return ever?

Washington : Yeah, I had one in Pittsburgh, I think in 2007. I ran one back to set up a field goal, in overtime. We  ended up winning the game. So, that would be it.

Strauss : You pride yourself on Special Teams, and have made a name for yourself through Special Teams, what’s your view on Special Teams? And, what have you brought to the Seahawks that they did not have before?

Washington : Well, first of all, I pride myself on being a football player. Speaking of pride, I have pride in putting good film on tape. I don’t want anyone looking at me and going, ‘Hey, he’s a sucker. He’s not trying hard.” I got a lot of pride in what I do. I want to be the best in what I do. And, secondly, if you’re a player, if you give Special Teams a chance, it could impact as the offensive and defensive plays. As much as a touchdown or an interception, you have a chance to change the game immediately. You also have a chance to regain momentum mentally. So, of all the plays, we can catch everyone’s attention by making a big play.

Strauss :  Who’s had the most impact on your career?

Washington : That’s a tough question, I’ve had so much help. I can’t pick out one person. So, honestly, I would say my faith in God. That right there is the truth, because often, I had a lot of tough times in my career. I kept my faith and trust in him, and it made me better.

Strauss : What is your favorite thing to do in your spare time not related to football?

Washington : Well, I have two little boys. So, I play with my boys when they get home. That’s what I do.

Strauss : So, do you have a nickname?

Washington : Some of the guys on Seattle call me, Jet Lee. I don’t know. I think when I return I had the Jets turned on, I was so fast, so they kept calling me Jet Lee.

Strauss : Have you ever thought about starting a foundation or charity?

Washington : I have, but I am little young. Even though I don’t have a foundation, I spend most of my time helping other foundations. Every year, I do a football camp. I host it in Connecticut every year.

Strauss : What’s an experience that changed your life?

Washington : I would say me breaking my leg, was a pretty bad experience. Not only was I called for not playing football, I was called that I would have to learn how to walk again, and that helped me appreciate the really small things in life.

Strauss : So, if you could describe yourself as any ice cream flavor, what would you be and why?

Washington : Ice cream flavor… It would probably be caramel!

Strauss : What is your favorite quote?

Washington :  I think Barry Sanders said, “To be what you’re not, you must do the things that others don’t want to do.”

Strauss :  For someone aspiring to play football in the NFL, do you have any advice for them?

Washington : To play in the National Football League, I would tell them that the best advice would be.. that quote. That’s what I just said. You definitely have to work hard. The NFL is not about the most talented person, I’m telling you. It’s for the guy that works the hardest.

Strauss : Thank you so much for your time Leon!

Washington : No problem dude, I want you to continue what you’re doing. Hit me up when you put it online!

Announcement : Thank you for listening to the interview with Leon Washington. I hope you enjoyed it. I hope you leave your comments below! Please continue to check out my website http://prointerviews.org/, “LIKE” the Facebook page at http://facebook.com/ProInterviews/, and follow me on twitter at http://twitter.com/ProInterviews/. Please subscribe and add me on YouTube at http://youtube.com/ProInterviews/ Thanks again for listening! Stay tuned for more interviews.

-> Here are the personal questions he answered. <-

Strauss : If you could meet anyone, who would it be and why?

Washington : Hmmm. I would probably say Martin Luther King. I would probably ask him what the secret is to becoming a great leader.

Strauss : If you weren’t playing in the NFL, what would you want to do?

Washington : If I wasn’t playing in the National Football League, I would probably be a biologist. I love everything about nature and everything about biology. I’m a big National Geographic / Discovery Channel fan. I love learning and study about the foundation of life. Something like that.

Strauss : What is your favorite TV Show?

Washington : Discovery Channel is probably my number one show. Basically the different informational channels, Discovery, National Geographic, and Planet Earth.

Strauss : What is your favorite movie?

Washington : Oh… Hm, I would probably say Shawshank Redemption. I like that long, settled down type of movie.

Strauss : What is your favorite type of pie?

Washington : Not pie, but cake, I love carrot cake.

Strauss : What would your last meal on earth be?

Washington : It would be… my wife’s Honey Baked Mustard Chicken. With a bottle of water or something.

3
Nov

46 : NFL Pro Interview : Mike Vick

Strauss : Why do you make it important to connect to your fans?

Vick : Without the fans, there would be no Mike Vick.

Strauss : If you could meet anyone, who would it be and why?

Vick : Martin Luther King because he was amazing.

Strauss : Who was your childhood star? Why?

Vick : Joe Montana – He was the man.

Strauss : What was your favorite NFL team growing up?

Vick : San Francisco 49ers.

Strauss : It’s time for personal questions. What is your favorite song to listen to before a game?

Vick : This year, the song is going to be, “Miss Me” by Drake and Lil’ Wayne.

Strauss : What is your favorite movie of all time?

Vick : North Dallas Forty, my high school coached co-starred in it back in the day

Strauss : What is your favorite snack food?

Vick : Starbursts.

Strauss : What is your favorite type of pie?

Vick : Sweet-Potato Pie.

Strauss : What is your favorite Ice cream flavor?

Vick : Vanilla Ice Cream.

Strauss : What is your favorite TV-Show?

Vick : Sports Center.

Strauss : What is your favorite meal?

Vick : Lasagna.

Strauss : What is your favorite video game?

Vick : Madden or Tiger Woods Golf.

Strauss : What was it like to be an NFL Madden cover athlete?

Vick : I grew up loving video games, so being on the cover of the hottest game out was crazy.

Strauss : Who is your favorite superhero?

Vick : Superman.

Strauss : What is the one thing you can’t leave your house without?

Vick : My iPhone.

Strauss : How long have you played football?

Vick : Since I was eight years old.

Strauss : Did you play any other sports in high school?

Vick : I also played basketball.

Strauss : When did you realize that you were going to play football as a career?

Vick : Either when I was fourteen or fifteen, but sometime when I was in the 9th grade.

Strauss : What is a non-traditional sport you play?

Vick : I love playing golf.

Strauss : What impact did your high school coach have on your college and professional career?

Vick : I wouldn’t be here, today, if it was not for Coach Tommy Reamon, he single-handedly change my life.

Strauss : If you weren’t playing in the NFL, what would you want to do?

Vick : I would play in the NBA.

Strauss : Why do you wear the number 7?

Vick : Because of John Elway, he was great.

Strauss : What is a favorite memory from Virginia Tech?

Vick :  All the love the fans gave me.

Strauss : What did you learn from playing football at Virginia Tech?

Vick : How to read a defense.

Strauss : What was the hardest challenge you faced in college?

Vick : The entire Florida State defense. They were always tough.

Strauss : What impact did your college coach have on your pro career?

Vick : They got me ready for the next level.

Strauss : What was it like to be the first overall pick in the 2001 NFL Draft?

Vick : It was a dream come true.

Strauss : What was your draft day experience like?

Vick : It was phenomenal. However, I actually knew for a while that I was going number one overall.

Strauss : When did you see your first live NFL game?

Vick : My first NFL game I saw was my first pre-season game.

Strauss : What is it like to be the first QB in NFL history to rush for 1,000 yards in a season and set an NFL record 8.4 yards per carry?

Vick : It was pretty sweet to make history and also to accomplish that.

Strauss : What was your favorite memory as a Falcon?

Vick : Definitely beating the Green Bay Packers in the playoffs.

Strauss : What was it like to be given another chance by the Eagles?

Vick : It was like God answering my prayers

Strauss : What is your favorite memory as an Eagle?

Vick : I am just excited and very thankful for a second chance.

Strauss : What is the important thing you developed throughout your career?

Vick : The ability to stay humble, and to learn from my mistakes.

Strauss : What was the best award you’ve received throughout your entire career?

Vick : Super Bowl Trophy coming this year!

Strauss : What do you want your career be remembered for?

Vick : A guy who made some mistakes, but bounced back better than ever.

Strauss : What was the best advice you received from your cousin, Aaron Brooks while you were growing up?

Vick : He basically just helped me by giving me a heads up on mostly everything.

Strauss : What is your nickname? Why?

Vick : “Ook” my aunt gave it to me when I was 5, its stuck ever since

Strauss : What is your favorite charity?

Vick : I like all charities that benefit people who need it.

Strauss : What is an experience that changed your life?

Vick : That’s easy, the whole dog fighting situation, but I’ve become a much better man because of it.

Strauss : What is your favorite quote?

Vick : “I’ll be floating like a butterfly and stinging like a bee.”

Strauss : Is there anything you want to tell your fans that I have not asked?

Vick : I just wanted to say, I let you all down once, but it will not happen again. Thank you to all the fans who still support me.

Strauss : For someone aspiring to play football in the NFL, do you have any advice for them?

Vick : Practice and polish your skills. Improve in weak areas, and work harder than ever. And, don’t let anyone stand in your way.

Strauss : Thank you so much for your time.

Vick : Thanks Max, and Go Eagles!

30
Jul

36 : NFL Coach Interview : Mike Pettine

If you need to download the audio interview with Mike Pettine, right click this link.


[The instrumental in the announcements is by the Pangea Kidz, http://facebook.com/PangeaKidz]

Announcement : My name is Max Strauss and with me today is Mike Pettine, the defensive coordinator of the New York Jets. Make sure you stop by my website, http://prointerviews.org. Anyways, let’s get started on the interview.

Strauss : Alright, so when did you start playing football? Where did you play? What positions? How natural did it come for you? What was your dad’s reaction to playing football?

Pettine : Well, it was funny, because my dad was a coach. So, I tried to play when I was eight and didn’t like it. I played offensive line on the 65-pound team in this little town called Warrington, just outside of the town where I grew up which is Doylestown, Pennsylvania and I didn’t like it at all, a bad experience, and I guess when the year was over, he was fine, I didn’t want to, you know, I just didn’t like it. So,  It was one of those things where it took me a couple of years and I started to play again, I want to say two or three years later. And, then it was much more natural for me then, and much more enjoyable and I just took off with it. Yeah, ever since I ended up playing for my dad, then I went to Virginia, played there, and then when I finished school, it was just a natural transition for me to get into coaching. I never realized when I was going to school, you know I wish I had that I was going to get into coaching and it was far from, it was the last thing I wanted to do. And, sure enough, my last season ended at Virginia and it wasn’t until the next fall came, something was missing, so I naturally got into it. In high school, I played quarterback and I played safety. And then, when I went to college, I actually started off as a quarterback and was a back-up for two years, then got switched over and started at safety for two years. So, those were pretty much my main positions throughout my career.

Strauss : What was it like to have your dad coach the football team? Did you get made fun of at all because your dad was coaching the high school team?

Pettine : Well it’s great now, because it’s everything I absorbed while I was growing up. But I’m not going to lie, when I was playing for him, I don’t want to say, it probably wasn’t the most pleasant experience in the world. I mean, he was a very tough coach, very strict, real hard on the team. A lot of the guys when they got mad at him, I was their only outlet to take it out on especially when I was a sophomore. So, I had my share of getting baby powder being dumped on me, equipment going missing, and that type of stuff, you know just like regular hazing type stuff when I was a tenth grader. That obviously didn’t happen later on. It was tough, but at the same time, it was a typical thing when you coach your kid, you want to make sure that people understand that you are not showing favoritism or anything like that. That’s what made it hard. He was so tough on me.

Strauss : So, did you get a nickname in high school?

Pettine : Everyone called me junior, just because we had the same first name. So, he was always Mike Pettine Sr., I was Mike Pettine Jr., for a while it was Big Mike, Little Mike, and then I got  bigger then him. So everyone ended up calling me Junior or JR.

Strauss : Uh, What was like your best experience from playing high school football?

Pettine : Let’s see, best experience. I want to say, we played a team from the Philadelphia Catholic League, Archbishop Ryan, it was kinda of a unique, non-league matchup. I don’t think we have played them before in anything other than a scrimmage and I just think there were a lot of bragging rights, kind of like the suburbs versus the inner-city catholic kids and we ended up beating them. It was a very physical game. And, it was very, very rewarding to come out on top.

Strauss : We’ll talk about college at UVA. How hard was it to choose UVA to go play football there?

Pettine : You know it really wasn’t. I mean the one thing that I think that my parents wanted to make sure was that I went to a good school. My dad always used the phrase with his players, ‘It’s not a four-year decision, it’s a forty-year decision. You have to go make the decision based on never playing a down of football. You have to make the assumption that something could happen, so you got to make sure you that you’re making a choice for school not for football.’ So, my final two choices were actually Duke and Virginia and I chose Virginia just because of the geography, it was just closer to home. It was one of things where I enjoyed my time there and got a good education and I look back very fondly on my time there.

Strauss : What was it like to play football under George Welsh?

Pettine : George Welsh, George was, It’s funny because he had just come from the naval academy, I think 1982 was his last year there. It was funny even at ’84, he was still slipping up, he’d call it the ‘mess hall.’ He wouldn’t say, ‘wake up’, he would say, ‘Reveille’. You know we’ll be at ’0.6 , whatever, we had to laugh. He had a hard time letting us military, naval stuff go. But, George was good, he was very meticulous, very organized. And as a coach, it helped me out down the road having played for him to see his degree of organization and how he interacted with the staff and how he interacted with the team. That’s the one thing that I’ve been very fortunate, that I’ve been around a lot of great coaches and I’ve had a lot of different methods and I feel like I’ve been able to draw the positives from all of them.

Strauss : So, how’d you really get started in coaching though?

Pettine : Well, I finished in college, and I knew I wasn’t going to play professionally. I just started to work. I took a job, just a normal job, I was working at Prudential Life Insurance. You know, in their home office. And, something was missing. That fall rolled around. Whatever it was, whether it was the smell of the cut grass, whatever it was, but something was just missing and I quickly realized that it was football. So fortunately, where it was located, there was a big business park, a lot of businesses there, so they had encouraged all the companies to kind of flex their hours so there would not be as much traffic heading in and out of that one area, twice a day. So, I had the option to work from 7 to 3, which was great for me, because I could go to work at 7, be off at 3, be at the high school at 3:30, so I just started to help my dad out, kind of part time. Videos and scouting for him. Going out and helping out his young kids, his young quarterbacks, and his young defensive backs. And, I just took to it right away, it was really a natural thing for me.

Strauss : When you coached your own football team, what was that whole experience like?

Pettine : Yeah, that was actually ten years ago. I was at North Penn High School. I was High School Head Coach at two different places. The first one was called William Tennent in Warminster, Pennsylvania and second place was North Penn High School. I had a great experience at both schools. I really enjoyed working with the kids. It’s the one thing about, since I’ve coached all three levels, high school, college, and professionally. High school is where you feel you have the most impact, you have the most influence on a player. Sometimes you get them in college or obviously you get them in the NFL, they have been around for a long time where coaching is less of an impact, where as high school, it’s much more coaching than anywhere else. It’s very rewarding.

Strauss : What was it like to be a graduate assistant at Pittsburgh when you coached there?

Pettine : To me, it was a real positive thing as well. Results wise, we weren’t very good, I think we were 3-8, both of the years that I was there. But it was a good coaching staff, I was surrounded by some really good coaches. Johnny Majors, the obvious one being the Head Coach. I was just fortunate to get the graduate assistant job through Chuck Driesbach. He’s at Rice now. He’s been many places. He actually played for my dad, and that was the connection there, in the late sixties early seventies. He gave me a break there. I worked with Jack Henry, one of the long-time very successful line coaches in the NFL, Tim Lewis, who’s still in the league with Atlanta, but he was a defensive coordinator with the Steelers, he was a secondary coach for the Steelers, he was with the Seahawks, Giants, as a coordinator. Tim was very successful, I learned a lot about football from Tim. Then actually there, I was fortunate enough to meet Matt Cavanaugh who ironically later on gave me my first break into the NFL after my high school coaching career was done. He was the one that was in with the Ravens that I contacted that got me in the door. It was at Pittsburgh when I made the contact that got me into the NFL.

Announcement : Do you play fantasy football? Have you ever wanted to play fantasy football with an NFL Player? Well, now you can. Go to http://prointerviews.org/ffl/ and you can find out how to win Isaiah Ekejiuba’s, the special team ace for the Detroit Lions, autographed jersey.

Strauss : And now, let’s get back to the interview with Mike Pettine Jr., so, speaking of when you first got into the NFL though, what was that all like?

Pettine : It was definitely an eye-opening experience. But, my first year I was not an on-the-field coach, and as I said I got my foot in the door through Matt Cavanaugh who was the offensive coordinator at the time. But the position that I got was more of a technical one, I was off the field, I was the third person in the video department. So, I was in charge of all the special teams video. Then, at the time, Brian Billick came from Minnesota, he had used Macintosh computers there, and Baltimore was transitioning, they wanted all of it on an IBM platform. So, Brian had about six thousand playbook drawings that he needed converted from this Mac format, Mac drawing program to this IBM based program that the Ravens decided to use that they wanted to still maintain the ability to edit them. So, they needed someone to come in, because basically the IT department basically had their own workload, it was just a one-time thing. They wanted to bring somebody in to do that project as well. That was one in addition to my video department, I worked and did that project for the playbook drawings as well. Then, at night, it helped me, just to be around at night, because once all my other work was done. I would help out the coaching staff if they had any kind of overflow, quality control-type work. And, it was great for me, from a career standpoint, when I walked in the door, there were three guys, mostly, the closest, end up all being future Head Coaches in the NFL. Mike Nolan was Defensive coordinator, Mike Smith, now head coach of Falcons, was the linebackers coach, and Rex was the defensive line coach. Those were the three guys that I really worked with the closest. Then, I was just kind of thrown with Rex. He really didn’t have someone working with him. He and I were just thrown in a room together and there was just instant chemistry there. That’s funny when I look back on that, because it was almost by default that I ended up working with him.

Strauss : What was it like to work with Rex with the D-line and everything? And, when you were promoted to Linebackers coach, what was the transition like?

Pettine : From ’03 to ’04, I worked and was the defensive line assistant, so Rex and I were around the D-Line, getting stuff together. I assisted him with all the drill work, everything in the meetings, and all that stuff. Then, in 2005 when he got promoted to coordinator. In a way, what I did for Rex was a lot of the computer stuff, a lot of the organizational stuff. I had the title of Outside Linebackers, but I was still really working as his assistant as well. So, I did a lot of the organizational stuff for the defense which I did that from ’05 to when I left Baltimore after the 2008 season, and it was a great working experience for me, to work hand in hand with the coordinator. And, it made it such an easy transition when Rex became the Head Coach here, that I stepped into the Coordinator’s role. Like I said, I was very well prepared for it because I had been doing those similar jobs for years.

Strauss : So, how much of your success do you give to Rex Ryan?

Pettine : I mean, I just… Can’t say enough, about what a positive effect he’s had on me as a person and as a coach. Like I said, when I looked at all the great coaches that I had been around, I would say my dad has had the biggest influence on me, but I would have to put Rex up there as a close second. It’s funny because those two personality-wise are like opposite ends of the spectrum. My dad is your traditional and old school. My dad never believed in the ‘I don’t get anyone to give me more bulletin material.’ Man, he was straight. No nonsense. Almost a military type approach. And then there’s Rex, on the other end of it, where it’s more easy-going, fun-loving, shoot from the hip, go ahead and put the bullseye on your chest, high expectations, all that stuff. It’s funny that I’ve learned the most from two guys that have such contrasting styles. But like I said, Rex was just such a huge part. As I tell people, I hitched my wagon to the right guy because I knew right away when I met him that he was special and it was only a matter of time before he got his break, and I felt like I wanted to be there with him when it happened.

Strauss : What’s been the best part of your relationship with Rex Ryan?

Pettine : I think, running a defense together, the interactions, the sharing of ideas, getting on the white board and hashing out a defense, what works good, and what doesn’t, how do we want to rule it out, just that whole implementation of a plan, and then, seeing it work, and just being there together, and having the ability. The one thing I think that is unique about our relationship and that people laugh about it when they come see us, it’s like we’re almost like brothers. I’m not afraid. He’s not afraid. He’ll say anything to me. I’ll say anything to him. I mean, we’re both competitive, both prideful guys. So, if there’s something wrong, I’m not afraid to say something to him and if there’s I did something wrong, then Rex certainly is not afraid to let me know. And, sometimes, we get after each other pretty good, and people ask us after a game, ‘Hey, you guys okay?’ and we laugh. Something we hardly even remember will be said to each other, but it’s just unique that way. Some guys get very guarded and sometimes during a year, you take something sensitively or you take things too personal. Rex and I are all about one thing and that’s one of the reasons why we work well together is that we’re both very passionate about football, and we both ultimately know that it all comes down to one thing, and that’s winning the ring.

Strauss : What were some of the toughest and easiest challenges when you had to implement the new defense in New York? And, what was it like to bring Bart Scott, Jim Leonhard, and Marques Douglas to New York to help you with the system?

Pettine : Well, I think the biggest challenge last year was just to implement a new system, adjust the system, a group of players that really had no idea what their style of defense was here. There are a lot of different ways and a lot of different styles and what was best for whatever Eric Mangini felt was best for them, they ran to what he was familiar with. Rex and I have a certain philosophy and how we do things was very different. It was not just putting in a new playbook, but I think it was also a different mentality as well, not be so much read and react, and we wanted to be much more aggressive and pressure and give our guys a little bit more freedom as far as some of the things they can do within the structure of the defense. I think it was difficult from a teaching standpoint to kind of change the culture, change the mentality, but the one thing that I can say and it’s to credit to Eric Mangini and credit to Mike Tannenbaum is that the group of players that were here, we weren’t that far away. We knew it when we first got here. It was like, ‘Hey, coverage is not bare, they have pretty good football players.’ And, we talk about a set of attributes that we want all our players to have, we call it, ‘Play Like a Jet’. It’s being passionate, tough, productive, relentless, play like your hair is on fire, that type of mentality, and most of our guys had that. It was a very, very smart group so they picked up the system right away, so we were fortunate that we got a bunch of meeting time in the spring with our camps. And then we were enabled to install it again in training camp, but this was a group that picked it up very quickly. We also had the advantage too, as you already talked about to bring in three players who played for us in Baltimore. One that people really don’t remember or don’t think about is Marques Douglas, who just ironically signed with the Dolphins, who was there with the defensive line. We had Bart Scott at the linebackers, and Jim Leonhard with the defensive backs. I think that was real big for us, not just for an X’s and O’s thing, but more for, ‘Hey, this is how we practice, this is how we prepare, and this is our mentality.’ We had a guy in each area of the defense that could kind of set that tone for us. And, I think that was a key part of our success was having those three guys that the rest of the guys on defense could lean to as an example

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Strauss : And now, let’s get back to the interview with Mike Pettine Jr. … The Jets have made a lot of offseason moves on both sides of the ball. The D-Line added Vernon Gholston so he is now on the defensive line. The Linebackers now have Jason Taylor. The Secondary got rid of Kerry Rhodes, but also added Kyle Wilson, Antonio Cromartie, and Brodney Pool. And, I think Brodney Pool was actually one of the most underrated pickups since I saw what he did in Cleveland and he…

Pettine : Yeah, that’s right, that’s very perceptive. We’re very excited about Brodney. I don’t know if he’ll be a spectacular guy for us, but he’ll make some plays, he’ll do his job, and I think he’s going to be, what a lot of people don’t realize, is a big part of our success this year.

Strauss : Which group, like line, linebackers, and secondary do you think has improved the most this offseason?

Pettine : Well, I just think, I’d probably have to say defensive backs because of the upgrade in personnel. We feel that Brodney is going to do a great job for us, he stepped right in, in the spring, and picked things up right away. Then, Antonio Cromartie just has the ability to have a guy who’s been to the Pro Bowl, had 12 interceptions in a year, and his type of man cover skills which is just a tremendous thing for us to add that we have a guy that plays, you know there are different styles of defense, and he’s not well-suited to be an off the ball, zone corner, and in our style, it’s get up in your face, take advantage of that first five yard contact rule we have, and let’s lock guys down. We’re fortunate that we have guys that can play man coverage and we drafted one also in Kyle Wilson. We think he has a chance to be a real good player as well. So I just think the backend has not only, we’ve upgraded personnel-wise, but just a good spring too, just as far as the communication back there. That was one of our issues last year when we gave up some negative plays, a lot of times it wasn’t necessarily what our opponent did, it was a mistake that we made. That was a big part of our offseason, was addressing those issues, and look at it, hey, we’ve given up plays. There are times in this league, where you’ll say listen, ‘That was a good throw, good catch, nothing you can do.’ But, there were a lot of times where the wounds that we had were self-inflicted. That’s one of our big goals this year is to get a lot of those things cleaned up because a lot of them are in it. It’s only natural in the first year of a defense, a lot of them ended up being communication things and that’s where I think where our guys have taken the next step. We preached to them in the spring, we know the basics of the defense and we had the success that we had, but we can be so much better, let’s take it more to a graduate level to understand where the ins and outs and the intricacies of it. I think our guys have bought into that and it really showed up during our spring workouts. It was one of those things where our guys understand, but it was more like last year was an introductory course versus this year we can build into some deeper things and key concepts that we weren’t able to get taught the first year because a lot of our stuff too was just learning, ‘Hey let’s just get lined up, how do I get lined up, what technique am I playing?’ where as now, our defensive linemen line up in a certain front, they understand, okay, this is how teams are going to block, and these are the types of blocks I can expect. Where as before, it was let’s just get lined up and go. And now, our guys understand better how teams are going to attack us.

Strauss : So, how does reuniting with Mark Carrier help the defense? What does he bring to the Jets?

Pettine : Well, he brings that mentality that we talked about. He’s proof of the whole, ‘Play Like a Jet’ mentality. He’s passionate, he’s a tough guy. I think one time he led the league in fine money for illegal hits when he was playing in Chicago, he jokes, ‘I think if he came out of retirement, he would still owe two game checks to the commissioner.’ He brings an attitude, a toughness, and a great example of a guy that’s done it. It’s great to have one of your staff guys, that played in the league that can relate to the players, that they know what the players’ going through. Whereas somebody like myself, or some of our other coaches that never played, we just don’t have that insight. So, it’s great to have somebody like Mark. Plus, since he came from Baltimore, he was with us for a bunch of years there, and he understands how we do things, the daily routine stuff, how things get taught, certain drills that are universal throughout the defense. He understands all those things, so while people looked at it well it’s a strange move to take a guy who’s a career defensive back as a player, a career defensive back coach. In my opinion, a good coach can coach any position. I think it was a good move for Mark, he was excited about it, and obviously a win for us as well to get somebody that’s one of our kind of guys up here in New York.

Strauss : Alright, just a couple more questions.

Pettine : Sure.

Strauss : For the people that want to go into coaching, or even playing football, what’s the best advice you can give them?

Pettine : Well, the one thing about it is the advice I have given young coaches. Some guys get too tied up looking for that next job, they’re always looking, people think okay, you’ll progress. I’m going to go from high school position coach to coordinator, from this high school to that high school, from high school to college. So, there’s a lot of information out there, okay, what jobs are going to open, sometimes guys get to revved up in that. And the phrase that I always use was just, “Don’t look for a better job, do a better job.” In a lot of times in this business, if you do good work, the jobs will find you, you won’t necessarily have to seek them out, it’s a very low percentage that you’re just going to randomly send out a resume and get a job. It’s going to be, as you already talked about, it’s going to be through contacts, through people you know, through networking, but the best networking isn’t the people that you just kind of meet. The best networking is the people that you have worked with, that see your work ethic, that see you produce and see how passionate you are about football, that’s how you move up. To me, football is a tough job because it’s a lot of hours, but I think the computer can help you as far as making it more efficient, something that we have found here is that we’re not going to put in a million hours and then at the end of the week, going into game-day, when you’re supposed to be fresh, and your head is supposed to be clear, so you can make logical decisions at the right time. You can’t be sleep deprived when you do that. There are so many coaches that want to work all these hours just to say they worked all the hours, just grind away, there’s so much information out there, that you can have. At some point, you have to sit back and say, ‘You know what, I need sleep.’ So, I think working hard is important, but working efficiently is just as important, knowing there’s going to be times when you are going to need to step away. I think there are guys that make that mistake of overdoing it, just to say that they did it, and at the end of the week, their mind is not as sharp as it could be, heading into a game situation.

Strauss : I like the quote though, “Don’t look for a better job, do a better job.” I’ve never heard that before.

Pettine :  Welcome. It’s appropriate. I’ve seen a lot of guys fall victim to that.

Strauss : Is there anything you want to tell Jets fans that we have not discussed or talked about?

Pettine : I just think that Jets fans have been great. They have embraced us. We’re going to have our ups, we’re going to have our downs, and I think they will be there with us. I have a very big Jets fan in my family. My brother-in-law who lives just outside of Tampa, is a life-long Jets fan. He grew up here in Jersey. When I called him and told him, ‘I got the job,’ he got very emotional on the phone, it meant that it was so important to him. He couldn’t believe it that of all the teams, I ended up the defensive coordinator of his team he followed for thirty-some years. It’s a passionate group. They have been through a lot, you hear the phrase, ‘Same Old Jets.’ But, the number one thing I think we can safely say, we look at last year, and we changed the culture here. And, ‘Same Old Jets’ is a thing of the past.

Strauss : Alright, I think that’s all, that’s everything.

Pettine : Sure.

Strauss : So, thank you so much, I really appreciate this.

Pettine : Your welcome, take care.

Announcement : Thank you for listening to the exclusive interview I had with Mike Pettine, Jr., the defensive coordinator of the New York Jets. I hope you enjoyed it, and I hope you tune in next time.

18
Jun

26 : NFL Pro Interview : Isaiah Ekejiuba

Right-Click and Download the audio interview with Detroit Lions’ LB Isaiah Ekejiuba



Strauss : So, Isaiah, did you watch a lot of American football growing up before high school?

Ekejiuba : When I was really young, my dad, my dad used to watch a lot of football, and I didn’t, really understand it, so I didn’t really watch it as much as he did.

Strauss : Did your dad have like a favorite football team that he was always watched?

Ekejiuba : He was a cowboys, *laughs*, when I was younger.

Strauss : What about you?

Ekejiuba : I didn’t really have what I would say was a favorite team, but I mean I just pretty much watched whatever game my dad was watching and that was pretty much it and spent some time with him, but I can’t say that I had a team that I was going to support because I really didn’t know much about the team, nor did I know much about the players on the team.

Strauss : Did you play football in High School?

Ekejiuba : No, I didn’t really play football in high school. I mean I had a roommate that played and he was really good, but I just kinda watched him, tried to go to the games, Coach tried to get me to play, just to get on there and kinda help the team, but at that point it wasn’t really my thing because, I thought I had played soccer and I wanted it and it felt like it was more fun for me at that point. But, obviously that changed.

Strauss : Do you still play soccer at all? Is it just football?

Ekejiuba : Mmm, every now and then, I kick the ball around, I don’t nothing too much like that for the risk of injury, offseason injuries that you don’t want or that I don’t plan, so I don’t do much of it anymore. I go kick the ball around with a couple friends, but we don’t take it too serious.

Strauss : Has soccer helped you at all in American Football?

Ekejiuba : Stamina aspect, and you have to think about your footwork, your coordination, soccer puts all that together, I mean apart from the stamina aspect of it. Your coordination, and the ability to be able to work within a group of people because you think about it, it’s all about teamwork. And, the easier it is for you to adapt to a team, the easier it is for everybody to get together and to be successful in that way, so I think that was one of the big things for me, team aspect, commodity, and just the agility in general.

Strauss : How long have you played football?

Ekejiuba : I played three years in college and this is my sixth year in the NFL right now, so, I’m going on nine years.

Strauss : W hat was it like to walk-on at University of Virginia, that’s a top school for football?

Ekejiuba : You know, it was, it was very scary at first, you know, but, it was a good experience because the environment was very welcoming. I had a lot of support from the guys that were already there and the coaching staff so, it made um, it made the transition, i mean the work was hard, but it made the transition pretty easy.

Strauss : Did you play any other sports, and that’s why it was such an easy transition?

Ekejiuba : Yeah, I played basketball, ran track, those are the main two things that I did, and doing that, just doing that, and just feel like you are somewhat athletic and then you want to try something different so that’s what it was for me. I knew I was somewhat athletic and I’d try some things. I didn’t think I’d get to the level I’m at right now. I just knew I could just try to be successful at something different.

Strauss : What was your best experience at University of Virginia?

Ekejiuba : My best experience at University of Virginia, wow I mean, I just had so many experiences I can’t really say that I could pick one over the over. I remember, I remember when my first game I played, it was against Duke, just making it out there, making my first tackle. That was the probably beginning of me, I look back at it now, and I didn’t think of it at then, but it was really the start of my career,just that first game I played for the Virginia Cavaliers, so that has to be pretty much what my experience is.

Strauss : What impact did Al Groh, the coach, have on your professional career?

Ekejiuba : Well, he gave me the opportunity to play, that’s what Al Groh did. As um, as the head coach, it’s ultimately his decision who plays and who doesn’t. So, he gave me the opportunity um to make the team, gave me the opportunity to eventually get on the field and play and he is a guy that came down from the NFL, so you already had an NFL-structured program, so once I got to the NFL, I already knew what to expect, I wasn’t shocked by it because I had gone through it in college.

Strauss : What was your whole draft experience like? Did you expect to be drafted? Or did you hear reports of when you should have landed?

Ekejiuba : No, I didn’t expect to get drafted for the simple fact that I didn’t enough film to go in there and say, alright this is what I’ve done, this is why you should draft me. But I did have a guy out of Arizona, by the name of Kevin O’Dea who was on the Jets for a while, so Kevin O’Dea, yeah he gave me a call and said, listen, we like you, we like what you’ve done on teams, we’re going to bring you in just to give you a chance, give you a look, and that’s really where it started for me. He gave me that opportunity and I went out there for Arizona and played for the first few games and it ended up that it didn’t work out, but he had given me that opportunity to put some film up there for other NFL teams and the Raiders picked me up. So, that’s the big thing because a lot of people don’t understand the value of the things you put on film, because somebody is always watching. You always hear that in the NFL, it doesn’t matter what you do, if it’s on film, somebody is always watching. So, whatever you do, you always have to do it to the best of your ability, and that’s how I got over here to Oakland and that’s why I’m trying to stay here for as long as I can and keep getting better what I do.

Strauss : What was the hardest jump like from college to the NFL?

Ekejiuba : I think the mental aspect of the game, a lot of things you do in college you got a lot of help from the coaches, watching film, studying your playbook, but now, you have to watch a lot of film on your own, and you see a lot of guys that really take it very serious and study day-in day-out. So I think that you know apart from the speed which you know the first thing you see is speed and size of the guys, it’s the mental preparation.

Strauss : Did you watch a lot of film in college? How’d you learn to really learn how to watch for film and prepare yourself?

Ekejiuba : I mean, I didn’t watch much film in college, because you know, like I said, we watched film with the coach. But in the NFL, when I first got here, when I first got to the Raiders, I was in Arizona first before I got to the Raiders, they got a guy here, Danny Clark, so he was sort of the veteran for us at that time and he started, teaching us how to watch more film and take notes, he’s, well, he was a big impact on just learning to do that. And, then you watching other guys that that have been in the league for a long time and asking them how they’ve been successful, a lot of them say it was a lot of film study, so it was just watching the veterans.

Strauss : Could you have predicted how far football would’ve taken you?

Ekejiuba : No, honestly, I would have never expected to hit on, to be who I am, I never to the life of me thought that I would be this far in my career. It’s just been a blessing, year in, year out trying to make the team. But, I feel like I’ve been very blessed. I have a lot of good positive people around me, role models to help me stay focused in everything I do, And, it is just crazy that I’ve come this far. you said I was an alternate, but I actually want to go to the Pro Bowl and play, so I’m looking to get better.

Strauss : So you like mentioned role models, who was your role model when you were growing up?

Ekejiuba : Um, but growing up, my role model was my mom, um, she just did everything she did, she was just successful she made us be focused in school and do all that and I think I get my work ethic from her, because she was such a hard worker and such a positive person that it became contagious to all of us, so I would have to say my biggest role model I say my mom, but it just I didn’t watch the game much when I was growing up, and I was able to focus and pick things up and she gave me that focus and dedication.

Strauss : Special Teams, You got to be sick to run down field, going full steam like full speed and everything willing to hit a guy and decapitate him.

Ekejiuba : Yeah definitely, there’s definitely a mentality to like you said, run down there full speed, um, some people are willing to do it, and others aren’t, it’s how do you feel, feel about it, to me, I’ve gotten better at it every year because I think I pick one person in my mind I don’t think they’re better than me so I just have to go down there and prove it every time. So, that’s my attitude.

Strauss : So you pride yourself on special teams and the impact.

Ekejiuba : Absolutely, special teams is often overlooked, and it’s just you think about the field position game that a lot of people don’t worry about special teams aspect of it, but it plays a lot of roles, in field position, if you make a tackle on a kickoff inside the twenty, then the offense has got to drive at least eighty yards to score a touchdown on you. And, people just overlook little things like that. we take pride especially out here in Oakland, we take pride in our special teams because we want to be the best every year, and we want to keep improving. It’s a lot, like I said, a lot of people you look at the wide receivers that scored a touchdown, and the quarterbacks that throw the touchdown. Yeah, you try to get them in good field position, I mean if you have a great quarterback, they’re going to drive that eighty yards to go score, but you don’t want your team to drive eighty yards every time they touch the ball, it’s just unrealistic, to score points like that all the time.

Strauss : What’s something your teammates don’t know about you?

Ekejiuba : Something my teammates don’t know about me, I mean, pretty much all my teammates know everything about me just because we’re so close and we always hang out together and go out together.

Strauss : So you don’t have no embarrassing story?

Ekejiuba : Uhh, I’ve definitely run into our kick returner one time and tackled him, so that wasn’t fun, Johnny Lee Higgins, so he wasn’t very happy about that, so we still talk about that, but that’s pretty much it, in terms of a little blunder like that.

Strauss : What’s your best memory on the Raiders?

Ekejiuba : Best memory on the Raiders, honestly when I made the team, it seems like such a small thing, but you have to think that you’re fighting for your job, every year, so that first year, I came back and I made the team, that was probably about as excited as I’ve been about it, I think I called everyone I knew and told them and then hopefully, my next best experience will be us winning the AFC West, and going out there to the playoffs and making a splash.

Strauss : Do you have a favorite quote?

Ekejiuba : Hmmm, I’ll say, favorite quote, um, I can’t think of one now just off the top of my head. I think about it like this, everyday I wake up I say, “The more they doubt me, the harder I work to prove them wrong,” and that’s just in everything, not just in football, just in life, the more people doubt you about things, the more ammunition you need to go. I mean, a lot of people aren’t self motivators, but if you are, that’s great. If not, sometimes it takes somebody telling you can’t do something for you to go do it. So, that’ll probably be it.

Strauss : For someone like me, a high school student, and even people in college they want to make it in the NFL, what’s the best advice you can give to someone?

Ekejiuba : One of the best things I can tell you is, one, listen to those that have been there, before you get anywhere, there have always been people that have done it before you. For me, when I was a rookie, it was a lot of vets, with the Warren Sapps, and the Randy Mosses, Ted Washington, Jerry Porter, those guys, so the biggest thing is whatever you do, do it your best, the best of your ability, don’t look back and say, man, I wish could have done that, so maybe things would have changed for me. Don’t have any regrets, whatever you do, do it right the first time so you don’t have to come back and do it again. And that’s one of the biggest things I have, do everything to the best of your ability and it will pay off for you.

Strauss : Like trying to achieve a goal, what’s the hardest thing you’re trying to achieve?

Ekejiuba : Right now, the thing you want to do out here, the number one goal is to win the Super Bowl, when you are a champion there is no feeling like it. It can’t be taken away from you. So, beyond personal goals, personal expectations of yourself, and you know I would love to go to the Pro bowl, but beyond that I would love to go play in the Super Bowl, and win the Super Bowl, and that takes precedence over everything else. That’d be a dream come true for me.

Strauss : Thank you so much Isaiah Ekejiuba!

Ekejiuba : Ekejiuba, yeah.

Strauss : YEAH!! I got it, so Thank you.