Jump to content

Dewayne Robertson not cooling his jets


rick34125

Recommended Posts

No cooling his jets

Robertson's goal with Broncos: prove himself after landing in Denver

By Lee Rasizer, Rocky Mountain News (Contact)

Originally published 12:05 a.m., May 17, 2008

Updated 12:23 a.m., May 17, 2008

http://www.rockymountainnews.com/news/2008/may/17/no-cooling-his-jets/

436474999_t220.jpg

Ken Papaleo / The Rocky

Dewayne Robertson expects to feel right at home in the Broncos' defensive scheme after feeling out of place with the Jets. "He's got blinders on," Broncos teammate Marlon McCree says.

Click-clack.

Stacks of heavy metal repeatedly smack against other steel, serving as an offseason sound- track for Dewayne Robertson as he prepares for his first season with the Broncos.

The cacophony is the perfect complement to the defensive tackle's relative silence as he lets his muscles do their work.

Even the presence of former college buddy Marlon McCree, with whom he has reunited as a teammate in Denver, can't change the clicking and clacking to chitting and chatting in the Broncos weight room. Even though the two have much to catch up on, seven years removed from their days at the University of Kentucky and only periodically having touched base since.

But McCree understands why a fist bump and a couple of "what-ups" at Dove Valley will have to do for the moment.

After five seasons with the New York Jets, where Robertson was hailed as the next Warren Sapp before eventually being traded for possibly nothing, it's clear the No. 4 overall pick in the 2003 draft has a point to prove to himself and the rest of the NFL.

If it takes being the strong, silent type now to become a noisy, disruptive force in 2008, that's what Robertson is doing.

"He's got blinders on," McCree observed recently. "I'm his boy, and I can't even get him off track. So I know, definitely, he's going to be a threat this year."

For a team lacking in the middle of its front four, to say that would be just what the doctor ordered is partially true.

No self-respecting physician would order up help in exactly the form Robertson brings, given a troublesome history with his left knee that dates to his sophomore year in college.

But the fact the Broncos traded for Robertson, despite an admission he would have flunked their physicals in each of the past four years, speaks to the team's desperation to find interior help.

That said, Robertson seems to be a low-risk, high-reward acquisition:

* He's low cost - the Broncos owe the Jets no draft-pick compensation if Robertson plays fewer than 65 percent of Denver's defensive snaps next season.

* The contract is tied to the lineman's participation on a defensive front that generally rotates eight players.

* His apparent ability to manage his pain.

This is a player who thrives on competition.

"If a guy thinks he's better than me, then I've got to show him he's not," said Robertson, his pride apparently buoyed by the thought of playing in the Broncos' 4-3 defense instead of the Jets' three-man front in which he was miscast as a nose tackle the past two years.

That position is for NFL heavyweights, big-bodied players responsible for gaps on both sides of the center who constantly take on double teams.

Here to help

Robertson prefers to play at least 15 pounds lighter, at 310, and in "attack" mode while aligned opposite opponents' guards. He'll do both with the Broncos, who will welcome his help, particularly as a run stuffer after they finished 29th in that category last season.

"I just feel like everything is going to happen naturally for me, because I know what kind of blocks to expect in a 4-3 scheme and all that kind of stuff," Robertson said. "You know how teams want to attack you. So I'm going to reapply that to what I learned before I went to a 3-4 and keep rolling."

The Jets ran a 4-3 scheme in Robertson's first three pro seasons.

After he struggled some during his rookie year, when New York ranked only 28th against the run, he began to adjust. He finished with 60 tackles and three sacks as the Jets reached the playoffs in 2004. A year later, though, Eric Mangini replaced Herm Edwards as head coach and Robertson was forced to learn a new position that minimized the quickness advantage he once had provided.

"When I was playing that 3-4 stuff, I had to do a lot of thinking and it kind of slowed me down as far as how to play and what to do," he said.

This offseason, the Jets acquired massive defensive tackle Kris Jenkins from Carolina to handle the role. And, given Robertson's contract, which included a $3 million bonus payment due in June, and the fact Mangini's staff didn't draft him in the first place, leaving New York was a fait accompli.

A trade to Cincinnati in March fell through because of a failure to find common financial ground on a new contract. Robertson shopped himself around before the Broncos worked out their arrangement, which included a new six-year financial package.

"It's kind of what I felt I needed," Robertson said of the trade.

At 26, Robertson will be playing under his third head coach, fourth defensive coordinator and third scheme. But he doesn't see that as a negative.

"I can take that and what I learned before and apply it to now," he said.

He insists he left New York with no hard feelings.

"The expectations were very high," he said, "and I don't know if people felt I was disappointing or whatnot. But I do know I tried to do the best I could do."

Overall, he started 75-of-77 regular-season games for the Jets, with 319 tackles (188 solo) and 141/2 sacks.

Yet given his young age, Robertson should only just now be reaching the prime of his career - if he holds up physically.

"He will be able to say that he doesn't fit in a 3-4 and the Jets misused him, etc., etc., (only) if he comes here and succeeds. He knows that," McCree said. "And he's got a lot of pressure on him. But a 4-3 is going to suit him. And I think he'll definitely help our front seven."

TRANSACTIONS: The Broncos signed 6-foot-3, 302-pound free- agent guard Dylan Gandy, who spent his first three seasons with Indianapolis. They also waived guard Isaac Snell.

rasizerl@RockyMountainNews.com

Numbers game

Just before the draft, the Broncos retooled the final two years of Dewayne Robertson's contract and tacked on an extra four-year extension through 2013. The revised deal:

$900,000 annual salary for the 2008 and '09 seasons.

$3 million roster bonus.

$4 million is what the contract counts against the Broncos' '08 salary cap.

$11 million in playing-time incentives he could earn in 2009, which means the contract could max out at $35 million over six years.

65% of the defensive snaps is the threshold for determining what compensation the Broncos owe the Jets. If Robertson plays fewer than that in 2008, the Jets get nothing. The cost becomes a fifth-rounder if he plays 65 percent to 70 percent of the snaps, a third-rounder if he plays 70 percent to 80 percent, and a second-rounder if he's on the field more than 80 percent of the time.

Knee-to-know basis

Dewayne Robertson said he has learned to live with the deterioration in his left knee that worried Denver and other NFL teams interested in pursuing him this past offseason.

"It's all about doing the things you need to do to manage it and make sure it stays the way it should stay," he said.

Frequent rehabilitation, ice and keeping his weight down have proved helpful in keeping him in the lineup for 75-of-77 pro regular-season games.

He first injured the knee at Kentucky in 2001 but, even then, missed only about a month.

"A couple doctors have told me it's about how much you can take and you can deal with it. But I've been dealing with it for five years. . . . I'm going to go out and show people I can play as long as I want to with this kind of injury."

Subscribe to the Rocky Mountain News

Comments

Posted by myerda00 on May 17, 2008 at 10:04 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Bone to bone is painful but not during an exercise, it is afterwards. This guys really shows me character to go through daily schedule of icing and pain relief. Coaches need to find out what he can do then leave daily practice to walk throughs and turn him loose on Sunday.

I see Robertson and Thomas starting with McKinley and Powell rotating. Now if you figure there are 70 offensive plays per game, Robertson would have to play 49-50 to owe the Jets a third rounder (70%).

I hope McKinley and Powell are go enough to play half the downs and give the Jets nothing.

Posted by gahoaglund on May 18, 2008 at 2:31 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I hope he is the dominant force the Broncos need up front... I would be happy to give up a 2nd rounder after a dominant and healthy year. Great upside with this guy, I am very excited about having him here.

Posted by tahosa on May 18, 2008 at 4:32 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I like him already. To win, attitude comes first before talent.

Posted by R8R_H8R on May 18, 2008 at 4:54 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Same story, different player every year with this damn coach. Deteriorated knee. "Potential". Can't pass a physical. So lets throw 4 million dollars into that against this years salary cap.....bRillIanT!

Posted by MADness on May 18, 2008 at 11:38 a.m. (Suggest removal)

R8R_H8R: I disagree.

While Robertson is a high draft pick with an injury history, unlike Courtney Brown he has a proven track record of staying on the field (rather than the opposite) and also a proven track record of producing at a quality level.

If Denver was able to give up only a late round pick for him and they were able to renegotiate a safe and reasonable contract then Robertson looked to be a great addition. They were able to meet both of those criteria.

Robertson is highly likely to be a productive starter for the Broncos even though he may not put up 'numbers' that catch your attention.

The difference between Robertson and the other lineman that Denver has brought in the last few years is that Robertson is in his prime and he has a strong and recent track record of both performing well and staying on the field.

Posted by ES on May 18, 2008 at 12:19 p.m. (Suggest removal)

He is a win/win for Denver. Great attitude. Leadership through work ethics. He plays when other players would have quit.

I wish him the best. We really have some quality players that will surprise people this year.

Posted by NJBroncosFan on May 18, 2008 at 1:59 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Hopefully Robertson will help slow down the rushing attack of San Diego, i feel if we can sweep the series with them then the division should be ours. More then enough potential on both sides of the ball, the team just needs to stay healthy, and take advantage of oppurtunities..

Let's hope DRob has a good season and plays more than 80% of the snaps.... a 2nd rounder would be sweet. ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I thought we traded him for a conditional 09 pick...correct me if I'm wrong.

* He's low cost - the Broncos owe the Jets no draft-pick compensation if Robertson plays fewer than 65 percent of Denver's defensive snaps next season.

This is the condition. It was mentioned in the article.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

* He's low cost - the Broncos owe the Jets no draft-pick compensation if Robertson plays fewer than 65 percent of Denver's defensive snaps next season.

This is the condition. It was mentioned in the article.

He'll play more than 65.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They may not get the chance, injuries can dictate if they can afford to.

He runs that same risk of injury himself, if not moreso. Right now, I'm not expecting anything for him. Odd considering the Eagles and Bengals were also rumored to be interested. We didn't want him anyway I suppose, so I can't complain all too much.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

He runs that same risk of injury himself, if not moreso. Right now, I'm not expecting anything for him. Odd considering the Eagles and Bengals were also rumored to be interested. We didn't want him anyway I suppose, so I can't complain all too much.
Obviously and I agree, it was good just to get him off the books, anything more will be gravy. We would have been better off never to pick him though and it sucks. You could always complain about that. :)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If he stays healthy. I would have wanted us to get at least SOMETHING for the trade, even just a 7th but SOMETHING. I don't like this at all.

You make it sound like we were turning down offers for him. This is better than a 7th, which is totally useless 95% of the time, and is fair to the Broncos. Not that the latter is so high on my priority list, but if it wasn't fair to them then they wouldn't do it. They're not offering more than that for a guy with serious long-term (and on paper, short-term) knee issues.

Last year - and just about every year except 2005 when he missed a few games - he was probably in on 90% of the snaps. Denver's DL blows. Barring injury, we should get something and it will be more than a 7th rounder.

Denver is not going to play or bench him over a 5th rounder. I can't see Denver's DC with a little play-counter that says "Get DRob out of there for the next 5 plays to get back under 65 or we'll lose a 5th round pick next year."

If DRob plays then we'll get at least that. If he plays well, a little more. If he plays well and Denver is in a serious playoff hunt (and can't bench him), we may get a 2nd.

If we get nothing, then that's that. The alternative was releasing him for nothing anyway. It's not like there was a lot of choice and the mere possibility of a 2nd round pick (with a realistic possibility of a 3rd rounder) was as good as we could hope to get.

Also note that according to the article DRob was playing at 325 last year. He'll get to drop back down to 310-ish which should help that knee as well.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Denver is not going to play or bench him over a 5th rounder. I can't see Denver's DC with a little play-counter that says "Get DRob out of there for the next 5 plays to get back under 65 or we'll lose a 5th round pick next year."

If DRob plays then we'll get at least that. If he plays well, a little more. If he plays well and Denver is in a serious playoff hunt (and can't bench him), we may get a 2nd.

Let's just hope that DRob is pissed off, motivated, and stays healthy. That second rounder is highly unlikely, but it would be nice to get something more than a seventh rounder. Last year, only one Bronco DL was on the field more than 70% of the time. Is DRob going to be so good as to blow that number out of the water?

But yeah, it's not like teams were knocking down the Jets' door to get this guy.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Let's just hope that DRob is pissed off, motivated, and stays healthy. That second rounder is highly unlikely, but it would be nice to get something more than a seventh rounder. Last year, only one Bronco DL was on the field more than 70% of the time. Is DRob going to be so good as to blow that number out of the water?

But yeah, it's not like teams were knocking down the Jets' door to get this guy.

Who were their starters again at (what would be) DRob's position - Amon Gordon & Alvin McKinley?

Just because they didn't have a few starters worthy of being on the field too much doesn't mean that no one can be due to something in their system's rotation schedule.

DRob isn't an elite DT, but he's worthy of being on the field. Don't let the whole "bust for the 4th pick in the country" (which he is) or his ill-fit as a 3-4 NT (also true) cloud the reality: he is a legitimate NFL starter.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Injuries will have allot to due with how much he plays, if he stays healthy and plays decent and some one else goes down, we should definately see better than a 7th rounder.

It was worth taking a shot, especially since we couldn't get anything for him, this is better than a cut. Sad part is we did not get much value for the pick we used on him.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Who were their starters again at (what would be) DRob's position - Amon Gordon & Alvin McKinley?

Just because they didn't have a few starters worthy of being on the field too much doesn't mean that no one can be due to something in their system's rotation schedule.

DRob isn't an elite DT, but he's worthy of being on the field. Don't let the whole "bust for the 4th pick in the country" (which he is) or his ill-fit as a 3-4 NT (also true) cloud the reality: he is a legitimate NFL starter.

I hear you, and I hope you're right, but 70% of the snaps is a lot for a 300 pound man - especially one with bad knees. My expectations are pretty low.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wouldn't be surprised if he had a good season in Denver.

Vilma, that's another thing. Looks like playing in a 3-4 defense not only killed his stats but took a toll on his small frame and he now he's career-threatening knee problems.

He had that condition when we drafted him. He was born with it and the Jets knew about it.

Bradway liked drafting guys in the first round with no known long-term prognosis to their knee defects.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

He had that condition when we drafted him. He was born with it and the Jets knew about it.

Bradway liked drafting guys in the first round with no known long-term prognosis to their knee defects.

I'm pretty sure that playing in the 3-4 for two years and having to routinely hit guys who had 100 lbs on him at the LOS exacerbated the condition.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...