Chargers rookie Isaac Rochelle has come a long way since 'hating' football
The bright beams of sunlight were making it hard to be outside for long stretches without sweating through a shirt.
In 2006, Isaac Rochelle stood on a football field outside of Atlanta. He looked around at his peers, worshippers of one of the Southâs favorite religions, and thought, âThis might not be for me.â
Heâd have rather been working on the family farm, walking huge buckets of water down to the pig pens on the edge of their property â" a distance necessitated by the stench of the swine.
For two more years, Rochelle played football without a passion for it. He tried to play because he wanted to be like his brother. He tried to play because every young boy, it seemed, wanted to be in footballâs congregation.
âI hated it,â he said.
Then Rochelle became a Charger â" at Eagles Landing Christian Academy â" right as he was learning to love a game his body would be built for.
Sunday, the 6-foot-4, 280-pound Rochelle will take the field as a Charger again, this time as a professional, a seventh-round defensive lineman from Notre Dame with no guarantees of a spot on the final 53-man roster.
Itâs an extended job interview for one of around 50 guys competing for the 10 or so available roster spots.
âHalf of us wonât have a job (at the end of camp), essentially. I definitely think about that,â Rochelle said. âIf someone tells you theyâre not, theyâre either making way more money than I am or theyâre lying. Thatâs just the truth of it.â
Rochelle is part of a Chargers rookie class consisting of seven drafted players and a handful more of undrafted ones, including his teammate at Notre Dame, James Onwualu.
Training camp will cap a process that Rochelle called âsuper-duper stressfulâ â" a transition from someone playing football to someone earning a living from football. It has included the Senior Bowl, the NFL Scouting Combine, pro days, private workouts, interviews and finally a seven-round stomach-torturing event, the NFL draft.
From there, rookies almost immediately get thrust into minicamp and then offse ason practices as they start to try and prove why they should be one of 53.
âIt doesnât consume my thoughts. At the end of the day, I have to play well. I have to get better. And, I have to set up myself up for success,â Rochelle said. âThinking about that stuff doesnât help anything â" but inevitably, you think about it.â
The Chargersâ evaluators donât mind their players thinking about their professional futures because theyâre thinking about their professional futures, too.
âFor all of these guys, youâre not on scholarship anymore,â Chargers general manager Tom Telesco said. âThis is what you do for a living. Everybody that comes here is coming to take someone elseâs job. Thatâs just the way it is.â
Rochelle said he understands that mentality â" itâs a must for him if heâs going to succeed in the NFL.
âWhen youâre getting recruited, those teams owe you something,â he said. âHere, itâs now your responsibility to prove your worth. Youâre not owed anything.â
Thatâs how a seventh-round pick should think. For a first-round pick, like Mike Williams, things are a little different.
Slowed by a lower-back injury, Williams doesnât have to worry about earning a spot on the team. Heâll have one â" and loads of guaranteed cash â" since the Chargers invested the No. 7 overall pick on him.
The team is hopeful he can avoid surgery on the back, steps that can be aided if Will iams can make the smooth transition from Clemson Tiger to pro. And, with Williams placed on the active/physically unable to perform list Saturday, heâs going to have to find other ways to stay involved.
âOne thing I talked to him about ⦠mentally, if youâre out here and not practicing, itâs going to be hard on you,â Telesco said. âBut, heâs young and I think he can handle it. Heâs said all the right things. Weâll have a plan together as far as his rehab is concerned and heâs got to stay on top of the details.
âThis is his job now.â
Williams has already been hired. Rochelleâs just trying to secure his spot.
Heâs got other skills â" he used to build fences all around the familyâs farm. He helped raise cows and goats. Heâs fed the pigs.
But since falling hard for football, the dreams have changed. Heâd rather use his quickness to get around an offensive guard to get to the quarterback, or his strength to beat a tight en d and blow up a rushing play on the outside. Heâd rather be immersed in a locker room and play in front of the Los Angeles Chargersâ first crowds.
Wanting that job, though, and getting it are two very different things.
âYou know thereâs a potential of guys getting fired,â Rochelle said. âThat might intensify things.â
Notes
Along with Williams, the Chargers placed Jason Verrett and Darrell Stuckey on the active/physically unable to perform list ⦠The Chargersâ first meeting of training camp featured a surprise appearance by former Laker Kobe Bryant. ⦠Sunday will be the first of 13 training camp practices at the Jack Hammett Sports Complex in Costa Mesa. All the practices are free and open to the public, though bleacher seating can be reserved through the teamâs website. Practices in Costa Mesa are all scheduled to start at 10 a.m.
Twitter: @DanWoikeSports
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