šŸˆ Alabama defensive end A'Shawn Robinson looks older than he is and plays like it, too

He's one of the most promising defensive players Alabama returns in 2014.
When Jeoffrey Pagan first laid eyes on A'Shawn Robinson, he didn't see a new teammate.

"I thought," Pagan said, "we had a new coach."

He wasn't alone.

"I wondered where his whistle was because he looks like a coach," Alabama defensive coordinator Kirby Smart said. "He's about a 28‑looking‑year‑old dude."

With a chin-strap beard and built with a ready-to-play 320 pounds, Robinson looked the part immediately upon his arrival at Alabama. He played like it, too.

Robinson's repetitions increased with each game throughout his freshman season. He picked up sacks in back-to-back games in September and added two tackles for loss against Kentucky midway through October.

"He's a very intelligent young man. He took pride in knowing his assignments," Smart said. "I can remember during the Texas A&M game there was frustration during the week of practice that 'I don't know this call, that call.' When he gets in the game, he plays fast and plays very athletic."

Picking up most of his snaps at defensive end, Robinson was also used some at nose guard. Versatility was nothing new for a player some recruiting websites projected as a possible option along the offensive line.

Robinson finished with eight tackles for loss and 38 overall. He took home SEC All-Freshman honors and earned the right to enter 2014 as a projected starter at one of the open defensive end spots.

"I didn't really expect it but that was my goal to try and play as much as I possibly could and try to help the team win," Robinson said in January after the Sugar Bowl. "So far, I helped along the way. Could have done a lot better but I've got to keep working and looking forward to the next season."

A better Robinson is one of the major reasons why Alabama shouldn't blink as it looks to replace two starters for a second consecutive year.

Pagan and Ed Stinson were rocks for Alabama in 2013, but neither generated quite the pass rush that Robinson provided on a consistent basis. It was apparent from Day 1, Pagan said.

"I've seen A'Shawn just completely destroy our starting offensive line with no moves or pass rush. Just straight bull rush," Pagan said. "I've seen him walk starters back to the quarterback."

After Pagan figured out Robinson wasn't a coach, he struck up numerous conversations with a player he also describes as "funny" and full of jokes. He was his protege, after all.

It took Pagan a second to figure out Robinson was serious when he made one such proclamation.

"He came in and one of the first things he told me was, I'm going to win the Heisman," Pagan said. "I laughed and a bunch of other guys laughed. We just pretty much told him how hard it would be to win the Heisman. To this day, he still tells me I'm going to win the Heisman.

"I tell him, you know what, if that's what you want to do, do it. If you think that's what you can do, do it. I'm behind him 100 percent."

In the days leading up to the Sugar Bowl, Smart said Alabama's defensive line depth wasn't what it had been in years' past. At this point of the spring, it appears that issue has been resolved, as Robinson and sophomore Jonathan Allen have been seen with the first-team defensive line at end and senior Brandon Ivory has been back at nose guard.

Waiting in the wings are junior-college transfers Jarran Reed and D.J. Pettway, both of whom are anticipated to make an immediate impact. Junior nose guard Darren Lake has earned valuable experience over the past two seasons and sophomores Dalvin Tomlinson and Dee Liner were highly coveted out of high school.

Da'Shawn Hand
, the nation's No. 1 defensive end according to Rivals.com, joins the fray in May.

"It can be very promising next year," Robinson said. "It's going to be pretty tough out there but me and the other freshman Jonathan Allen had a pretty good season and there are other freshmen coming in, the JUCO guys, we're going to be a force to reckon with next year, I feel."



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Yall forgetting Jonathan Allen too, I have alot of expectations for the d-line this year.

Good reminder. Forgot about all the PT he got last year. I'm sure he's got more grasp of the playing book and what he needs to do. Dee Liner may see some action also. Probably most excited about Reed in the middle. Just need someone plug up the middle and cause teams to go more outside.
 
Good reminder. Forgot about all the PT he got last year. I'm sure he's got more grasp of the playing book and what he needs to do. Dee Liner may see some action also. Probably most excited about Reed in the middle. Just need someone plug up the middle and cause teams to go more outside.

A few text message exchanges after week one of spring camp left me with these impressions...

During the recruiting cycle there were rumors floating out there (similar to our "slow and fat" comments) about Hootie and contact—a lot of them hinting that he avoids it or doesn't like tackling. Physically, he's fitting the part of what anyone would want in a safety: moving well sideline to sideline and has the size to take on runners.

Also in the secondary several have mentioned Tony Brown. Is it hype coming from recruiting sites and their evaluations? Hard to tell, but he is turning heads. I'm wondering how much we see him, early on, in our nickel and dime packages. I'm beginning to think more than I thought originally.

One thing hasn't changed. I wondered about ILB's and depth and it's still a work in progress. As we've discussed a little, Dillon Lee is getting attention. Physicality has never been an issue, a grasp of schematics has been. He's reported to understand a lot more now than he did. I believe that if for no other reasons than he's seeing reps on the outside as well as the inside.

When we've talked about DePriest our opinions have been pretty spot on...he's the "rock" there, right now.

The thing that strikes me about Reed in week one is the same thing that impressed us about A'Shawn last season: he's versatile. He's been playing several roles on the line including the DT/NG role.
I tend to trust some of these last notes more than what was being said after the first two practices. Friday before last was a practice in full pads. It's certainly a better position for judgment.

Week two starts today...practice #5 of 15.
 
Tony Brown from what I've heard is looking really, really good and has been splitting time working out with the ones (of course that means nothing right now). Gonna be interesting to see if he and Marlon can crack the rotation early. Gonna be alot harder for Marlon tho.
 
Uh oh, CNS already calling them out.

https://alabama.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1626788


"They've got a long way to go. I'm not satisfied with the way any of them are playing, if you want to know the truth about it," Saban said.


"They've got to be more aggressive, physical, play with better leverage, hold the point better, rush the passer better," Saban said. "I didn't think that last year was one of our best years up front, and even though we have a couple new players competing and Dalvin Tomlinson's back, I think all of them have a ways to go.


"A'Shawn Robinson has a lot of ability, but I think we need to get him in shape, and he's got to play with better focus and intensity down in and down out to be more consistent. So defensively we have a ways to go to improve to get back to the level and our standard of what we like to play here."
 
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