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DT Robert "BB" Landers (Official Thread)

ROBERT LANDERS' JOURNEY TO THE NFL: FORMER BUCKEYE BACK IN OHIO AND BALANCING PRO DAY TRAINING WITH RESPONSIBILITIES AS A FATHER

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In the months leading up to the 2020 NFL draft, former Ohio State defensive tackle Robert Landers is joining us here at Eleven Warriors to document his quest to become a professional football player.

As Landers goes through the NFL draft process in hopes of hearing his name called in late April, he’s checking in with us periodically to document his experiences along the way in his own words.

The second installment of Robert Landers’ Journey to the NFL begins with an update on his preparation for Ohio State’s pro day, which is just over two weeks away (March 25).

“I’ve kind of been honing in a little bit more on the smaller details with my training. Over this process, I’ve learned that there’s a lot of technique that goes into the different testing that we do. And it’s been blowing my mind. So I’ve just been trying to be like a sponge and absorb all the information I can get, picking up all the tricks and trades from Terry Grossetti, who I’ve been training with. And I’ve just been counting my blessings, man, taking it day by day. I’ve been blessed enough that God continues to give me 24 hours to do what I can do, so I try to take full advantage of it and try to do what I can to improve my game and prep me for the big day.”

While Landers was training alongside several other NFL draft prospects, including former Ohio State teammate Rashod Berry, at Grossetti Performance in New Castle, Pennsylvania, he’s now back in Ohio, where he’s been spending time training with two of his former coaches. He and several of his former Ohio State teammates have been working out with Ohio State defensive line coach Larry Johnson at the Woody Hayes Athletic Center, while he’s also been going back to Huber Heights to work with his high school track coach and math teacher, Michael Fernandez.

“I’ll be working with Coach Johnson quite a bit here over the next couple weeks until pro day. And then I’m also going to be training with my old track coach/math teacher, his name is Coach Fern, at Wayne High School. So I’ll be kind of going back and forth between the two. When it comes to the track side, he’s one of the gurus, he’s the GOAT. So kind of get some more mechanics down and get his perspective on things to try to better my 40 the best that I can.

“It works phenomenal in my favor, because I’m always going to be comfortable in my environment. And the biggest thing, it comes down to trust. Since I’ve built that relationship, I trust him, and I know he has my best interests at heart. And I know he’s gonna give me as much as he can give me and provide me with the proper tools that I need to succeed and achieve the goals that I have set. So trying to get acquainted and feel a person out, I don’t have to go through that process, so it makes it a lot easier.

“You’re in an environment that over the course of time, you’ve had the opportunity to kind of dictate and create. You’re already with people that you know, that you trust. And especially dealing with Coach Johnson, there’s nobody better. It’s Coach Johnson. So it makes the process fun.

“And then being with the other guys, it’s just, you get to reminiscing on all the time that you’ve put in together, and you kind of value this time that we have. Even though yeah, we’re prepping for pro day, but you’re having fun. You feel like you’re back in practice again. Granted, nobody likes spring ball. It’s God-awful. But the moments that you build with those guys that you can look back on is special. And we, at this point in time, have the opportunity to build more moments. So it’s fun, and it makes the work good. We push each other harder than anybody else, so it makes it easy. I’m enjoying it.”

Because he wasn’t invited to the NFL Scouting Combine, Landers opted to block it out as much as possible, focusing instead on continuing to work toward his own opportunity to impress NFL scouts at pro day, which will draw representatives from all 32 of the league’s teams to Columbus. He acknowledged, though, that it was disappointing not to be in Indianapolis.

“I didn’t watch it. But as a football player that aspires to be in the next level, making it to the combine is one of those things that you put on that goal board when you’re a kid. I was a little down about it, but at the end of the day, one thing about Ohio State’s pro day, that’s the next-best thing you’re gonna get to the combine. So I took my blessing that I got within this process and I prayed about it, got in my feelings and while the combine was going on, I went to the gym and got to work. So at that point, I looked at it as ain’t no point in me watching it. A lot of guys are like, ‘Well, that’s competition.’ At the end of the day, your biggest competitor is yourself. That’s what I’ve learned.”

Landers was proud to see 11 of his former Ohio State teammates get the opportunity to participate in the combine, especially fellow defensive tackle DaVon Hamilton, who led all defensive linemen with 33 repetitions of 225 pounds in the bench press.

“Watching some of my boys do drills, I was proud of them. They represented the name on their back and that Ohio State logo on the front of their jerseys very well, so I’m proud of them.”

That said, Landers’ own goal for pro day is to put up 40 repetitions in the bench press, which would have been the second-highest total among all players at the combine. He’ll be raising money with every rep he does put up through “BB’s Big Lift,” a campaign through which he is taking pledges to donate to Nationwide Children’s Hospital’s On Our Sleeves initiative, which promotes mental health awareness and supports children and families battling mental illness. He also recently had the opportunity to visit the new Big Lots Behavioral Health Pavilion, which recently opened – thanks in part to financial support from Ryan Day and his wife – at Nationwide Children’s Hospital to provide mental health services.

“I actually just did an event, like a meet-and-greet, with Nationwide Children’s last week. Just kind of set up, took pictures, signed autographs, just have fun, and they actually let me go around the new facility and look at it. And it’s beautiful. It’s beautiful, it’s phenomenal, the way that they have everything set up and the different little areas they got for kids and different activities that they have for them to kind of help them. I’m all for what they’re doing, and I appreciate them for allowing me to kind of wear their brand. So it’s been great.”

All the while training for pro day and preparing to begin his NFL career, Landers has had to balance the responsibilities of being a father, as he has two young children. He will soon be living in Springfield, Ohio, between Columbus and Dayton, so that he will be able to see both of his children regularly while commuting back and forth between workouts.

Entire article: https://www.elevenwarriors.com/ohio...ay-training-with-responsibilities-as-a-father
 
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SKULL SESSION: RYAN DAY AND CHRIS HOLTMANN ARE THE BEST DUO, ROBERT LANDERS' NFL DRAFT SETBACK, AND MASTER TEAGUE IS LOOKING NIMBLE

BB'S BUMP IN THE ROAD.
The coronavirus hasn't been kind to anybody, and that includes Robert Landers, whose NFL preparation has gotten exponentially harder over the past few weeks.

... Ohio State closed its athletic facilities, as did Wayne. Landers, who’s living in Springfield with his mother and 9-month-old daughter, Jordyn, then went to a local gym. That also has been shut down.

“My resources are becoming more and more limited, but I’m trying to find a way to still get my work in,” Landers said.

It isn’t easy. He doesn’t have weights in his home. It’s the first time since before high school that he has been unable to lift. So Landers is doing what he can in his backyard.

“I’m still working on muscle endurance,” he said. “The way I’ve transferred my workouts is high volume, high reps, high sets. It might be pushups or types of pullups.

“You can’t really simulate a game or a practice or a pro day when you’re in the house, but you’ve got to do what you’ve got to do.”

I have nothing but faith in BB making some NFL team extremely happy, and I think he's going to benefit quite a bit by simply playing for Ohio State and having lots of tape from his games seen by many scouts, whether they're specifically watching him or not.

But for a lot of guys, their best chance to show out in front of pro scouts – pro day – simply evaporated, and now they can't even easily work out to be ready when that time does come.

Stories like that make me realize this is affecting everyone. There is not a single person completely untouched by this situation, and I can count on one hand the things I've been able to say that about in my lifetime.

Entire article: https://www.elevenwarriors.com/skul...anders-nfl-draft-setback-and-master-teague-is
 
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BB FOR TIGHT END. We know Robert Landers has been training for the NFL for the past few months, but there's a solid chance he's been working at the wrong position.



I had no idea he had those hands, and I'm now furious we were never blessed with a BB Landers one-handed snag.

Perhaps the NFL will be more fortunate.

Entire article: https://www.elevenwarriors.com/skul...ll-season-lincoln-riley-talks-trey-sermon-and
 
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Robert Landers (DT)

One of the most bubbly personalities on the team, Landers not getting a chance to impress scouts at Ohio State’s Pro Day is upsetting for a number of reasons. Outside of just the opportunity to up his draft stock, the defensive tackle known as “BB” had planned to partner with Nationwide Children's Hospital to raise money with his bench press drill.

Having always been open and outspoken about his own struggles with mental health, Landers was asking fans to pledge money that would be donated for each rep he pushed out during his bench press at the Pro Day. The donations would go towards the On Our Sleeves initiative, a program heavily backed by Ryan Day and his wife Christina that aims to break the stigma of children’s mental health.

Charity work aside, Landers could have definitely impressed scouts with his upbeat and engaging personality, not to mention his skills on the field. The DT was a key cog in the Buckeye defense up the middle, registering 6.5 tackles for loss this past season with 24.5 total tackles for loss in his four years of game action. Regardless of whether or not an NFL team gives him a shot or not, it is definitely not the end of the road for Landers, who will without a doubt find some way to channel his endless energy and positivity.
 
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