Daily Pilot Football Player of the Week: Robert Chai
Barry Faulkner
Robert Chai doesn’t know where it comes from. In fact, he’s not
totally convinced it exists.
But for eyewitness accounts and game videotape, The 6-foot-4,
270-pound Newport Harbor High football star might even successfully
dismiss his on-field alter ego with plausible denial.
But incontrovertible evidence of his unleashed aggression continues to
mount, as do his accolades, and the piles of defenders he propels into a
prone position.
“People say I’m really mean on the field, but I can’t tell when I’m
out there,” said Chai, a decorated senior offensive tackle whose
highlight video wowed college recruiters throughout the offseason. “I
guess you have to be kind of mean to play offensive line, but when people
tell me about the things I do on the field, I don’t know what they’re
talking about.”
These days, it’s his live performances that have solidified the
UCLA-bound standout’s reputation as one of the biggest blocking bullies
in Orange County, if not the Southland.
“He has been our most dominating lineman,” said Newport Harbor Coach
Jeff Brinkley, who is among those impressed by the Daily Pilot Player of
the Week’s rare combination of power and grace.
“For a big kid, he’s very athletic and he’s able to stay on his feet,”
Brinkley said. “He’s one of the nicest, most polite kids you’ll ever
meet, a real gentleman. But he’s very aggressive out there and he
finishes off his blocks. He seems to find another gear on the field.”
The finishes of which Brinkley speaks usually mean pain for Chai’s
opponent, perhaps even embarrassment.
“When all the recruiters came through last spring to watch film on
him, they didn’t want to shut down the projector,” Brinkley said. “They
said he was so fun to watch, because when the play was winding down, he
was still driving his guy out of the frame.”
Additional fodder for Chai’s growing legend involves what coaches call
a “punch” on pass protection. The technique, a sharp thrust of both hands
into a defender’s chest, is designed to stop forward momentum, while
allowing the blocker to reset his balance for the defender’s next surge.
Against Chai, however, that second surge often never materializes.
“He has the best punch of any offensive lineman we’ve had,” said
Brinkley, in his 16th season at the Sailors’ helm. “There have been about
six or seven times over the last two years when he has pass set, punched
and knocked his guy off his feet and onto his back. He did it last week
against Woodbridge.”
Chai termed the Woodbridge game, a 34-7 Harbor victory to clinch the
Sea View League championship, one of his best in what has been an
unbeaten season for the Tars, ranked No. 1 in CIF Southern Section
Division VI and No. 5 in Orange County.
An All-CIF Division VI choice as a junior, Chai is one of three
returning starters on what Brinkley has said may be the best offensive
front he has had. But, despite the fact that he stands out, at least as
much as any offensive lineman can, Brinkley said Chai downplays his
personal prowess.
“He’s very, very team oriented,” Brinkley said. “He was almost
embarrassed by the recruiting process. He just very much wants the team
to be successful.”
Chai said the individual attention he received after last season,
including being listed by SuperPrep magazine as the No. 60 college
prospect among players from California, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon,
Washington and Hawaii, was as unexpected as it was flattering.
“I never thought I’d get the awards and opportunities I have,” he
said. “I wasn’t even sure I was going to play football in high school.”
Chai also said previous honors, as well as praise for the his
teammates in the trenches, helps motivate him to live up to high
expectations.
“I was worried about letting people down,” he said. “I figured people
would be gunning for me this year and I wanted to prove I could get
better, not worse.”
Though respectful of opponents, Chai said he does not regret the
mayhem he administers in the process of doing his job.
“The other guy is trying to do the same thing to me I’m trying to do
to him,” Chai said. “It’s just competition.”
Still, Chai looks forward to the postgame handshakes, when he and his
rival can share some mutual respect.
“That’s one of my favorite parts,” Chai said. “I shake the other guy’s
hand and sometimes we give each other a hug. It’s just a game and there
are no hard feelings.”
Perhaps not hard feelings, but plenty of hard landings for those
unfortunate enough to line up across the neutral zone.
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