knapplc
International Man of Mystery
Much sweat and toil have been expended to reach this point.
But now that he’s here, Chris Brooks is sure of one thing.
“I love my job.”
He repeats that because surely it’s worth repeating.
“I love my job.”
That’s what a man says when he goes to work each day and puts on a football helmet with an NFL team’s decal.
The best moment? Maybe when Brooks told his 6-year-old son, Chris Jr., that Dad was going to be a Tampa Bay Buccaneer.
“He wanted to come down and he wanted to play in the sand and make sand castles,” Brooks said. “That was just a wonderful feeling for me knowing that I can provide something for him.”
The 6-foot-2, 215-pound St. Louis native caught 17 passes during a five-year career as a Husker wide receiver.
In his first four years? Three catches, one touchdown, one redshirt season.
Could’ve quit, didn’t quit.
Certainly there were skeptics when Brooks was among the former Huskers working out for NFL scouts at Nebraska’s Pro Day this spring.
“I knew I could do it,” Brooks said. “I never doubted for one moment that I couldn’t do it. It wasn’t about getting back at anybody or showing anybody anything. It was about what I believed in.”
When the time arrived to see how fast he could run 40 yards, Brooks was a blur.
Nebraska strength coach James Dobson clocked him at 4.43 seconds. Another observer had him at :04.39.
The Buccaneers saw promise.
After Brooks went undrafted, he was one of 49 free agents Tampa Bay invited to a three-day mini-camp.
Stacked odds. But the Bucs need receivers. Brooks picked up the playbook faster than others.
“My main thing was just to do everything as hard as you possibly could,” Brooks said. “If things don’t go your way, then they don’t. But at least you can look yourself in the mirror and feel comfortable about yourself.”
After the final day of camp, Doug Williams, the Super Bowl MVP, called Brooks over and told him the Bucs were going to offer him a contract. (Williams has since left the organization.)
Of the 49 players trying out, Brooks was one of five asked to return.
Hard work and prayers, Brooks said. That was the recipe.
His contract runs two years. Plenty of hard work remains. Maybe a few moments for sand castles, too.
Wherever his football journey leads, he’ll eventually take off running with the economics degree he received earlier this month.
But for now he likes his current job title: NFL football player. Good work if you can get it.
“A lot of people thought my playing days were over. They counted me out,” Brooks said. “But as long as you don’t count yourself out and always talk yourself into doing things instead of out of doing things, you can always do them.”
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There must be some reason he barely saw the field for the Huskers, yet he's now signed with a pro team. I'd love to know more about why he wasn't a bigger part of the action.