‘He’s one of one’: Clubhouse philosopher, straight shooter and line-drive hitter, there’s nobody like Nick Castellanos
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Jesse Rogers, ESPN Staff WriterOct 24, 2023, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Jesse joined ESPN Chicago in September 2009 and covers MLB for ESPN.com.
In the first game of the Philadelphia Phillies‘ 2023 MLB postseason run, in the bottom of the fourth inning with the Phillies up 1-0 on the Miami Marlins, Nick Castellanos belted a double. When he reached second base, he dusted himself off, pausing to look into the home dugout — and proudly displayed a single batting-gloved finger on his right hand to his teammates cheering back at him.
Social media exploded, and even his own team’s dugout was confused: Was the Phillies’ right fielder flipping off his teammates from the middle of the diamond at Citizens Bank Park?
Castellanos later said that it was his ring finger he was waving in the air and that the gesture signified he wants a World Series ring to put on that finger, but for his teammates, this was just the latest case of Nick being Nick. This kind of thing is exactly what they’ve come to expect during his two years in Philadelphia. Ask anyone who shares a clubhouse with Castellanos what makes him tick and the inevitable smirk appears on that person’s face. He’s different, they say. But in a good way.
Shortstop Trea Turner put it simply: “He’s one of one.”
“I don’t know if I’ve met anybody like him,” Turner said recently. “He’s different. And he can really, really hit. It’s cool seeing him just do his thing. And regardless of what people think about him, he’s just his own person. So I love him and respect him for that.”
After a down year in 2022, Castellanos has burst onto the national scene during these playoffs. And it’s not just his National League-leading five home runs this postseason for a team that will take on the Arizona Diamondbacks in an all-or-nothing Game 7 of the NL Championship Series on Tuesday night.
Beyond his play on the field and penchant for an attention-grabbing quote or celebration, his endearing relationship with his 10-year-old son, Liam, has also produced heartwarming social media moments that have helped make Castellanos a fan favorite in Philadelphia.
“Every day, being part of this team and getting to understand this city and being able to [spend time] with Liam, I’m loving my space here,” Castellanos told ESPN.
Philadelphia has become a home, something for which the 31-year-old has been “searching” for a long time.
Castellanos was taken No. 44 overall in the 2010 draft by the Tigers, and he flourished at the plate as a doubles machine in spacious Comerica Park. But in his six years in Detroit, he made the postseason only once, in his rookie year, and for the latter part of his stay, he was one of few veterans on a perpetually rebuilding roster.
“I’m a dreamer by nature,” Castellanos said. “When I was drafted as a Tiger, I thought of Al Kaline. I thought I was going to be like him. You don’t always get Plan A.”
Plan B turned out to be a trade to the Chicago Cubs at the 2019 trade deadline, just before he was scheduled to hit free agency the following offseason. Though he quickly became a fan favorite because of his scorching-hot performance at the plate — he hit .321 with 1.002 OPS in 52 games — Castellanos had trouble finding his place as a temporary answer in a clubhouse full of players who were part of Chicago’s 2016 World Series roster.
“With the Cubs, I was a rental player,” Castellanos said. “I was there for two months. I have all these visions and dreams and aspirations and theories on how things should go. But it was not my place to go in and do that because if I vocalized all that, I would have been viewed as a tyrant. That’s also not in my personality either because any leader who inserts himself into that position, that’s not a leader, that’s a dictator. Over history, people don’t f— with dictators.”
Though Chicago had made four straight postseasons, that year the team faltered late and Castellanos again missed out on playing in October. By that offseason, when Castellanos hit free agency, the Cubs were shedding salary instead of adding it, so Castellanos had an open mind in his search for a new home.
He ultimately signed a four-year, $64 million contract with the Cincinnati Reds that included opt-out clauses after each of the first two seasons. Coming on the heels of a career-best season in 2021, Castellanos elected to become a free agent for the second time in three years. Though he called his 2021 season “the most consistent, happiest I’ve been playing baseball” at the time, his performance had put his next contract into a dollar range the Reds were unlikely to spend, and Castellanos was again on the move.
The Phillies didn’t actually emerge as a possible landing spot until late in the winter.
“I did not think that I was coming here during my free agent process at all,” Castellanos said. “It wasn’t [one of] the cities that I was interested in at the time, really wasn’t on the radar. Then Bryce [Harper] reached out to me and said, ‘What do you think? I want this. I want you to be here.'”
Harper’s pitch worked, and over the span of three days in March, the Phillies signed Kyle Schwarber for $79 million and Castellanos for $100 million, remaking the team’s offense (and leaving plenty of pundits wondering about its defense).
Asked if his fit in Philadelphia off the field was everything he had hoped for, Castellanos gave an emotional response that went far beyond the team’s success on it.
“Yes,” he said. “And it starts with the Middleton family. [Owner John Middleton] is a Phillies fan. He’s a Philly guy. That’s the foundation of everything. I truly do not believe that owning this team is a business for him. It’s a passion. If that passion is not there, a lot of time, the things that are underneath it, does not work out. Because of that, he oversaw the hiring of [president of baseball operations] Dave Dombrowski. And I think Dave is tremendous at his job. And what makes him tremendous at his job is he’s such a good people person. He believes in character above individuals.
“Every team is going to talk. I found that the more intelligent the words sound, the faker they are. The more fancy and educated the vocabulary — you’re getting to describe why winning is not now but it is in our imminent future — they’re trying to convince. I didn’t have to be convinced here.
“The one thing that gave me comfort was having pillars in Bryce, J.T. [Realmuto], [Zack] Wheeler, Schwarber and Dave’s track record. I didn’t need to hear any intelligent vocabulary because if I can just look at what’s there, I can understand.”
Such a thought-out and detailed response to a question, any question, is something Castellanos’ teammates have come to expect in their two years together.
“If Casty wasn’t a ballplayer, he’d be a philosopher,” catcher Garrett Stubbs said. “He’ll always ask, ‘Why?’ No matter what. He’s probably the most curious person in the entire world. It doesn’t matter what the conversation is about. You know how little kids will always ask, ‘But why?’ He’s always asking why, and it’s hilarious.”
Across the clubhouse, second baseman Bryson Stott admitted that learning to appreciate Castellanos’ deeper thoughts to even the most routine conversations took some time.
“You could ask him the most simple question like, ‘Why is it 7 a.m. in the morning?’ and he gives you an answer you could probably write a story on,” Stott said. “Sometimes you’re like, ‘Nick, I just want to know what time it is. I don’t need to know about the sun and how everything is moving around.’ Anytime you get in a conversation, you know you’re going to get the most in-depth, full answer you could get.”
Or you could get something off-the-cuff and shocking, in the vein of his ring-finger celebration. During an on-field interview after the Phillies’ division series win over the Atlanta Braves, Castellanos was asked if his fit with the team was something he always needed. Without skipping a beat, he responded, “I mean, yeah, I f— with Philly,” on national television.
“I’m not sure where he’s going with some of those interviews, like a lot of other people,” Dombrowski said with a smile. “That’s Nick. One thing you won’t get is any false pretense. You’ll either like it, or you won’t. That’s up to you.”
There is no denying that Castellanos’ straightforward approach could be jarring in a professional clubhouse. But the mistake, according to those who know him best, would be to judge Castellanos by only his quirky, say-anything style without getting to know him as a teammate.
Rookie center fielder Johan Rojas points to the help his right fielder has provided him all season, from the first day of spring training, to his call up to the big leagues in July, to the October stage. Throughout, Castellanos has been there to show the 23-year-old the ropes.
“He’s been a mentor to me,” Rojas said through the team interpreter. “He’s been good about everything, really. He tells me what to expect in the game and sometimes when I don’t have a good [at-bat], he comes to me to forget about it and focus on defense.
“All I can tell you is he’s a great teammate. He’s always looking to help me. I can’t be more thankful to God for putting me on his team. He’s been an incredible teammate.”
Firmly in his comfort zone in his second year in Philadelphia, Castellanos has grown into a leadership role in the clubhouse and become a fan favorite. Much of what has endeared him to the home fan base is showing how he connects with his son through baseball. First, MLB released a Father’s Day video tribute that showcased a softer, more personal side of Castellanos not many had seen before. Whether it’s his son cheering him on after a clutch home run or a postgame trip across the parking lot to meet fans at Xfinity Live, their interactions this postseason have become part of the fabric at Citizens Bank Park. On the eve of NLCS Game 6, it was Liam who got the bigger ovation when both Castellanoses were shown on the Lincoln Financial Field scoreboard during the Miami Dolphins-Philadelphia Eagles game. Getting to share the journey with his son has added to the feeling of groundedness for the elder Castellanos.
“If what you mean by ‘home’ is I have like-minded individuals that are passionate about being great at their careers, yes, I have found a home,” Castellanos said. “The city of Philadelphia, and the crazy cheering by the fans, is all complementary to that. Because if you don’t have that, everything else is come and go.
“The more comfortable I feel with where I’m at, the more my raw emotions can come out and I’m not worrying, thinking or analyzing about s—. I’m just doing it because everything else is in its place.”
Now, Castellanos and his Phillies teammates have a chance to finish what they fell just short of accomplishing last season — bringing their city its first World Series title since 2008. But Castellanos refuses to let even that lofty goal be his only measure of success.
“There’s two ways to go about it,” he said. “You can look at the positive side and just appreciate the fact you got to be in it and not sound like a spoiled brat, just be thankful for the opportunity to play in the biggest baseball series in the world. Or you can be that much more frustrated and not be thankful about any of it and just want to finish it the right way, and none of the other stuff matters. Where’s the balance?”
Many players would have given the expected canned response to such a question, but it’s an answer that is quintessential Castellanos.
“Nick being Nick,” pitcher Michael Lorenzen said. “He knows how to be himself better than anyone.”
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Sumrall hires Kentucky’s White as Florida DC
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December 4, 2025By
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Associated Press
Dec 4, 2025, 03:10 PM ET
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Jon Sumrall made his first official hire as Florida‘s football coach Thursday, bringing aboard Kentucky‘s Brad White as defensive coordinator.
The 43-year-old White spent the past eight years in Lexington, including seven of those in charge of the Wildcats’ defense. Sumrall and White overlapped on that side of the ball between 2019 and 2021, including working their final year together as co-DCs. Sumrall left Kentucky to become Troy‘s coach in 2022 and spent the past two years at Tulane.
Under White’s direction, Kentucky fielded defenses that ranked in the top 25 nationally in 2018, 2019, 2021 and 2022. His unit ranked sixth nationally in 2018 thanks in part to edge rusher Josh Hines-Allen. Hines-Allen recorded 17 sacks and five forced fumbles as a redshirt junior.
He went on to become the seventh pick by Jacksonville in the 2019 NFL draft and now owns the franchise’s sacks record with 59 and counting.
“First of all, they’re getting a great person, a great communicator, a guy that wants the best for his players,” Hines-Allen said. “He was my positional coach when I had him, and the time we spent together helped me develop and be where I am today. I give him a lot of credit and a lot of respect and love.
“He’s done a lot of good things for that program. Hopefully he continues to have that success at Florida.”
Current Jaguars coach Liam Coen, who was Kentucky’s offensive coordinator in 2021 and 2023, faced White’s defense daily and called him “one of the smarter guys I’ve been around at any level.”
“True teacher of the game,” Coen added. “I learned so much from Brad in terms of the way that he saw the game. He is one of the more detailed, organized coaches I’ve been around in terms of his process throughout the week, his checklists throughout the week and then his game plans to be able to go and cause issues for people.
“It gave me problems every day in practice. It’s multiple. He knows how to scheme people up.”
Sumrall is expected to install a 3-4 defensive scheme at Florida, with an emphasis on linebacker play that would accentuate the talent and depth of a position group that includes standouts Myles Graham, Jaden Robinson and Aaron Chiles.
Sumrall’s more important hire will come on the other side of the ball, where Georgia Tech‘s Buster Faulkner is one of a few candidates to be Florida’s offensive coordinator.
“I may be a defensive guy, but I want to be more of a defensive guy like … Bob Stoops,” Sumrall said. “I want the scoreboard to light up.”
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Nits nixed again: DeBoer denies PSU job interest
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December 4, 2025By
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Mark SchlabachDec 4, 2025, 03:25 PM ET
Close- Senior college football writer
- Author of seven books on college football
- Graduate of the University of Georgia
Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer said he doesn’t have interest in other jobs.
DeBoer, who has a 19-6 cumulative record and is in his second season with the ninth-ranked Crimson Tide, had been linked to Penn State‘s coaching vacancy.
“We’re extremely happy at Alabama,” DeBoer said Thursday ahead of this weekend’s SEC championship game against No. 3 Georgia.
“We’re extremely happy here, love the challenge, love the grind, love this place. There’s never been any link, there’s never been any conversation, there’s never been any interest either way. So I’m glad we can put that to bed right now.”
The Nittany Lions’ coaching search is ongoing after they fired James Franklin on Oct. 12. Penn State, which had national title aspirations for this season, started 3-3.
Other coaches who were linked to Penn State’s search, including Vanderbilt’s Clark Lea, Louisville’s Jeff Brohm, Georgia Tech’s Brent Key and BYU’s Kalani Sitake, agreed to contract extensions with their current schools.
Meanwhile, DeBoer said starting defensive end LT Overton and reserve defensive tackle Kelby Collins won’t be available to play against Georgia in Saturday’s contest (4 p.m. ET, ABC) at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.
DeBoer wouldn’t specify their injuries, calling them “illnesses, medical conditions — whatever you want to call it.”
Overton, a senior from Milton, Georgia, was listed as out on the SEC’s first availability report Wednesday. Collins was not included.
“Just trying to get through these next couple days here and kind of see,” DeBoer said. “Obviously, Kelby’s just popped up, too. Just trying to get through this weekend and kind of see where that’s at. We’ll understand more details when that time comes.”
Overton has 33 tackles and four sacks this season. He had six tackles and a half-sack in the Tide’s 24-21 win at Georgia on Sept. 27, which ended the Bulldogs’ 33-game home winning streak.
DeBoer added that running back Jam Miller, tight end Josh Cuevas and guard Kam Dewberry remain questionable for Saturday’s game.
The Bulldogs will be without starting center Drew Bobo, who injured his left foot in last week’s 16-9 victory against Georgia Tech.
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J-Rod’s journey: From sleeping on floors and taking out loans to Heisman contention
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December 4, 2025By
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Max OlsonDec 4, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Covers the Big 12
- Joined ESPN in 2012
- Graduate of the University of Nebraska
LUBBOCK, Texas — In December 2021, Jacob Rodriguez felt lost.
The young quarterback had just ended his freshman season at Virginia. Coach Bronco Mendenhall had unexpectedly stepped down. Rodriguez decided to transfer but had minimal tape as a college passer and few options. He had a creeping doubt, too, that maybe it was time to give up his quarterback dreams.
Texas Tech was willing to take a chance on him under two conditions: It didn’t have a scholarship available, and it didn’t need a QB. If Rodriguez wanted to come home to Texas and play for new coach Joey McGuire, he would have to learn to play linebacker.
Rodriguez took out a student loan to pay for school. He couldn’t find an apartment when he arrived in January 2022 and moved in with his older brother at the University Pointe apartments. He slept on the floor of his brother’s bedroom, on a foam queen mattress topper folded in half for a little more cushion.
He started sixth on the linebacker depth chart. He lifted weights twice a day to bulk up and watched film to figure out a position he had never played in high school. Back then, Rodriguez wasn’t envisioning someday becoming the All-America performer he is today.
“My biggest concern was not really trying to get a scholarship,” he said. “I was just trying to make the team. I’m fighting to survive.”
Four years later, Rodriguez is the Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year and the best linebacker in college football. His No. 4 Red Raiders are about to play for a Big 12 championship. Then, they’ll advance to the College Football Playoff. Surreal doesn’t even begin to describe it.
The mustachioed, cowboy hat-wearing captain married to a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter pilot is enjoying a historic senior season and experiencing a new level of fame this fall as Texas Tech pushes him for Heisman Trophy consideration. No other college defender over the past 20 years has put up the stats he has with more than 100 tackles, seven forced fumbles and four interceptions.
And Rodriguez is ready for more as the Red Raiders prepare for the program’s first Big 12 title game against No. 11 BYU on Saturday (noon ET, ABC).
“Man, it’s such a great story,” McGuire said. “In the age of all this money, which is great — I mean, I’m all for it, obviously — this is one of those great stories for college football.”
Rodriguez always had his believers as a record-setting quarterback coming out of Wichita Falls, Texas, but Heisman good? No, even those who know him best say this is getting ridiculous and see it as pure proof of his determination. If Rodriguez could tell his 19-year-old self where he’d be standing today after his humble beginnings?
“That was a long time ago,” Rodriguez said with a smile. “But I’m very proud of that. I think it’s something that I’ll hang my hat on for a long time.
“There’s nowhere else I’d rather be than here, doing what we’re doing.”
HIS CHILDHOOD DREAM was to become the starting quarterback of the Minnesota Vikings.
“Oh yeah, you betcha,” his brother Joshua Rodriguez said with a chuckle.
Jacob Rodriguez was born in Hastings, Minnesota, the youngest of five siblings in a family that competed in everything, from croquet to UNO to holiday pancake decorating. Joe and Ann Rodriguez signed up Jacob and his twin brothers Joshua and Jeremiah for wrestling at a young age because “we were breaking everything,” Joshua said.
Jacob got started at age 3 and won two youth state championships by the time he was 7, pinning every opponent he faced during his second title run.
“That’s one reason why he’s so good at tackling: all those single-leg and double-leg takedowns,” Joshua said.
When the family moved to Wichita Falls in 2010, the boys were eager to start playing tackle football. The twins would play linebacker at Rider High School. Jacob, a four-sport athlete, played varsity as a sophomore and went on to break school records with more than 10,000 career total yards and 106 touchdowns.
“He was the guy, the talk of the town,” Rider teammate Jed Castles said. “He was signing autographs when we went out to restaurants.”
Rider coach Marc Bindel occasionally let his star quarterback play safety, but Rodriguez was a QB first and foremost with a playing style that evoked Tim Tebow comparisons.
“We always called him Captain America,” Bindel said.
Rodriguez was an ESPN 300 recruit, but recruiters were split on his college projection: Should he play offense or defense? Then-Kansas State offensive coordinator Collin Klein gave him his first FBS offer in 2019 and saw his potential as an athletic quarterback.
But others saw something else. In a game against Canyon Randall during his junior year, Rodriguez made a fourth-and-1 play on defense they still talk about to this day. He burst through the line, grabbed the running back by his legs, lifted him in the air and slammed him on his back for the stop.
Bindel had a coach on his staff send the clip to then-Texas Tech defensive coordinator Keith Patterson. The next day, the Red Raiders offered Rodriguez a scholarship as a linebacker. Baylor would end up doing the same after McGuire became its outside linebackers coach in 2020. Rodriguez ultimately received more offers for defense than offense.
But Mendenhall and his Virginia coaches made Rodriguez a priority — and convinced him he could be their next Taysom Hill. His plans to fly out for a spring break official visit were canceled by COVID-19. Rodriguez still committed and enrolled without ever visiting campus.
“I think we all knew his best chance to make it big was going to be on defense,” Bindel said, “but in his heart, he wanted to play quarterback. And why would you not want to try to play quarterback in college?”
Virginia had an established starter in Brennan Armstrong, who broke single-season school records in 2021. But the Cavaliers also had a way to get Rodriguez on the field as a freshman. He agreed to back up Keytaon Thompson at their FBP (football player) position, a hybrid role in Robert Anae’s offense that could entail pretty much anything.
Rodriguez wore No. 98 and Thompson, a former quarterback at Mississippi State, wore No. 99. They lined up at slot receiver, outside receiver, tight end, running back or behind center. They would motion all over the field before the snap and throw blocks, run routes or take handoffs. It was intentional chaos, aimed at confusing opposing defenses.
“It was pure creativity,” Thompson said. “A lot of the stuff [Anae] came up with, I don’t even think he knew it would work. If it looked good, we’d go with it.”
It was an awful lot of running, so much so that Rodriguez said he went from 215 pounds to 185 during the season. He played 169 snaps but only four at quarterback. The rookie didn’t expect to become a Swiss Army knife on offense, but he embraced it.
“I was having a blast,” Rodriguez said. “I was just happy to be on the field.”
All these years later, Rodriguez believes he would’ve finished his college career at Virginia if Mendenhall hadn’t surprised everyone by resigning that December after a 6-6 season. Thompson called it a “totally unexpected curveball.”
“I loved it there and loved the people there,” Rodriguez said. “But I kind of went there to play for him.”
He made the 1,300-mile trek home to Wichita Falls, unsure what his future might hold. And his phone wasn’t ringing.
“There wasn’t a whole lot of buzz,” Bindel said.
TEXAS TECH ASSOCIATE head coach Kenny Perry excitedly called Bindel the morning after Red Raiders’ first spring practice in 2022.
“Jacob Rodriguez is a bad motherf—er,” Perry told him.
The high school coach’s reply?
“Yep, and he’s playing for free right now…”
After leaving Virginia, Rodriguez had asked a few people to reach out to McGuire on his behalf in the hopes he could join the Red Raiders. Two Rider teammates, Castles and E’Maurion “Dooda” Banks, played for Texas Tech. One of his former youth coaches, Dudley McAfee, is a Tech grad and knew McGuire well. All three vouched for Rodriguez to the new head coach.
“Dooda was like, ‘Coach, if we can get this guy on our team, we need to get him,'” McGuire said.
McGuire vowed he would put Rodriguez on scholarship as soon as one became available. These were the early days of NIL before collectives helped take care of walk-ons. Tech could provide him two meals a day, but he would need to take out a student loan to cover his classes and books.
“It was kind of one of those deals where, well, I got to go somewhere,” Rodriguez said.
More importantly, Rodriguez had to accept his future was on defense. Texas Tech already had three starter-caliber quarterbacks in future second-round pick Tyler Shough, Behren Morton and Donovan Smith.
Bindel has no doubt Rodriguez could’ve made it as a tough dual-threat QB such as Georgia Tech‘s Haynes King had he found the right opportunity. Rodriguez doesn’t fault other coaches for missing on him during his month in the portal, especially given his role with the Cavaliers.
“I really didn’t have any quarterback film,” he said. “I just had a whole bunch of other stuff.”
Ann Rodriguez suspects if he hadn’t gone to Virginia to play quarterback, he would’ve regretted never trying. He had received plenty of advice that linebacker was his best path to the NFL. It still wasn’t easy to give up his childhood dream.
“There were a lot of tears shed and a real thought process about it,” his mother said. “It took a lot of him really looking inward and deciding, ‘You know what? I’m going to do whatever it takes.'”
It was Joshua’s idea for Jacob to move in and save money. The brothers lived in a four-bedroom apartment with three random roommates they initially didn’t know. The bedroom was certainly tight quarters — the brothers had to share a bathroom and closet — and Jacob would sleep near the foot of Joshua’s bed. Eventually, they squeezed in a twin-sized mattress for him.
“To be honest, I wouldn’t even know if those guys would be able to say, ‘Yeah, I lived with Jacob Rodriguez,'” Joshua said. “He was never there. He’d go to workouts at 5 a.m. and was gone before they woke up. He’d come back at 9 p.m. after classes and film.”
Rodriguez said he’d go in for the 8 a.m. lifting session and come back at 2 p.m. for another while working to get back to 220 pounds for spring practice. His offensive knowledge helped, but learning to play his new position was a completely different challenge. Former Texas Tech inside linebackers coach Josh Bookbinder said Rodriguez had all the right traits coming out of high school to be a great linebacker — he just hadn’t played the position.
The hardest part early on was the physicality of Texas Tech practices. Quarterbacks never get touched in these settings. Rodriguez had to get the hang of hitting and getting hit day after day. “I’m like, ‘Dude, how can I sustain this?'” he said. If he were to queue up his 2022 practice film today, Rodriguez expects it would probably look “awful.” He barely had a clue.
“The one thing he showed really early was his effort was nonnegotiable,” Bookbinder said. “He may not have known exactly what he was doing at linebacker, but he was running his ass to the ball.”
Texas Tech coaches loved the potential they saw in the spring of 2022. When McGuire called Rodriguez into his office before August preseason camp, the linebacker genuinely didn’t know why. The head coach asked him to call his parents and let them know he was on scholarship.
“There was a lot to learn, but Jacob is a football dude,” McGuire said. “He was raw, but he picked up stuff so fast because he’s really intelligent. Football makes sense to him.”
All the little details — his footwork, hand use, the angles he took in tackling, how he struck ball carriers — came with reps and time as he graduated from playing on instincts to processing and better understanding formations, sets and situations. After playing backup snaps as a sophomore, Rodriguez’s development accelerated throughout his second offseason in Lubbock to earning a starting job entering 2023, but a foot injury sustained in the season opener sidelined him for most of the season.
“It’s like you had all the ingredients on the counter,” said Bookbinder, who’s now coaching at TCU. “You just had to mix them up and let it cook for a little bit.”
The Jacob Rodriguez who returned in 2024 was finally ready to put it all together with an All-Big 12 season, finishing second among all Power 4 defenders with 127 tackles. And the one who returned for his senior year in 2025?
“He’s the best player in college football,” Perry said.
SESI VAILAHI TOOK the handoff and ran up the middle. Rodriguez met the Oklahoma State running back in the hole and stood him up. But this wasn’t your typical tackle for loss.
Vailahi staggered backward, attempting to break free. Except the veteran linebacker wasn’t going for a takedown. No, he was thinking theft. Rodriguez ripped the football right out of Vailahi’s grip and ran the other way for a 69-yard touchdown.
Literally took it away and took it to the house.
Best defender in the country.
📺 @ESPNU | https://t.co/G56N3v07Kv https://t.co/SKua435dYH pic.twitter.com/1FGuLyRaEt
— Texas Tech Football (@TexasTechFB) October 25, 2025
He has been filling up the Heisman highlight reel week after week. Like the two Kansas State fumbles he punched out. The one-handed interception at Utah. The pick he deflected to himself against BYU, or the screen pass he jumped in front of against UCF.
“Every time you look up, he’s at the ball,” Morton said. “The way he can cause and flip momentum in a game, there’s not another player in the country who can do that.”
Rodriguez has created seven turnovers by himself. His FBS-leading seven forced fumbles are more than 53 teams have all season, including Georgia, Ole Miss and Notre Dame, and he’s four away from breaking Khalil Mack’s FBS career record of 16.
McGuire has plenty of respect for Indiana‘s Fernando Mendoza, Vanderbilt‘s Diego Pavia and Ohio State‘s Julian Sayin, the trio of quarterbacks currently leading the Heisman race with one week to go. But he’s not going to relent in campaigning for Rodriguez.
“The thing for me is there’s nobody at the quarterback position that is having a year that we haven’t seen before,” McGuire said. “He’s having a year at the linebacker position that we haven’t seen.”
For comparison: Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te’o finished with 113 tackles and seven interceptions but zero forced fumbles during his Heisman runner-up season in 2012. Te’o was the unquestioned top player on the No. 1 team in the country.
Rodriguez points to Texas Tech pass rusher David Bailey, their projected first-round pick with 12.5 sacks, as the best player they’ve got. His answers in news conferences offer praise toward teammates and coaches. But among his peers, there’s no question.
“This is a talented football team,” Morton said, “and it’s led by Jacob.”
McGuire shook up Texas Tech’s defense after an 8-5 finish in 2024. He brought in defensive coordinator Shiel Wood from Houston, splurged in the portal with a rebuilt defensive line that cost more than $7 million and inked arguably the top transfer class in the country.
Rodriguez considered going pro at the end of last season and went through senior day ceremonies before the home finale. But he put his trust in McGuire and watched as his coach and general manager James Blanchard assembled the kind of roster that could finally compete for a Big 12 championship.
“You could tell as soon as we put pads on for spring ball: Hey, we’re going to be a special group,” Rodriguez said. “I’ve never had this much fun playing football ever.”
Texas Tech’s determined efforts to make Rodriguez a Heisman finalist took a creative turn two weeks ago. Ahead of its home finale against UCF, McGuire texted Joe Rodriguez to break the news: Offensive coordinator Mack Leftwich was working on a Wildcat package to utilize Jacob at quarterback.
“I said, ‘Coach, that’s so freaking awesome,'” his dad said. “I’ve been pushing that for four years. I told him, ‘Be careful, because you’re going to let that beast out.'”
Joe did not warn his wife that this was in the works. Jacob’s wife, Emma, was the one who told her inside Jones AT&T Stadium, a few plays before the moment arrived in the first quarter. She asked her to try to stay calm. Texas Tech running back Cameron Dickey said he got goosebumps when he overheard Leftwich ask, “Is J-Rod ready?”
“He goes out there,” Ann said, “and we both immediately started crying.”
The home crowd got so loud that Rodriguez worried he might mess up the snap cadence. But his offensive line paved a wide-open lane for an easy 2-yard score. He got to go in and do it again Saturday at West Virginia.
Linebacker Jacob Rodriguez with his FIRST CAREER OFFENSIVE TD for @TexasTechFB ‼️
And he hit the Heisman as his celebration 👀 pic.twitter.com/zzOWSXR1Qr
— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) November 15, 2025
“Just like old times, man,” said Thompson, his former Virginia teammate.
It was all so cathartic for those who know Rodriguez best, who watched how relentlessly he worked to turn into the linebacker he is today and know what he gave up getting here. The dream had to change along the way, but he wouldn’t change a thing now.
“We couldn’t have dreamt this up,” Ann Rodriguez said.
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