Like the rest of his teammates, Stephen Weatherly said he was "shocked" on Saturday when he heard the Vikings were releasing Brian Robison.
The reality of the NFL is an ascension like the 24-year-old Weatherly's, who had 1.5 sacks in the preseason en route to earning playing time this fall, added to the reasons why Robison became expendable to the Vikings. But Weatherly, a former seventh-round pick, said he owes just about all of it to Robison.
"Honestly, everything," Weatherly recalled in a phone interview this weekend.
Seventh rounders like Weatherly are barely given the job security assumed by NFL draft picks. So when he arrived to Minnesota in 2016, he faced an uphill climb about as steep as anybody on the roster.
Robison, then 33 years old, was immediately there, Weatherly said, even though he was the latest young defensive end to threaten Robison's own job security.
"As soon as I got there he introduced himself, gave me his cell phone number and said if you need anything, let me know," Weatherly said. "I heard that was going to happen, but he actually followed up with it and we were able to establish a connection there which I've used. I've leaned on him a lot, not just with football things but off the field too."
Just as Robison did with other teammates, he took Weatherly under his wing. He pulled Weatherly aside at practices, helping him through the basics, "from my steps, to my hand placement, my eyes, really how to practice and perform as a professional every day," Weatherly said.
When things didn't go Weatherly's way, Robison was still there.