Chances are you've never heard of Derek Domino. Chances are you never will.
That's what makes sports so fun.
You stand in front of this 23-year-old kid from Spring Lake Park and you wonder. Are you looking at just another underdog with an unattainable dream? Or are you looking at the next Scott Studwell? Until someone invents a drill that measures a man's heart and its likelihood of intersecting with opportunity, we can only guess. Then wait and see.
It's 7 a.m. Tuesday and Domino is pacing inside the Bierman Building at the University of Minnesota. It's a big day for him. Huge. Bigger than Christmas morning is to a 6-year-old.
"I'm nervous," Domino admits.
It's an hour before the NFL pro day workout starts for about 20 of the area's small-college prospects. Domino, an outside linebacker from South Dakota State, is one of them.
You notice that Domino is gulping at his second big bottle of water. You wonder why. Then Domino says his weight has been dropping. It's probably nerves. Or maybe it's because he's leaner than a turkey burger, having spent seven weeks training to run fast and jump high by Bill Welle at Velocity Sports Performance in Champlin. Welle's long list of believers includes a couple of clients named Larry Fitzgerald Jr. and Cris Carter.
"I was 234 on Sunday and this morning I was 226," says the kid who stands 6-3. "I've tried everything. Lots of water. Oatmeal. Bananas."