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Warchant TV: Florida State coaches, players embracing bowl opportunity

On3 imageby:Aslan Hajivandi12/26/22

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FSU Cheez It Bowl generic

ORLANDO — The Florida State football team is in Orlando chasing a season-ending win in the Cheez-It Bowl vs. the Oklahoma Sooners.

It would mark the program’s 25th season with 10 or more wins, a source of pride shared by several players during FSU’s turn at the player/coordinator press conference on Monday afternoon. Talented prospects Jared Verse and Jammie Robinson have still not disclosed their decisions to return in 2023 or enter their names into the NFL Draft, but stressed their focus and dedication to closing the season out on a successful note.

Florida State faces Oklahoma on Thursday at 5:30 p.m. A full transcript of all interviews is forthcoming.

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MIKE NORVELL: I want to say thank you to the Cheez-It Bowl, our rival yesterday coming in, incredible hospitality from the entire group. Great group of people. The efficiency and organization of what we are able to do today, I thought our guys came to work and had a really good practice. I liked the mindset.

This team, they have really had a good Bowl prep. We have a lot of work that we still have to do as we lead up to Thursday night, but I like their mentality and the way they have pushed themselves, the way they have been preparing. We are going to enjoy this Bowl experience.

But today was an important practice for us. I thought the energy level and the speed that showed up was impressive. And still some things we are going to clean up just when it comes to our execution and efficiency, but I think the guys have the right mindset. And just grateful to be here, and just all the people associated with the Bowl have just been remarkable.

With that, I’ll take some questions.

You guys have been practicing back in Tallahassee, but this is the first time a lot of players have ever been in a Bowl, a few years since any of them have been in a Bowl. Did you sense excitement when you got here, when you got to the location and practice here?

MIKE NORVELL: Absolutely. They showed me their excitement with how they prepared back at home. There’s plenty of distractions that can be in place. Anytime you have an extended downtime, you know, maintaining that edge – finish the season, playing as good as anybody in the country, I believe, and the objective for this game is to go be better.

I think our guys have embraced it throughout the season. They have really worked hard, and I’ve liked the edge that they have brought.

But we got here last night. This is a reward. It’s a reward for the team. It’s a reward for the work they have done. We talk a lot about the relationships that have been established throughout this football team, and that’s what I enjoy. I’ll enjoy watching them hanging out together, to get away and just enjoy that fellowship.

This morning to get up, everything is different when you get to a Bowl. Sometimes guys want to hold back because they don’t know exactly where to go or exactly what to do. But once we got to the practice field, I thought they had a great edge about them, and I thought they were able to have a really good practice.

You can feel that expectation and excitement.

Obviously not your first Bowl game, but for this team and program to go through, it’s been a while. You talked before about having several plans, what to go through. How much do you have to maybe kind of educate some of these guys who have never been through a Bowl experience what to expect?

MIKE NORVELL: We had a lot of different plans because of the different Bowl options. Obviously Plan A ended up being the result of it. So we went through and really from everything, with our strength and conditioning, sports science, all the things that we knew would be necessary for us to build our guys so that Thursday night we have the opportunity to go play our best, I think that was the plan that we laid out just from the days we were practicing.

Some of the things that we were going to have, mental days rather than as much of the physical push, and I really liked the results that I’ve seen. It’s been really good up until this point. These guys, it’s about building trust. Since the very first day I got here at Florida State, it’s being able to earn that trust throughout the experiences.

And these guys know we put a lot of time and thought into how we are going to do things, and we try to explain the why. When it’s time to show up and go to work, there’s one standard for how we are going to do that.

And that’s what I think this team has really bought into and it’s not – we got some really talented people and professionals that are helping lay out those plans and being able to create the expectation for what we need to do; and the players, it’s their job to give everything they have when we have the opportunity.

I think that trust has been established throughout the year and throughout the last couple years. And so we know what it takes, and now we just have to go be the best we can and executing that plan.

Mycah got the Cheez-It room. Have you had a chance to see it yet, and what’s been the reaction?

MIKE NORVELL: I have not yet to see it other than the video, and I know my daughter got to go, she wanted to see it. So Mycah was kind enough to let her see that. She said it’s plenty of orange. It’s pretty remarkable. I guess dark is still dark at night, but it’s a pretty bright room (laughter).

How important is it to finish strong for this season, in addition to what you’re building heading into next season with so many players coming back?

MIKE NORVELL: Everything builds off itself. For us, our focus is this game. It’s to go be our best. And one of the things that’s a little bit of a challenge and almost a little bit of a distraction with so many players making that decision to come back and really announcing it early and something I’m proud of, but you know, this is not – it’s not about next year. It’s about right now. It’s about this team. It’s about this game. It’s about this opportunity.

And, you know, sometimes the excitement for what’s to come, you cannot allow that to distract you for what we have here in this moment and this practice. It’s this day. Lord willing, we wake up tomorrow, we have to go be better.

Our expectation is to go play our best game this year. That’s been the expectation with each week that we’ve had throughout the course of the season: continue to improve, continue to get better, focusing on those little things that separate us.

You know, what’s ahead? Well, there’s an exciting time for Florida State football. There’s an exciting time for the young men we are building and the young men I get to coach and the work they have put in.

The future is bright, but we have to take care of the moment and ultimately the things that we can control, and that’s this week. You know, it’s an absolute treat to be able to be here and to get a chance to play in this game, and you know, we just want to go show and be better than what we’ve been.

Just wondering, now that you’ve had time to reflect on the end of the regular season, what do you think were the one or two things that were the biggest causes for the turning point for this team to play so well? And do you feel like there has been a feeling in the program that things are really cooking right now and things are going well?

MIKE NORVELL: They never stopped. There was no direct just turning point. Even through some disappointing games there in the middle of the season, they continued to work. They continued to believe. You lay out an expectation, you have a plan. Sometimes things don’t always go exactly the way that you anticipate or expect them to go, but you still are in control of your response.

And this team responded by continuing to draw close together, to push the standard, to push the expectation to go get better throughout the course of the season. You know, it’s their decision. It’s their choice.

You know, as a coaching staff, we push hard, and even though some games didn’t go the way we wanted, that didn’t change the approach of what we brought. Our guys in this team, they responded the way that I expected them to, and you’ve seen them grow.

We have got a great group of young men. I am so blessed to be able to coach them because they care about each other. They care about this program. They care about who they represent and who they get to do it with and for, and so that’s the joy of watching a team grow. You know, as we have gone through, it’s what makes this week special because you get one more opportunity for this group to go play the game together, and as you watch them kind of rise up through the opportunities that they have had, it’s a remarkable group. I’m excited to see them play Thursday night.

Now that the game is this week, just what do you think it says about the team that none of your top players have opted out for the game, and how hard was it in this day and age to convince and talk and just kind of go through that for however many days and figure that out?

MIKE NORVELL: You know, the great thing, there was no convincing that needed to be made. I mean, I remember the first Bowl practice, we had a couple of our top players that were going to meet with the media afterwards. I didn’t even talk to them about anything when it comes to opt-out or decisions or any of that. But we had a practice scheduled and it was an opportunity to go get better. There was nobody that was missing out on that.

And so I talked to the players right after I got done with the meeting and said, Hey, just so you know, you don’t have to go and make any decision. You don’t have to go – they are probably going to get asked about it. 20 minutes later, I’m looking at my phone, and we have a couple players that are already, “I’m playing in this game. This is it.”

That’s what it should be. These guys, they love playing the game. They love playing and getting a chance to represent each other. Each situation is unique to itself. I mean, the fact that I don’t have to try to convince anybody to play, I mean, ultimately, you always look at each decision, whether guys would like to go pro, would like to come back. It’s about each individual, and we try to help them along through the process by providing information, by helping to guide. And if there are any opinions, I want them to be educated opinions of how we guide them through their careers.

But it’s always about them. And that’s what’s been so nice because this team, they are excited to play. They are excited. I’ve talked about it. When you get a chance to do something that’s going to change a wall at Florida State, you’ve done something. That’s where we talk about the opportunity to go try to win your tenth game is big. It would be the 25th time in our program’s history.

That’s a great challenge but also a great opportunity for these guys to go finish the season; the way that they have worked and continuing to push to our expectation and standard of what we want – how we want to operate.

You have Randy on the staff, and you have Tatum on the team, guys who have played with Dillon when he was at UCF. Do you plan on using those guys to get an idea or scouting report of what to expect, even though Dillon played this year with Oklahoma?

MIKE NORVELL: I mean, you know, you always try to gather information of just whether it’s from years past, just any little things that you can gain. We watch film. We have a pretty good sense. There’s been a couple years since that was – teammates and everybody going through it. But we had a chance to see this year and what that looks like. But, yeah, you always try to take whatever information is out there that might be able to help or benefit.

In the same vein, facing Venables who coached at Clemson. Have you seen anything that he’s brought to Oklahoma that you can attack?

MIKE NORVELL: His defense is going to attack, and they are going to bring pressure all over the field. They lead the Big 12 in tackles for loss. They are going to try to create havoc in what they do. There are some similarities.

But similar to the last question we just talked about, this team is unique to itself. And as guys fit into it, they try to play to the skills and talents of the players that they have. So that’s been our focus. We know they are going to attack, we know they are going to bring pressure. They do a good job schematically in their plans of attack. So we have to be ready to adapt and adjust throughout the course of the game.

There’s a lot of discussion nationally about Bowl games that are not in the Playoff. Did you envision a scenario where you went into a Bowl game and didn’t feel like it was of huge importance?

MIKE NORVELL: I can’t. It’s a special experience. Been fortunate to be in quite a few Bowl games in my coaching year, and when you – when you see this week and just all that goes into it – and that’s not even – yes, the game is one thing but also the impact. The impact within the community. The impact that when you have two teams coming from different places to be celebrated for what they have done throughout the course of the season, they get to go compete for one more.

Just what that means to the different communities, obviously it’s great being here in Orlando and being able to represent in our home state. But I think they are special. You know, I know that with the Playoff and all the things that are also out there, this is still a great reward. It’s a great reward for the teams. It’s a great reward for the staffs, the families, all that get to be a part of this week.

It is special. Even within the preparation of what it takes, we had a lot of young players that those extra practices were big for. You’ve seen guys that are growing up and trying to take advantage of all those, it’s really important.

So I’m grateful for them. And, you know, it’s a special venue that we get to be a part of here this week with the Cheez-It Bowl.

How did you feel about practice?

ALEX ATKINS: I thought the effort was good. I thought guys showed they want to still work together. We have to clean up on some details. This defense does present a lot of challenges with looks, pressures, and he understands how to leverage the football and he knows what you’re going to attack by what calls he makes. So we have to make sure we are on point in the execution of the details.

What’s the difference from going from Tallahassee to going down here to Orlando, what goes into schematics?

ALEX ATKINS: Not a difference of schematics, you just try to control the distractions. There’s a lot to be distracted. Just like you go on the road, different practice environment, different locker room, different schedule, different time, more family in town, things like this. So we have to make sure we are controlling the distractions that when the work starts, it’s about the work.

You have Pittman in the Cheez-It Room. Did they make the right choice?

ALEX ATKINS: I bet you he loving it. You probably going to see a vlog on it not too long. Just be ready. He probably got his own private camera crew in there 24 hours.

What’s allowed you to be successful running the football in the second half of the season?

ALEX ATKINS: It start with the quarterback position. And run game is all about services, looks, safety rotations. And the quarterback has done a good job of handling the run checks, getting us in good plays, getting us in the best possible looks and not just running plays on a bad look. First thing is Jordan.

Next thing is continuity in the line. We had the same guys pretty much out there. So not too much they had not seen. And then Trey Benson, I think he leads the country in broken tackles and elusiveness and yards per carry and things like that.

When you do have a bad look or things are not blocked correctly, you got backs’ second break tackles. So it’s a combination of all those things, whether you’re in the right play, you’re blocking up the looks and nothing confuses you and you can maintain blocks, and also you got guys that can make you right when you ain’t right.

I thought our running backs done a great job of breaking tackles and running through things and making it difficult to tackle. So I think all those things combined gives you a shot to have a pretty good run game.

We have been hearing from the head coach and several players the importance of focusing on the individual, how important that is, keeping the guys together. What kind of experience have you had with that, and what are things that you’re telling the guys to keep going, especially for their goal to win the 10th game?

ALEX ATKINS: When you say focus on the individual –

Personal development –

ALEX ATKINS: Ah, being the best version of yourself. You play a team sport, a lot of times especially in football, some guys’ mistakes are not magnified more than others because you can hide a little bit when you have 11 guys out there, and some positions where you can’t.

I think what it’s saying is just be your best; the results will come. And that’s what Coach preaches from the day he got here to today. Even at practice to today, nothing has changed. It’s all about the growth. Wherever you are, be a little bit better today, and everything else will take care of it.

It also comes from accountability because one of the hardest things to hold yourself accountable to what you know. Like at the end of practice, he said basically it’s not about the result, it’s did you play your best. And only one person knows that, and that’s you. And if you can lie to yourself, then we got a lot more development to go on in all other areas.

Having played Coach Venables, you’ve seen what his defense does, it’s obviously a different team with Oklahoma. But what kind of challenges does his brand usually bring?

ALEX ATKINS: You have two great defensive minds with the defensive coordinator with Coach Roof and Coach Venables putting together a lot of good stuff.

The good thing about Coach Venables is he’s multiple. He’ll present you with multiple looks. But he also knows the vulnerabilities of his defense. So he knows what you’re going to get. He knows what you’re going to try to attack and what you’re going to try to leverage. So those guys play fast and react to it quickly.

So we have to be ready to be detailed. Just because we think we’ve got a good play and we know what’s coming, they know what they vulnerable at. So we have to be even more detailed to execute where we got to look.

Coach Venables has done a good job. He been calling defense for a long time. He’s going to be prepared and well prepared, and he’s going to know what he want to take away. We just got to be on point to make sure we’re disciplined and we’re not going backwards and making sure we’re in the right place.

Are you proud or thankful that so much of this team is enjoying this Bowl process and willing to play the game? In this day and age, there’s so many teams that are playing in these bowl games that aren’t going to be at full capacity. How does that make you feel as a coach and competitor?

ALEX ATKINS: I’m blessed to be around a group of guys that want to be around each other. So many times – she brought up a good question about the individual. The way you create a good team is when the guy want to play for somebody else. I don’t want to let you down.

I think we got a lot of that. When you talk about true brotherhood, every coach talks about brotherhood and teammates and love and family. And all that sounds good until you have to make a decision that is greater for the team than it is for yourself.

I think we see a lot of that now. We are also going to protect them from themselves, too. It’s our job to monitor and make sure they are doing a good job and make sure we are giving them the best possible things for their future. But you want it where you have to protect them from themselves because all they can think about is not letting their teammates down, and that’s a blessing to have.

How nice has it been throughout the whole season going against the defensive line and how much does it help your offensive line, the competition? We get to see it during practice, and it gets violent. How much has that helped?

ALEX ATKINS: It creates that I got to be on point or on the bench mentality. I tell high school players the biggest jump from high school to college is every practice is like a game. It’s graded the same, evaluated the same, and the pressure is the same.

What you learn in college is the games get easier for the player because there’s so much pressure put into every single rep from individual to team, eyes are always on you. It creates that “all right, I got to get this done or there’s a consequence” mindset every play.

Coach tried to use this phrase every day, it’s fourth and one. I think that competition level, I have to be on point just raises yourself more. Now, we don’t have a “dog eat dog” mentality, meaning, hey, I’m going to throw it out there and whoever comes out. No. We want to teach and develop and put you in good situations to have success also, but you have to be on point to be on that field at Florida State.

The brotherhood with this team, every program strives to have that. What have you done that’s allowed it to come to fruition?

ALEX ATKINS: We have been through it. Sometimes you never know why you go through, but you got to go through to get through. We have to make all the past experiences, all the lessons learned, all those guys – we had pretty much the same staff and same group of guys since we have been around.

I think about guys like Maurice Smith, Darius Washington, Jordan Travis. I think about guys that have been here and fought the long fight, Treshaun Ward, guys that have been in it, been in the fight, McLendon, that’s seen. And then now you have the guys in the locker room: Hey, guys, I’ve seen that side, I’ve seen where that leads to; this is what I know works and what’s been pushing us forward.

So you’ve got guys that can warn guys when they’re going down the wrong path, and also praising, be thankful for the things that we’re having now because we learned from the lessons we went through earlier in our time here.

Coming to Orlando, what do you see in the first practice and what do you like?

ADAM FULLER: Today we combined Tuesday and Wednesday. Had a bunch of situations and we give the guys about two days off.

So it was important to get them out here and try to make it as physical a practice as we could. I thought our guys showed up with good energy, come back tonight, correct some of the things and move forward tomorrow.

Talk about everybody being intact to play the Bowl game in this different time and age; how happy are you come into a Bowl game with a team that’s dialed in and all your players ready to go?

ADAM FULLER: I’m grateful for these players, grateful for these coaches. It starts with Mycah, how selfless he is. He sets the tone every day and our players follow.

I think the way we have gone to work the last three weeks after the Florida game, it represents who we are. Our guys care about each other, they care about representing this great university. They care about playing well.

They have got high standards and doesn’t guarantee always success but it guarantees what it looks like out there right now and I just feel really grateful to be part of this football game.

How was this morning getting ready for Dillon Gabriel, talented quarterback; what’s it been like preparing for a quarterback like that?

ADAM FULLER: Yeah, I would like to stop the run, the pass and the screens, all of it. But their quarterback is really good. I even, he’s played in this style of offense for a number of years. Shane and Randy and Tatum have played on the same team as this quarterback. I feel we have got information on him.

But he’s been really successful everywhere he’s been. Offense has not been the problem. He’s really efficient. He’s a competitor and has really good pace of play on his touch passes. He’s got really good feet. He had that one run against Nebraska where he ran away from them. He’s a complete quarterback and he’s a winner, two different schools now.

We like playing against competitors because it brings out the best in all of you. So we are just excited. It will be a good multiple on Friday.

We heard from Coach Atkins about the importance of blocking off distractions for the guys that are here. Talk about your side on the defense what conversations are you having with the fellas and how are you encouraging them to dial in and remain focused?

ADAM FULLER: Well, I think you need a certain level of focus in everything you do. It’s a little bit different in Bowl games because certain away games, you get off the plane and you’ve got a Friday night routine and you wake up and either the game is at night in the morning and you have a routine.

You really don’t have as much opportunity to get distracted. Here at the Bowl, part of the allure playing in good Bowl games is you have opportunities for distractions, and it’s important for our guys to be able to venture and enjoy some of those times.

But you don’t prepare for the Bowl game when you get to the Bowl game. You prepare for the Bowl game, last December, last January, last February. You’ve got classes and you have all different things that pop up in these guys’ lives and I think you have to trust what you’ve done throughout the year to get to this point.

Sometimes when you get back, shoot, we’re all distracted last night, Christmas, you have a team meeting. I think when you garner a collective group like we have of good, young men and you put them all in a room, I think that draws the right energy to point in the right direction.

So you never want to take anything for granted, and we won’t. But I do trust the group, and we’ll have them focused, but that’s every day, and that’s definitely a battle that we understand what we need to do each day.

How and why has continuity been such a big key for you guys, your improved play on defense? You mentioned sifting through a lot of options beginning of last season, but that you’ve set on something, it explains itself but how does that make itself a successful unit?

ADAM FULLER: Part of being a coordinator is you have to create structure for your group. That comes with putting certain pieces together in the right positions, and then what are the rotations look like and they can’t always being the same every year because you have different players. Then injuries come up.

So our job is to make sure that the right guys are playing with the right pieces and substitutions happen. So kind of how we coach, all three levels of the defenses, we do have some consistency in putting guys in different spots and moving them around and different pieces, so that when guys have to step up – I heard Jammie saying there’s multiplicity in the training in the back end, and that happens because you are going to need them all and they need to be comfortable playing in different positions; and you have to have comfortable coaching and making sure that all works together.

We have settled in our group, and I think the connectivity of our back seven playing together with our front four is important, and it’s been part of our growth.

Statistically, you guys are one of the best defenses in the country; I know you don’t are about statistics and it’s about how you guys play on the field. But is there a defining way an Adam fuller defense is playing right now? How would you describe the way you guys are playing?

ADAM FULLER: Well, I mean, our job is to get stops every series, right and so probably the proudest I’ve been, what I want to look like is we have games that we played really good for four quarters.

We’ve had games that maybe we gave up a score in the first series of the second half. But usually our responses, I think that’s been the growth that I’ve really enjoyed seeing the most, is just our guys connectivity to each other in all things, and I think we’ve done a really good job of that. I’m excited to see that take place one more time with this team.

But we want to do what we have to do to win the game, and you know, I think our offense and our defense, our special teams, have all played well as a team this year. That’s why we’ve had the success we’ve had, and looking forward to that happening one more time for this team.

Did you ask Santa for Jammie and Jared to come back next year?

ADAM FULLER: No. I didn’t. But I should have. Good question. That was tremendous.

We’ve had two players claim they should have had the Cheez-It Room. Do you want to make your argument for it –

JAMMIE ROBINSON: No, no, no, I’m not – because I just found out that they actually gave it to someone. I text the Instagram page, and I was like, Can I get the Cheez-It Room? And they said it’s against the guidelines or something like that. So they lied to me. I found out Mycah got it. It’s cool. I’ll go by and see it.

I’ve seen it on Instagram, though. That’s why I slid up and I was like, Can I get that room? And they told me it was against the guidelines. But come to find out Mycah got it. I’ll go see, see how the room look.

How was practice this morning?

JAMMIE ROBINSON: Practice was great. The atmosphere was good. Everyone flying around, and a different atmosphere, that was the great thing. We was able to make it feel like home, and I feel like that’s going to lead to us getting a victory. We feel like this is already home, and it’s the first practice.

How excited are you guys about playing in a Bowl game again and playing against a team like Oklahoma?

JAMMIE ROBINSON: I mean, I feel like every game is a great game and a great opportunity, you know what I’m saying. Hats off to Oklahoma. We look forward to playing against them. We have definitely been game planning, watching film. They got some great talent over there.

I also seen that they had a lot of guys out – but that don’t phase us. We ready to see what they really talking about over there and really just ready to get to work honestly. We been practicing for about two and a half weeks, so, you know, we just ready to get off from somebody, really.

Your main goal is to shut out the opponent. Talk about the conversations you guys are having as a defense coming into this, especially since you’re pointing out this already feels like home for you and it’s your first practice. What conversations are you guys having to build each other up and head out into that game on Thursday?

JAMMIE ROBINSON: For sure, like I was saying earlier, like we don’t have five – I don’t know if it’s a five- or four-game winning streak, but I feel like we had lost three games in a row and it kind – you know what I’m saying, it hurt a little bit, but that brought us closer as a team, you know what I’m saying, and that brotherhood.

The brotherhood here different. In all my years in college, this my best year in college football, you know what I’m saying. We’re actually fixing to get a tenth win. I’ve never been pretty much over .500 in college, you know what I’m saying. So I feel like I won a Super Bowl already.

Just getting after it with the guys, everyone, it’s like a team – I feel like our team is player led now. Earlier in the season, we were working on it. The coaches were on us about that, just being leaders and stuff. And I feel like now we get to the end, we getting stronger. Like I don’t feel like we off beat at all. It’s just, you know what I’m saying, we ready to go, honestly.

Your decision to stay at Florida State or go to the NFL, is that something that’s coming into focus, or is this something you let the coaches know, hey, I will let you know by this date?

JAMMIE ROBINSON: Honestly, I just been football-minded. I’m here. I’m with my brothers right now. Because I know when it’s over with, it’s going to be over with, and I’m going to miss it.

Right now I ain’t going to try to miss it, you feel me. I’m going to cherish every moment I got with my brothers, you know what I’m saying, and just day-by-day with it. That’s the type of guy I am, day-by-day.

Once the game over with, then I be answering phone calls and saying what it is, you know what I’m saying. But right now, I’m just ready to get this tenth win. It’s only been 24 10-win seasons. We’re trying to make it 25. That’s what we focusing on. We already won a state and now trying to win a Bowl game and see what’s next.

With a Bowl game you get extra practices. What have you seen from Azareye’h Thomas since arriving? What makes him special to be getting that playing time as a true freshman?

JAMMIE ROBINSON: One thing I like about AZ is as a freshman, you don’t see most guys like being students of the game, and I feel like that’s one thing AZ is doing a great job at. He’s in the film room, he’s making the checks, he’s running with the ones, he’s getting two reps, you know what I’m saying. He’s playing his role, and everybody on the team got their own role and everybody got their own plan, you know what I’m saying.

So for sure he got a bright future ahead of him, just like all our young guys. We got so much depth and if one man go down, we know like the next guy that’s coming up, he’s able to be trusted, you know what I’m saying. So that’s why I feel like all our coaches do a great job just getting everybody prepared for it at any moment because anything can happen.

Last time you guys played was that Florida game. That was a back-and-forth game. As a defense, you’re probably not, looking back at that now, happy about giving up 38 points. What do you guys have to do to make sure you don’t do that again this week?

JAMMIE ROBINSON: I feel like we just going to go out there, we going to make them try to throw the ball, because that’s what they tend to do, and then once they know they can’t throw the ball on us, they can’t run because our D-line is just crazy.

It’s going to be a great game for us. We are going to go out there and get after them for real.

You’re statistically one of the best defenses in the nation. How do you explain the Florida State defense?

JAMMIE ROBINSON: I feel like there is no defense that play man coverage like how we play man coverage. I feel like there is no defense that fly around like we fly around. I feel like there’s no defense in the country that practice like how we practice, the intensity, the level we practice.

I just feel like Florida State different, you know what I’m saying. If you not built for Florida State, you can’t come to Florida State honestly.

Speaking of throwing the ball, what are your thoughts on Renardo Green, doesn’t get talked about a ton –

JAMMIE ROBINSON: That’s another corner, you feel me – ain’t even got to finish asking the question. Renardo, he play safety. He play safety, now he playing corner, you know what I’m saying. I play safety, I play nickel. Kevin always play corner, nickel, you know what I’m saying. Jarrian Jones, corner, nickel, you know what I’m saying.

Everybody on our defense on the secondary, everybody is versatile. Everybody don’t just have one job. Everybody playing multiple positions. And like I said, when one guy go down, we can count on the next guy, you feel me. And Renardo has been balling out, lights out, you feel me, being able to play safety, then you go to corner.

Like most safeties can’t play corner, you feel me. And he do that. And then he physical, you know what I’m saying. He got all the attributes, man, and got all the God-gifted talent and he got a bright future, also, you know what I’m saying.

Speaking on our Florida game, it’s so crazy because Akeem had got – he went down, like I said, next man, the next guy, our coaches prepare the next guy every time.

So for instance, Akeem got injured, so Shyheim came in and he had to play free, and I had to move to boundary safety, you know what I’m saying. He came in, he had a great game. That was one of his best games. Like just looking at him, like just me watching him since I been here, you feel me. Like he growing up. Like he got the intangibles, you know what I’m saying. He long. He got good range, you know what I’m saying. He can be able to play in the box and all that.

And just him maturing up, you know what I’m saying and stepping in every time the number called, that’s one thing he do, he a team guy, his number called, you can trust him.

I know you chose to come here, so you believe in what Coach Norvell told you, but the fact that it’s come to reality, can you describe if you are surprised that it went this well or just your feelings about he laid out a vision –

JAMMIE ROBINSON: I felt like it was due time. It was due time. I been in college four years and since I been in college, I haven’t had, you know what I’m saying, an exciting year.

But I told you earlier, I done feel like I won a Super Bowl coming here. Ten games, we going to win ten games. We going to put 25 – we going to put the 25th ten-game winning season and we going to do that. We going to do that for Florida State.

You mentioned watching tape earlier. What is it about Oklahoma’s offense that has stood out on film?

JAMMIE ROBINSON: I feel like for Oklahoma offense, honestly like I said, they are a passing team that are going to look to pass the ball more. For instance, seven-on-seven, I feel like their offense is based kind of on a seven-on-seven offense. You going to get more passing than anything. I feel like we can go out and establish and stop the passing game. Our defensive line is so crazy, they’re not going to be able to run. Once we establish and stop the passing game, it’s going to be over with.

What does it mean for you and your teammates to be in a Bowl and have this experience and also a chance to get to ten wins?

JORDAN TRAVIS: It’s a blessing for sure, having an opportunity to come here, it’s a great Bowl game. We were in a Bowl game a couple years ago. Just seeing how far we came as a football team, the accomplishments that we had this year is amazing.

I’m so, so proud of this team and grateful for this team, and everybody deserves this.

You had your first day of practice. How did it go today and how do you guys feel out there? Second question is Mycah got the Cheez-It room. Talk about that, have you seen it yet?

JORDAN TRAVIS: Practice went great today. Guys were flying around. It’s important. First day back off of two off-days, coming back, flying around, giving 100 percent. Guys flying around, the offensive line was moving around today pretty good.

We got here early at 3:30, and I had to go video Mycah. You know he likes to video everything. I was in his room videoing him and everything, yes, sir.

We talked to Coach Norvell, guys that have not made draft decisions are here this week. He said there was no convincing from him. Was there any convincing from you, or was the message we are going to play in this game no matter what the future is after this?

JORDAN TRAVIS: Yeah, I think we owe it to this university. Florida State gives us everything. We are blessed every single day we get to wake up a Seminole. I think we all know that.

And knowing how far we came at a football team, the off-season, how hard we worked together. Nobody wants to leave anybody behind. What Coach Norvell does for us, too. That’s a coach that loves us really hard. He coaches us really hard. It means a lot to us. So yeah, I think it was an easy decision for a lot of guys to at least be here to support.

You had a chance obviously to look at some film of Oklahoma. What have you seen from their defense, and what stands out that could be challenging?

JORDAN TRAVIS: Yeah they are a great defense with a lot of great athletes all over the field. Obviously we played their coach a couple, what is it, two years ago at Clemson. They do a lot of different things. They are a special team. But, man, it’s always about us. I always say every week, it’s about us. We go out and play our game and let everything fall into place.

Heading into the season, there were not a lot of people who thought Florida State would be in a position to win ten games this year. How important is it to finish strong considering how far this group has come this year?

JORDAN TRAVIS: Yeah, it’s special. Puts a smile on my face every time I think about it. I’ve been here for a while now. I’ve seen a lot of down years. Just seeing the smiles on my teammates’ faces means everything to me. Our fans are happy, which is big. We go to games, and our games are sold out. It’s a blessing from the Man upstairs and I’m just grateful and thankful for this football team.

Coach was in here talking about the fact that one thing he admired about the team is that you guys consistently kept playing, like you guys never stopped despite whatever was going on. Talk about the conversations that you were having with your fellow players and the way you guys built each other up to keep going?

JORDAN TRAVIS: It comes from the off-season, how hard you work in the off-season. Confidence comes from the work, and Coach Norvell emphasizes that all the time. We go out there and play our game. There’s a lot of fight on this football team and every single player. Coach Norvell recruits guys that are fighters, hard workers.

They were talking about it last night how this team, Coach Norvell always recruits the right guys. It’s always the right guys, great people. People first is the most important thing. It’s how you treat people is everything. How you do anything is how you do everything, they always talk about that.

It all comes from Coach Norvell and how hard he pushes us.

You were in a Bowl game in 2019 with Florida State. How much different will this experience be than that experience?

JORDAN TRAVIS: Honestly, that was a while ago. I don’t really remember that. But, I mean, we are blessed to be here, man. Yeah, we’re blessed. We’re thankful. That’s all it is.

We saw you hanging out at the welcome party at the hotel last night. Other than the game itself, what are you looking forward to here in Orlando?

JORDAN TRAVIS: Spending time with my teammates. We deserve this. We earned this. Yeah, that’s all it is, enjoying time, embracing everything. There’s a couple guys on this team, it’s their last football game at Florida State. So we owe it to them to go out there and give them 100 percent and give them a great week.

Being from the state of Florida and playing at Florida State, how big is it to play in this Bowl game and in Orlando? How big is it for the team to get that opportunity?

JORDAN TRAVIS: It means a lot. We have a lot of guys from Florida so a lot of people’s families can come to the game, which is great. I live two hours away so my family will be here. They are always at the game. It’s always a blessing. You have your family around and we have our fans here. It’s going to be a great week for sure.

You start next season up again, as a guy coming back, a leader, what do you tell your teammates about how to enjoy this week but also understand it’s a business trip for you?

JORDAN TRAVIS: Yeah, I think we know that. It all starts at the top. Coach Norvell talks about it a lot. It’s great we are in Orlando, have a good time, but we are here to work. We have a job to do. We came here for a reason. Focus on the game. And when next year comes, we’ll worry about that.

Did the Cheez-It Bowl make the right choice with Pittman getting the room?

JARED VERSE: I saw the room. Tatum didn’t deserve it. Nobody else deserved it. It should have been me. I would have been acceptable with Coach Norvell. But it should have been me. That’s it. Period. Tatum got the room.

How was practice, being in the new stadium and getting acclimated?

JARED VERSE: It was good. That’s one thing I’m very happy with this team. We translate very well. Anywhere we go, anything we do, it’s going to be full speed. Everybody came out hitting hard, moving fast. Coach will tell you himself it was a good practice.

How do you think coming down here FSU will start off the season next year? Orlando, at the same stadium, how do you think that helps some of the players getting ready for next season, already getting a feel for Orlando and everything?

JARED VERSE: Everybody gets a feel for the stadium, how the stadium works, how the turf feels, how the locker rooms work. I think it’s very good to help translate for the next season.

Do you know kind of when after the Bowl game you’ll want to make your decision, how you’ll communicate to the coach whether you’re coming back?

JARED VERSE: Not at all. I’m still talking to my family and deciding what’s best for me and best for my family moving forward. But I’ve been very communicative with the coaches and the staff working around me. They’ve been very helpful giving me the information I need. But it’s just whenever I feel right about it, probably a week or two afterwards, after the Bowl game.

You had a few weeks without games, finals, different things going on, holidays. How great does it feel to be preparing for a game on Thursday instead of just the game is next week or two weeks?

JARED VERSE: It’s good. Just being the same week, but throughout the whole preparation, nobody’s been sitting back like, oh, we play next week, let’s lay off. It’s been like: We play next week. Let’s get after it today and move forward and have our best foot stepping forward.

Seems a lot of the success that you guys have had as a team has been the closeness that you guys have with each other, and it’s something every football game preaches about, brotherhood and family. Is there anything unique about Florida State that’s allowed you to come close together and be successful?

JARED VERSE: I think it’s the players that the coach brings in. Everybody meshes well and is so different, but everybody meshes well, everybody has a good personality. They could put me in a room with anybody on the roster and I’ll be able to talk to them for hours. That’s how I am. That’s how they are. We’ll be fine. It’s just we really care for each other, too. It’s just one of those things. It’s just natural.

Coach Norvell said that he didn’t have to talk anyone into playing in the Bowl game. What does that mean overall when a coach doesn’t have to talk you into playing and you’re like you’re playing no matter what?

JARED VERSE: Relates to the last question, brotherhood. I want a chance to play with my brothers. Nobody takes anything for granted. This is the last time this group will specifically be together. It’s good to come out here and enjoy time with each other and go out, mess around, complain about who got the Cheez-It Room and who don’t. It’s just good to be with everybody again. I don’t think anybody on the roster would give that up.

What do you guys need to do to make sure — you mentioned the goal is to shut them out every week, but is that the goal this week and how do you guys get there?

JARED VERSE: The goal is always the same: To shut them out. Their goal is to put the most points on the board that they possibly can. We can see who can reach their goals first, but for us, we have to bring our best foot stepping forward. Everybody has to be as fast and as strong as they can be and come out with their best, nothing less.

With that decision of staying or moving on to the next level, are you waiting on more information, or is it a matter of just trying to get away from the sport for a few days when the season is over to have a clear mind and figure out what’s best at that point?

JARED VERSE: It’s a sit-back thing. I have all the information I need to formulate a decision. It’s just putting everything together now.

How did practice look today? You arrived yesterday. How did practice look this morning for you guys?

TATUM BETHUNE: Coming out in practice, I didn’t think the weather was going to be like this, so I always think about how practice going to go before it happens. I thought we was going to be complaining about the weather, but we actually didn’t.

Everybody came out and did what we had to do. Just felt like we needed to focus and lock down on the details now.

Two-part question, how does it feel to be back in Orlando? You played here for a while. And you played with Dillon Gabriel. What kind of insight can you bring to the team of what he likes to do and what he brings to the table for Oklahoma?

TATUM BETHUNE: Feel great to be back in Orlando, knowing my family is able to come here without any struggle or whether to buy a plane ticket or not. I got some family here in Orlando that I am going to see. That’s just a good feeling to see them. I haven’t seen them all year.

Then Dillon Gabriel on the scouting report, I give my honest opinion, a guy that makes plays and a guy that we need to stop on their offense. That’s just something that we need to get done.

Lebby’s system, he mentioned how confident he sees you guys playing as a defense. Is it an individual thing, or are each of you guys confident what’s going on, or is it a whole team and confident in the coaches and vice versa?

TATUM BETHUNE: For the defense to work, it always has to be the whole defensive unit and the whole team. It’s never in any individual thoughts. I feel like that’s what got us going because I feel like that’s how it was in the beginning, but now we all together and we click as one. That’s what keep us going.

How does it feel, finals, different things going on, knowing you’re playing a game on Thursday? How exciting is that feeling right now?

TATUM BETHUNE: It’s a good feeling, just the fact that I know we’re playing in a Bowl game. And the guys I’ve been around, they only played in one, and that’s something we’ve been talking about before the season even started. We reaching a goal that we are here now, so we just got to get it done. We talked about it, but we here.

What would a tenth win mean?

TATUM BETHUNE: That’s one of our goals when we first found out where we was going to play at, that was the biggest goal. We got that – how many teams that have ten wins in front of our locker room, and we just want to be able to change the wall. That would be huge for us.

With having a Bowl game, you get extra practices, and it helps some of the younger players. What have you seen from Graham when he makes plays? Seems like a pretty smart player.

TATUM BETHUNE: When I see Omar now, I think of me when I first came into college and when I came in early, but I feel like Omar is way better than how I was when I was a freshman. So I just feel like next year, Omar is going to be – I’m pretty sure he’s going to see the field, and Omar is going to be dominant.

Have you seen the Cheez-It Room, and did they make the right choice with Mycah?

TATUM BETHUNE: I have not seen it yet. But, no, they did not make the right choice. They should have gave it to me (laughter).

What makes you the cheesiest candidate for the room?

TATUM BETHUNE: (Laughter.)

Coach mentioned when he brings people in from the transfer portal it’s important that they fit into the locker room. How refreshing was it to come into a new locker room and see like-minded people that were on the same page?

TATUM BETHUNE: When I first hit the portal, Coach Norvell, he promised me everything that you would think a coach wouldn’t promise. He promised me that I was going to be put in hard positions and put through adversity on purpose so I could be able to thrive through that and know how to deal with it and stuff like that.

Sometimes you don’t hear it from coaches. Coaches will try to tell you what you want to hear. So I feel like if you play at Florida State, it’s only a select few that’s able to come here. I feel like this program is not for everybody. I feel like that’s what he do, is just elimination factor.

What did you see out of practice today and what did you see from the team and what kind of energy was it and was it what you wanted to see?

DILLAN GIBBONS: Yes, sir, amazing amount of energy. We are going to be the most conditioned team out there on the field. Our coaches have pushed us really hard over our past couple weeks playing football.

I have been to this bowl game twice, back when it was the Citrus Bowl and the Camping World Bowl, and the most conditioned team going out there is going to have the best advantage.

I’m excited to see that come to fruition the next couple days. Part of the way these guys have worked. I’m a sixth-year senior, my last bowl game, so it’s great to see young guys sacrifice on a day-to-day basis, to get us better, whether that be on the scout team or supporting us one way or the other, but it was a great practice.

I wanted to ask you about winning the Wuerffel Trophy. What does it mean to be recognized for something like that by an organization?

DILLAN GIBBONS: It is tough for an individual to take that kind of recognition, at least for me. Everybody that’s been a part of my process, everybody that we have been able to tell their story. All the individuals that have worked with Big Man Big Heart and helped us out through the process so far.

I really am standing on the shoulders of giants in the literal sense. That experience was wonderful, in New York City at the Heisman event with Danny Wuerffel.

But, it’s been crazy, a crazy couple weeks. What I’m focused on right now is playing football and winning one more game.

Coach Norvell told us earlier that he didn’t have to talk any player into playing in this bowl game; a lot of guys could have opted out. What does that mean as a team overall to you specifically?

DILLAN GIBBONS: Right after the Clemson week, I started realizing how special this group was, specifically on the offensive line, specifically on the offensive side of the ball. I just wanted one more game, one more experience with this group of guys.

We have some amazing athletes, guys like Jordan Travis and Trey Benson, wonderful coaches like Coach [Alex] Atkins and all the other position coaches. We have a special group of guys with a bunch of very special individual pieces. It is great to go out there and play another game, but I am looking forward to fist pumping the guy to my right and left and going out there and sacrificing for each other.

I was asking Jordan this question, what kind of conversations were you having with the younger guys, especially given how encouraged you are, their level of sacrifice, what do you tell them going forwards?

DILLAN GIBBONS: Part of leadership is conversational based, but the other part is going out there and showing it on a day-to-day basis, right. Showing it through our actions, going out there and performing the way that we want to perform on game day.

So having that sense of urgency, coming into meetings this morning, 45 minutes to an hour early, trying to get that competitive advantage in every single facet of our lives. So showing them that, showing them the way to conduct themselves in a meeting, on the practice field, and pushing to the best we possibly can every time, that’s how we lead every time.

You talk about being a dependable 6-man at Notre Dame, but did you envision all this, even in your wildest dreams, the success you would have on the field and changing the culture for this program moving forward and what you’ve done off the field? I know you had big goals coming to Tallahassee, but is this the way you saw it playing out in your head the entire time?

DILLAN GIBBONS: Yes, sir. It’s an amazing experience. I understood the opportunity that presented itself when I did make that change from Notre Dame to come here to Florida State, and I attacked that opportunity everything I possibly can.

If it wasn’t for the coaches that allowed me that opportunity, I wouldn’t be here today. If it wasn’t for the guys in my offensive line room and the wonderful guys we have on offense and everybody that sacrifices on a day-to-day basis to help us win football games and run football, it’s been an amazing process.

None of it would have been possible without people helping me and individuals that were receptive to what I was trying to bring to the table.

You’ve gone up against Coach Brent Venables in your time at Notre Dame and over here. What challenges are you getting ready for?

DILLAN GIBBONS: Multiple front. We are going to see a lot. We are preparing for as much as we possibly can prepare for, but [it] doesn’t matter what team we are playing or defensive coordinator we are going against. What matters is we are playing Florida State football, and I can look to my left and right and trust the guys next to me. We are all seeing the defensive front through one set of eyes.

I am really confident in our group and the plan our coaches have put in place, and they have allowed us the best opportunity to go out there and play our football.

Another year of improvement, both in pass blocking and the run game. What about Coach Atkins and the coaching he’s done? We get to see it a lot of times throughout the week; talk about him and the big year on the O-line?

DILLAN GIBBONS: At Notre Dame, I studied leadership, and I have not met a better leader than Coach Atkins. He gets it done on the field and off the field, encourages every day. Some coaches have a certain style or a certain way they want the offensive line to be conducted. Some coaches lead by example.

Coach Atkins is a blend of those two. He does an incredible job in pushing us every day, but not necessarily being that father figure. He does a great job in balancing that. He has an incredibly high ceiling, and I really can’t put a stop to where he could possibly go. So, he does an incredible job with this offensive line unit, and I can’t thank him enough for allowing me this opportunity at Florida State.

I don’t want you to give us any secrets, but can you give us insight schematically or is it a mentality thing of what you guys have been doing that’s allowed you to be so successful running the football specifically?

DILLAN GIBBONS: You can point to some individuals that we have on the offensive line, but like we were talking about in our meeting today, it’s not like we have a bunch of incredible athletes on the offensive line. Guys that are going to go out there and demolish guys, physically, every single play.

We work on those other little things. Every little facet in our lives that we can control, we control those controllables. Whether it be like this morning, showing up early to meetings, a little bit more emphasis at the end of a block, really digging down and doing as much as we possibly can with the ability each and every one of us has.

But at the same time, I think having that continuity, having that same group of guys that play week-in, week-out, that’s helped this unit grow into what it is today.

Seems like Jordan Travis is a quarterback, who is willing to lay it on the line on every play. I’m just wondering what is it like to block for someone like that, and how much faith do you guys have in him?

DILLAN GIBBONS: So over the past two years, our relationship has grown, blocking for him, trying to protect him the best I possibly can. But, it is pretty amazing to have a guy – I was up there at the Heisman weekend a few weekends ago, and it is tough for me not to see him in that picture here this year or next year.

To have a guy that you can say, Hey, Jordan, go win a football game, and he will go win a football game, that’s crazy. We haven’t had to do that too many times this season yet, but I love protecting him and keeping him off the ground and picking him up when he goes out there and sacrifices for this team.

The point from earlier, you’re here in Orlando, here for a football game and you have a job to do while you’re down here, but what are you looking forward to most about the week and the experience leading up to the game?

TREY BENSON: You know, just some of the seniors’ last game, so basically just hanging out with the guys, hanging out with the team, create memories that will last forever.

What does practice look like this morning, new stadium? How did it look like?

TREY BENSON: Practice was good. Everybody moving at fast speeds. Continue to get the work in. I’m just happy to be out there with the guys.

Have to ask about the Cheez-It Room. Have you been able to see it yet? How was Mycah picked? Is he the cheesiest on the team?

TREY BENSON: (Laughter) I don’t know, he got the room, I don’t know. I haven’t been up there to see it yet. I’ve seen it on Snapchat and Instagram. It looks pretty cool. I’m going to go check it out today.

Talk about what it means to you personally to be here to be able to participate in this particular Bowl game.

TREY BENSON: Means a lot. We get a chance to have ten wins this year and make history. It’s a business trip, but we come down here to have fun with the team and the coaches and the coaching staff. But it’s big because we can get to ten wins.

What on tape Oklahoma-wise has stood out to you defensively just watching tape throughout the week and preparing for them?

TREY BENSON: They move fast off the ball. They have a lot of great guys, but basically they move fast and they know what they are doing.

Playing this Bowl game, Cheez-It Bowl, Florida State, it’s been a while since playing in a Bowl game. How big is it for the program and how big to catapult to next season when you open the season here?

TREY BENSON: It’s big. Some people are home right now. We are just grateful to be here right now. Grateful to have an extra game because last year, we was at home around this time. We just grateful to be here.

What is it about you individually and this team that you are embracing and that you are excited for a Bowl game?

TREY BENSON: Just building the confidence each and out through every game. Because at the beginning of the season, I was lacking a little confidence, but every single game I’ve been getting better, rep by rep. My teammates, my running back room, they have been helping me out, my offensive line, Jordan Travis, they all help me out because at the beginning I was lacking confidence, but now my confidence is through the roof.

Speaking on the help you got from the running back room, Treshaun Ward, he got hurt, lost the job, and you took over the bell cow role. How much has he helped and what does it say about his character that he didn’t start moping when you took over the job after he came back?

TREY BENSON: I love Tre – he a real brother to me. He didn’t lose his job. He just got hurt and he got to build his confidence back, too, so I’m going to help him out like he been helping me out this whole year, and I’m really grateful for him.

I don’t want you to give away any secrets, but how are you able to continue to run the ball so effectively here? Everybody knows you guys are going to run it, but you still run it right down.

TREY BENSON: The offensive line, you know, they’ve been doing great. I’m going to give it to those guys. That’s why we’ve been running the ball, because of the guys up front.

Talk about this story with other die-hard FSU football fans on the Tribal Council.

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