The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

American football: North-east’ s Ojabo adapting to succeed.

American football: Pandemic prevents athlete’ s return to US college

- BY RYAN CRYLE

American football hopeful David Ojabo says being stranded at home in Westhill – away from his University of Michigan teammates – is “a blessing and a curse”.

Ojabo, 20, should be back in voluntary training with the Wolverines ahead of the new season, but a trip to his family home in the north-east after the university shut down during the Covid-19 crisis in March has lasted three months.

A ban on internatio­nal travel to the United States due to the pandemic has left the defensive lineman uncertain of when he will be back in Ann Arbor.

Ojabo, who was set to begin pre-season proper on July 24, said: “I came back to my family – I wasn’t going to stay in the US, because it (the Covid-19 situation) was crazy.

“I thought ‘I’ll come back, be in Scotland, because I don’t come back often’, but one month turned to two, turned to three.

“It’s a blessing and a curse. I can’t say ‘Being away from my team is the worst thing in the world’, but I’m in the US to get down to business, for work, school.

“Just sitting here at home while my team-mates are working out is weird.”

Ojabo has joined his fellow Wolverines in workouts on Zoom at 8pm UK time, keeping in shape “by any means possible”, with his coaches adapting his programme to the weights he has on hand.

Still, the player – who one day hopes to reach the profession­al ranks of the NFL – feels frustratio­n, but understand­s the need for a safety-first approach.

He added: “As disappoint­ed as I am, my safety and my family’s safety is the priority.”

Current circumstan­ces are a speed-bump in what has been an incredible rise from total American football novice to NCAA Division 1 college level for Ojabo.

At eight, he moved to Aberdeensh­ire from Port Harcourt, Nigeria, attending the

Internatio­nal School, then won a place at Blair Academy in New Jersey to finish high school and play basketball.

Since the school’s gridiron coaches spotted his combinatio­n of size and speed – and potential to swap sports – he hasn’t looked back.

After just seven matches for Blair, Ojabo was offered 35 college scholarshi­ps, before settling on Michigan, with the team playing in the second-biggest sports stadium in the world and led by head coach Jim Harbaugh.

Having spent his first year at the university deepening his knowledge of the sport under Harbaugh and defensive line coach Shaun Nua and watching senior players earn their way to the profession­al ranks, Ojabo said he feels “ready” for minutes in what will be a reduced “Big Ten” season.

Ojabo said: “This was the best year of my life. I really went through it.

“A lot of people who don’t get to play will take it one of two ways, either ‘I deserve to play’ or ‘this was a good learning experience’.

“Honestly, I’m so thankful to get to learn. This game – a lot of people see meatheads just running into each other – but the intricacie­s are so crazy that I’m still figuring it out.

“If you want to be great at it and be a pro, you need to invest every day in your craft. Not playing has been the best experience; training against starters.

“Our whole offensive line got drafted, so I’ve been playing against NFL-level players as a guy who just started playing the game two-and-a-half years ago.

“I wouldn’t ask for it any other way.”

 ?? Photograph by Darrell Benns ?? EAGER TO PLAY: David Ojabo plays NCAA Division 1 football for the University of Michigan Wolverines.
Photograph by Darrell Benns EAGER TO PLAY: David Ojabo plays NCAA Division 1 football for the University of Michigan Wolverines.
 ?? Photograph by U-M Photograph­y ?? Ojabo in action for the Wolverines.
Photograph by U-M Photograph­y Ojabo in action for the Wolverines.

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