The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Finding fulfilling life after football

Some Yellow Jackets eschew NFL for a less harsh career.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM

When his Georgia Tech career ended at the TaxSlayer Bowl last New Year’s Eve, defensive end Rod Rook-Chungong had what seemed like a no-brainer of a next step.

The pursuit of a job in the NFL – the chance to draw a six-figure salary and live a dream – would seem a matter of course for a two-year starter on a power-conference team that he helped win nine games as a senior.

An effective edge-setting run stopper, Rook-Chungong turned it down, though, starting a job with Mondelez (formerly Kraft Foods) in January. He makes visits to grocery stores, Targets and Walmarts to pitch floor displays and his employer’s array of Nabisco snacks.

“I definitely loved what football does for me, but I know I’m bigger than football,” he said. “I’m not just a football player.”

He is one of a number of Tech players who have made the same choice in recent seasons, seeing their identities more broadly than football, seizing opportunit­ies in the real world and walking away from a shot at profession­al football with their bodies intact.

“The lifespan in the league is so short,” former A-back Charles Perkins said. “My thought process was, let me get started on my career.”

The vast majority of Yellow Jackets players who have earned spots in the starting lineup have at least worked out at Tech’s pro day in hopes of playing in the NFL. But in recent seasons, Perkins and Rook-Chungong have been joined by former starters such as Trey Braun, Eason Fromayan, Shawn Green, Deon Hill and Tony Zenon in choosing to end their football careers at Tech. In each case, their likelihood of getting into an NFL camp was small, but not zero.

With size and a willingnes­s to sacrifice his body for the team, Perkins probably had a chance to make it into the NFL as a special-teams player. But he had torn his labrum earlier in his career and had shoulder problems going back to high school. He realized he wasn’t going to be a draft pick and recognized the odds were long. He thought it wiser to hang it up.

His final season, which included wins over Georgia and then Mississipp­i State in the Orange Bowl and a season-ending top-10 ranking, provided a dream finish.

“I was ready (to stop playing),” he said. “Now, if I would have went out on a sour note, it would have been a lot tougher to get through. I still smile (about the Orange Bowl). I’m still smiling right now thinking about it.”

Like Rook-Chungong, Perkins began a job as a sales associate with Mondelez shortly after his final game. He had even been working there part-time during the 2014 season. Since then, he has been promoted three times and is now a customer category manager, a position whose responsibi­lities include representi­ng the Nabisco brand to 260 Publix stores, including metro Atlanta, and 201 Ingles stores in six states.

“Anytime you shop in a Publix, think of me when you’re on the snack aisle,” Perkins said wryly. “It’s a lot of fun being in this field. It brings me back to my competitiv­e days.”

 ??  ?? Ex-Georgia Tech defensive end Rod Rook-Chungong (41) segues easily from tackling quarterbac­ks to corporate sales of Nabisco’s snack lines.
Ex-Georgia Tech defensive end Rod Rook-Chungong (41) segues easily from tackling quarterbac­ks to corporate sales of Nabisco’s snack lines.

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