| It’s Not so Complicated |
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| September 2006 | |
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With the glassy waves of the Pacific Ocean just five minutes
away and an ocean view from his family’s back yard, Brandon Chillar grew up
like most kids in the Now a starting linebacker for the St. Louis Rams, Chillar’s been a bit land-locked for the majority of the past couple of years. And even though he says West Coasters may be a little more “relaxed,” due in part, he thinks, to the beach culture, he is also enjoying the Midwestern life. “Everyone that I’ve encountered has been really nice and especially supportive of their sports teams,” he says, “and it’s definitely a bigger sports town out there.”
He’s impressed his past and current coaches with a pretty straightforward philosophy: “Basically, I don’t worry about numbers,” he says. “I just worry about doing what I’m supposed to do every play… do it as good as I can so that the coaches know they can depend on me and I’m running their system.” Following someone else’s system is something Chillar
shouldn’t find too difficult; he says he grew up under a strict father. Ram
Chillar, a motivated, athletic young man from a family of 16 kids, left “He’s strict,” Chillar adds. “We used to butt heads when I was younger. But then I started understanding he’s just trying to mold me to be a good man. I look back now and realize that and appreciate it.” It’s comments like this that make Chillar seem closer to 55 than 25. But then watching him talk about his friends and family, it’s clear the comments are a combination of maturity — which he acknowledges he’s been working toward professionally — and that laid-back Southern California attitude. He can be a hand-talker, and anytime he gets excited, both hands often instinctively revert to the forefinger and pinky pointing out — the universal sign of skaters and rockers. It’s the small things, like his rock-on sign, that are inescapable giveaways of where Chilllar grew up. “You’ve got so many guys surfing, guys going to the Winter X Games,” he says of his high school classmates. These other young athletes are participating in sports usually associated with upper-middle class Caucasians, which is what makes up a good portion of Carlsbad; according to census information, the city’s families earn about $20,000 more than the nation’s average and it is 87 percent white. It is a place where Chillar’s multicultural heritage left him open for childhood taunting. “When we were younger and kids didn’t even know what they were doing, they would say stuff,” he says, once again sounding as though he’s lived more than his 23 years. “You know, whatever, ‘camel jockey’ all that kind of stuff you hear, but not too bad. It’s not like (my brother and I) were getting picked on out of the ordinary. We were pretty tough kids. We wouldn’t take too much.” Both broad-shouldered boys were well over 200 pounds in high school; all the meats and pastas their mom, Kathy, fed them, (It wasn’t until adulthood that Chillar started liking curry and other Indian foods) had bulked the boys up, and their excellence at sports and friendly personalities helped them to fit in as they got older. In fact, it wasn’t until two years ago that Chillar felt his ethnicity had become a big deal again. When he was the 130th draft pick in 2004, a reporter from an Indian newspaper told him he was the first person of Indian descent to play in the NFL. Turns out, Chillar isn’t the first, but he is indeed one of a select few Indian Americans to make it into the league (Sanjay Beach, 1988-1994, 49ers, Packers, Jets; Bobby Singh, 1999, Rams). Either way, the information was surprising to the green-eyed Chillar. With the high turnover rate of NFL players and many well-known Asian athletes in other sports, it had never occurred to him that he would be making history. “Obviously, anything I can do to give other people motivation and get their kids out there and to think that they can do it now, is cool with me,” he says with a bit of a shrug. “I’ll try to lead the way. I’ll just do what I can do, and if other people are inspired by it, then that’s a plus.” But whether or not he leads a new generation of Indian players into the NFL, Chillar seems like he’ll be OK either way. His goals for now are to keep up his work on the field and to eventually own his own business — and of course some day to move back to Southern California, where he can finally take up surfing. “I’d probably try a short board first,” he says thinking about that day, “but I’m kind of a bigger dude, so depending on what happens, we’ll see once I get out there.” Comments (0)
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