NFL veteran Super Bowl player Bryan Robinson found dead in Milwaukee hotel room at 41

Published 3:17 pm Monday, June 13, 2016

In this 2010 photo, Arizona Cardinals defensive end Bryan Robinson reacts after a New Orleans Saints touchdown during an NFL football divisional playoff game in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Dave Martin, File)

Bryan Robinson, who played 14 seasons as a defensive lineman for the St. Louis Rams, Chicago Bears, Miami Dolphins, Cincinnati Bengals and Arizona Cardinals before retiring after the 2010 season, died late Saturday after he was found unresponsive in a Milwaukee hotel room. He was 41.

Milwaukee police told the Chicago Tribune’s Brad Biggs that there were no obvious signs of trauma and are treating the incident as a sudden death. The Milwaukee County Medical Examiner’s Office is continuing to investigate Robinson’s death, and autopsy results are scheduled to be released Monday.

Robinson played in 207 games during his career, starting 170 of them and recording 24 career sacks. He’s probably best remembered for blocking a field goal for the Bears as time expired against the Packers on Nov. 7, 1999, Chicago’s first game after Walter Payton’s death.

“He was kind of a jerk to me but if you took it the right way it was helpful to you, especially to me as a rookie,” former Bears linebacker Brian Urlacher, who was mentored by Robinson, told the Tribune. “He became one of my better friends on the team. B-Rob was very good at what he did and he never made mental mistakes. He always knew where to be and he knew where other guys were supposed to be and he didn’t accept that when other guys screwed up. One time in preseason he went off on me for getting out of my gap and they ran through my gap. He didn’t accept guys screwing up for mental reasons. Physically, guys are going to make mistakes. Mentally, he didn’t accept that because he was so good at what he did without being wrong.”

Robinson also played in Super Bowl XLIII for the Cardinals.



 

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After spending the first 17 years of his Post career writing and editing, Matt and the printed paper had an amicable divorce in 2014. He’s now blogging and editing for the Early Lead and the Post’s other Web-based products.

(c) 2016, The Washington Post · Matt Bonesteel · SPORTS, FOOTBALL · Jun 13, 2016 – 3:04 PM