Dorian Thompson-Robinson

Dorian Trevor Thompson-Robinson (born November 14, 1999), also known by his initials DTR, is an American football quarterback for the UCLA Bruins.

Dorian Thompson-Robinson
UCLA Bruins No. 1
PositionQuarterback
ClassSophomore
Career history
College
  • UCLA (2018–present)
High schoolBishop Gorman (Las Vegas, NV)
Personal information
Born: (1999-11-14) November 14, 1999[1]
Columbia, South Carolina[2]
Height6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight197 lb (89 kg)

Early years

Thompson-Robinson was born on November 14, 1999[1] in Columbia, South Carolina.[2] He attended Bishop Gorman High School in Las Vegas, Nevada. A four-star recruit, Thompson-Robinson passed for 3,275 passing yards and 38 touchdowns as a senior, and he also rushed for 426 yards and 7 touchdowns. He committed to the University of California, Los Angeles to play college football, choosing the Bruins over Michigan.[3]

College career

Freshman season

Thompson-Robinson saw action in ten games in 2018, his freshman season at UCLA. Of those ten games, he took the first offensive snap in seven. In a 31–24 loss to No. 10 Washington on October 6, Thompson-Robinson completed 27 of 38 passes for 272 yards and two touchdowns. The following week, on October 13, Thompson-Robinson completed 13 of 15 passes in a 37–7 victory over California for an 86.6% completion percentage. This was third-highest completion percentage by a UCLA quarterback since 1980 in a game with at least 15 passes.

Sophomore season

Thompson-Robinson became the starting quarterback in 2019, his sophomore season. He started 11 of the 12 games that season, missing the Oregon State game with an injury. On September 21, Thompson-Robinson led the Bruins to a 67–63 comeback victory at No. 19 Washington State. Against the Cougars, Thompson-Robinson threw for 507 yards and five touchdowns, and he also ran for 57 yards and two touchdowns in the victory. His 564 total yards against Washington State was a UCLA record for total offense by a player in a game. In the Bruins' rivalry matchup against USC on November 23, Thompson-Robinson generated 431 yards of total offense against the Trojans, which was the second-most ever by a Bruin in the UCLA–USC rivalry[4] and the ninth-best single-game performance in UCLA history.

In 2019, Thompson-Robinson amassed 2,701 passing yards and 198 rushing yards for a total of 2,899 yards of offense—the tenth-most for a UCLA player in a single season. His 25 touchdowns—21 in the air and four on the ground—also ranked tenth all-time in a single season for a UCLA player.

College career statistics

SeasonTeamGPPassingRushing
CmpAttPctYdsY/ATDIntRtgAttYdsAvgTD
2018UCLA 1011219457.71,3116.874122.350681.40
2019UCLA 1121636259.72,7017.52112134.91181981.74
Career2132855659.04,0127.22816130.51682661.64

[5]

Personal life

Thompson-Robinson's parents are Michael Robinson and Dr. Melva Thompson-Robinson, a community health professor at UNLV. He has one brother and one sister.[4]

gollark: Pedals are uncool.
gollark: So if you have a set of electric cars with small batteries - enough to travel within a city and near it - available for rent, and you don't suffer too much overhead from having to rent them out, that could conceivably be a good method of transport.
gollark: Electric cars are expensive *partly* because they need batteries for hundred-mile journeys, even though most actually won't be this long. And cars are kind of inefficient because most of the time they're left idling.
gollark: Personally, I think that local public transport and short-range intra-city electric cars would be worth considering.
gollark: Batteries' energy density isn't that great right now, sadly.

References

  1. "DTR on Twitter: "To see 18 is a blessing. Thank you."". Twitter. November 14, 2017. Retrieved January 6, 2020.
  2. Hilbert, Evan (April 21, 2017). "Diary from mom: Dorian Thompson-Robinson's mother on visits, son's growing popularity". USA Today High School Sports. Retrieved January 6, 2020.
  3. Zucker, Joseph (April 23, 2017). "4-Star QB Dorian Thompson-Robinson Announces Commitment to UCLA over Michigan". Bleacher Report. Retrieved January 6, 2020.
  4. "Dorian Thompson-Robinson". UCLA Bruins. Retrieved January 6, 2020.
  5. "Dorian Thompson-Robinson". ESPN.com. Retrieved January 7, 2020.
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