Dominique Easley gets real: Super Bowl, mental health, and Ryan Tannehill battles

Brandon "Scoop B" Robinson
17 Min Read
Robert Hanashiro-Imagn Images

Dominique Easley is more than the story you think you know. The former first-round NFL draft pick and Super Bowl champion has seen the highs and lows of professional football from walking into Bill Belichickโ€™s locker room as a rookie to hoisting a Lombardi Trophy. He later confronted serious battles off the field. Now, Easley is using his voice in a new way in launching a podcast and speaking out on mental health, authenticity, and everything in between.

We caught up with the former New England Patriots and Los Angeles Rams defensive lineman just as he prepares to debut his new podcast. More than just a platform for sports talk, itโ€™s a space for Easley to unpack the layers of his own experience โ€” and to help others do the same. โ€œMental healthโ€ may be a buzzword to some, but for Easley, itโ€™s personal. Itโ€™s part of the reason he started the Easley Foundation, and part of the mission that continues to drive him.

His reflections run deep, from the adrenaline of his NFL debut in 2014 against the Miami Dolphins at Sun Life Stadium to the lingering sting of what came after a Super Bowl ring. Easley remembers the speed of Knowshon Moreno, the challenge of facing Ryan Tannehill, and the icy calm of Belichickโ€™s postgame demeanor after a tough loss. But more than anything, he remembers how he felt. And thatโ€™s what matters now.

Today, Easley isnโ€™t chasing quarterbacks, heโ€™s chasing purpose. Through his podcast and foundation, heโ€™s bringing new light to conversations around pain, resilience, and healing. Heโ€™s showing others that vulnerability isnโ€™t weakness โ€” itโ€™s strength.

What follows is a Q&A that dives into the past, present, and future of Dominique Easley, a man who may have been defined by football in the public eye, but is now defining himself on his own terms.

Brandon โ€œScoop Bโ€ Robinson: Tell us about your new podcast, Managing Our Minds, and the message you hope to share through it.

Dominique Easley: Itโ€™s called Managing Our Minds. Itโ€™s where we create a safe space for them to tell their stories because when people tell their stories they tend to tell it without being vulnerable, and we want to allow people to be vulnerable and let them know that vulnerability is not a weakness, itโ€™s a step toward growth in every area of life whether if itโ€™s business, family, friendsโ€ฆyou know what I mean? Weโ€™ve got a couple episodes right now but, right now weโ€™re just putting together a nice little collection so when we drop it, weโ€™re dropping it! So, when we drop it, itโ€™s gonna consist of athletes but, throughout the podcast, weโ€™ll have CEOs, executives, and stuff like that so people who…I wonโ€™t say; well, itโ€™s really going to be everybody. All athletes, people who have been through a lot because I want to hit not only the athletic community but, my community that I grew up in, you know what I mean? Like the poverty community. So being able to get them on and tell their stories and help them out is also going to be helpful as well. But for right now, itโ€™ll be athletes.

Brandon โ€œScoop Bโ€ Robinson: Why do you think mental health has become such a buzzword and more visible in todayโ€™s conversations?

Dominique Easley: Thereโ€™s more visibility to it I say. We have social media. Like, people always talk about the times when “we” grew up and we didnโ€™t have social media, so we didnโ€™t see a lot of people going through certain things and you didnโ€™t want to be seen going through those certain things. Now? Times have changed. Itโ€™s ok to be seen going through those things. You see it every day. You hear about it; people are asking questions, so Iโ€™ll say itโ€™s more at the forefront now of conversations and visibility as well.

Brandon โ€œScoop Bโ€ Robinson: How did you come up with the title Managing Our Minds, and what does the acronym M.O.M. represent to you?

Dominique Easley: So the reason why we came up with Managing Our Minds and the acronym for it is M.O.M. and so, one thing we tend to forget is how to nurture our minds. Momโ€™s nature is to nurture. So when it comes to them nurturing themselves and thatโ€™s our nature in everybody for real, we donโ€™t nurture our minds, you know what I mean? So I want to get people to understand how to nurture your mind for the rest of your life because that doesnโ€™t stop.

Brandon โ€œScoop Bโ€ Robinson: What do you remember most about your first regular season game against the Dolphins in 2014 at Sun Life Stadium?

Dominique Easley: It was hot! That was a hot day. It was a hot day, and Iโ€™ll say we took that personally because we felt like we got run to ground because we werenโ€™t prepared physically, so that put us in a whole different mentality as far as our preparation from that game on.

Brandon โ€œScoop Bโ€ Robinson: Who do you remember lining up against on that 2014 Dolphins team โ€” and how stacked was your Patriots defense that year?

Dominique Easley: Ryan Tannehill was on that team. I remember him. Who were the wideouts? Now I remember my team! Our team stacked that year! Our defense, think about it, we had Darrelle Revis, Brandon Browner, Jason McCourty, Malcolm Butlerโ€ฆwho else was back there? Who was our strong safety? Patrick Chung. Our linebackers were Jamie Collins, Dontโ€™a Hightower, Jerod Mayoโ€ฆwho else was there in the beginning? Chandler Jones, Rob Ninkovich, Vince Wilfork. Yeah, our defense was stacked that year!

Brandon โ€œScoop Bโ€ Robinson: What stood out to you most about facing Ryan Tannehill in that 2014 matchup?

Dominique Easley: He was movinโ€™! He knew how to move around. He kept us on our feet and that was the one thing I do remember about that game: He kept us moving from sideline to sideline and thatโ€™s where he was winning a lot.

Brandon โ€œScoop Bโ€ Robinson: Is Ryan Tannehillโ€™s skill set comparable to any current NFL quarterbacks? If so, who?

Dominique Easley: I wouldnโ€™t say that heโ€™s likeโ€ฆdominant, but I feel his skill set is like a Baker Mayfield. Just that swag. They like to roll out and move the pocket; they can tuck and run when they need to and get in between gaps as well.

Brandon โ€œScoop Bโ€ Robinson: What do you remember about Knowshon Morenoโ€™s speed and impact in that game?

Dominique Easley: Like I said, more or less, I feel like we were gassed. We were missing tackles a lot and he had a lot of run-after-tackle yards; I donโ€™t want to say it was him, to be honest we were just missing a lot of tackles. We were gassed and we lost ourselves, you know what I mean?

Brandon โ€œScoop Bโ€ Robinson: How did Bill Belichick respond to the team after that loss in the locker room?

Dominique Easley: I donโ€™t remember. Nah, not in the locker room. I just knew that next week, we had Minnesota that next week because after that next week, we were prepared.

Brandon โ€œScoop Bโ€ Robinson: Did winning the Super Bowl with the Patriots and then getting cut trigger your mental health struggles, or did those challenges begin earlier?

Dominique Easley: Nah. What sparked my issues with mental health was when I got to the Patriots. My mental health [issues] Iโ€™ll say began in college. But when I knew about my mental health, that was after I retired. At the time that I got cut, it was after we won the Super Bowl, but it was the year after we won the Super Bowl — so we lost in the AFC conference championship? I donโ€™t even think we made the championship that year. In 2016 after I got cut, it didnโ€™t spark my mental health. I actually was relieved to go, to be honest. I didnโ€™t wanna be there, and it was a lot of being in Boston or being at the Patriots wasnโ€™t at the time of who I was wasnโ€™t for me; meaning that the environment, the coaches, the peopleโ€ฆlike theyโ€™re a great organization, you know what I mean? But at that time and place, I wasnโ€™t the right fit for who I was as a person. Their mentality — Iโ€™ll say if you walk through different buildings you can understand whether it’s truly business or if it is โ€œfamily businessโ€ if that makes sense, you know what I mean? So, I think in that time of my life I was looking for a family business and I shouldโ€™ve been with a family business and what I mean by that, I shouldโ€™ve been drafted by the [Seattle] Seahawks which was Dan Quinn, but the Patriots had drafted me before and I knew it was going to happen, but I was hoping it wasnโ€™t so I was a little mad going in because I knew how they ran things there, and I knew thatโ€™s not who I was and what I needed at that point when I was at that age, you know what I mean? So just going there, I feel like [New England] I took a traumatic moment in my life that I didnโ€™t understand how to deal with at the time.

Brandon โ€œScoop Bโ€ Robinson: Why did you start the Easley Foundation, and what impact do you hope it has on your community?

Dominique Easley: So growing up, I wonโ€™t say that I never received anything. I had a great childhood and when I say great childhood, I had a lot of love but I didnโ€™t understand how to communicate; I didnโ€™t understand what life was like outside of where I was from because I didnโ€™t see people come back to the community. I didnโ€™t see success outside our community, you know what I mean? So, the Easley Foundation allows people to be vulnerable in different places and thatโ€™s something that I wasnโ€™t with business, with family, friends, my coaches and my teammates. I wasnโ€™t vulnerable and that created a lot of mistakes in my life essentially. It created a lot of mistakes and it created a lot of hardships and stuff like that. And Iโ€™ve seen a lot of my friends go through the same thing because we all didnโ€™t receive what we wanted to receive, you know what I mean? That wouldโ€™ve helped us out in life, but I feel like that we went through this because now weโ€™re able to give back to the kids and also me as where I am now in life, Iโ€™m a little more emotionally intelligent now, you know what I mean? Because I work on myself; Iโ€™m very aware and I see a lot of friends going through hardships, and they donโ€™t have the tools to be able to work through those hardships, you know what I mean? And when I say tools meaning being able to be vulnerable, to be able to get to that space and I feel like thatโ€™s my calling because Iโ€™ve had close friends of mine die because of mental health, you know what I mean? And for me, itโ€™s a real serious subject because vulnerability in life wouldโ€™ve allowed a lot of calmness and a lot of smoothness and a lot of less stressful things to take place, you know?

Dominique Easleyโ€™s journey is raw, real, and far from over. While the game of football gave him a platform, it’s his honesty and advocacy that are building something lasting. With the Easley Foundation, heโ€™s creating tangible impact while providing resources and safe spaces for individuals, especially athletes. Thatโ€™s vital because theyโ€™re able to unpack mental health struggles and find community.

His upcoming podcast is just another chapter in that mission. Easley isnโ€™t chasing ratings or shock value, heโ€™s chasing real conversations. The showโ€™s name, rooted in its own story, invites listeners to confront uncomfortable truths, to explore the realities of life after football, and to embrace the idea that healing isnโ€™t linear.

The NFL taught him toughness. The aftermath taught him grace. Easley is not afraid to call out the pressure, the silence, and the emotional cost of being an elite athlete. But heโ€™s also not bitter. Heโ€™s reflective and more importantly, heโ€™s using his voice so others donโ€™t feel like they have to stay quiet.

What struck us most in this conversation was not just the depth of his football memory which included the exact details of 2014 matchups, but in fact, it was the way he broke down Tannehillโ€™s style. Additionally, he gave insight into Belichickโ€™s approach and the depth of his self-awareness. That balance of grit and growth is rare.

Dominique Easley isnโ€™t here to rewrite his legacy, heโ€™s expanding it. Through storytelling, support, and self-awareness, heโ€™s creating a new kind of playbook; one thatโ€™s centered on healing, purpose, and power through vulnerability. And in doing so, heโ€™s helping others do the same.

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Brandon โ€œScoop Bโ€ Robinson doesnโ€™t just report the culture โ€” he connects generations through it. With a career that began before most kids had a driverโ€™s license, Scoop B has grown from a kid reporter with the then-New Jersey Nets to a trusted voice in NBA circles and beyond. His platform, Scoop B Radio, blends breaking news, archival insight, and exclusive interviews with icons past and present โ€” from Allen Iverson to Mark Cuban to modern-day stars like Dylan Harper, Cam Thomas and Angel Reese. Raised in both northern New Jersey and New York City by a family that ran both an Athleteโ€™s Foot and a menโ€™s shoe store called Menโ€™s Walker, Brandon learned early how to recognize trends, build relationships and serve the people. Today, his storytelling bridges eras, bringing context and culture to the forefront of sports media. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram @ScoopB & visit ScoopB.com.