Game Changers: Business & Branding

How former NFL player Tobias Dorzon found success as a personal chef

As a student-athlete at Jackson State University, Tobias Dorzon was known for more than his on-the-field abilities. When he wasn’t at practice or competing in a game, he could be found on campus hosting fish fries for his teammates.

“Cooking was something I always loved,” he tells CNBC Make It. “But it wasn’t until I ventured off and stopped playing [sports] that I realized I loved it more than football.”

After two years in the NFL and Canadian Football League, Dorzon turned his passion for cooking into a full-time career. His catering company, Victory Chefs, provides services to businesses in the Washington, D.C. area and to professional athletes and celebrities across the country.

Chef Tobias Dorzon

Photo courtesy of Adam McMillan

From football to the kitchen

Building a clientele

His posts of mouth-watering dishes like jerk shrimp pasta, Thai chili jerk wings and cilantro lime lamb chops eventually caught the attention of Washington Redskins player Santana Moss in 2015.

“One of his buddies followed me on Instagram and tagged him under my pics,” explains Dorzon. “One day in the middle of the night I was up and just decided to start liking a bunch of Santana’s pics. He just so happened to be up as well and sent me a DM asking if I was in the D.C. area.”

The next day, Dorzon met with Moss at his home and demonstrated his cooking skills with an herb roasted chicken, broccolini and sweet potatoes. Moss hired him on the spot and offered Dorzon a salary five times more than what he had been making working in restaurants.

A week later, Moss took some of the food Dorzon prepared for him to the Redskins’ locker room for other players to try.

“He came back and told me, ‘DeSean Jackson wants you to start cooking for him and Trent Williams wants you to cook for him,'” says Dorzon. “Within a month I had five Redskins players I was cooking for.”

Moss describes Dorzon as an individual with a unique flair that sets him apart from other cooks that he’s encountered.

“To be honest, chef [Dorzon] has a different type of swag and confidence about his craft,” says Moss. “So he made [hiring him] a no-brainer.”

His work with Redskins players also helped Dorzon land other NFL clients, like Tyrod Taylor when he was with the Baltimore Ravens and the Pittsburgh Steelers’ Robert Golden. He eventually developed a close relationship with Jackson, who now plays for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Dorzon credits Jackson with helping him to expand his client reach beyond athletes.

“With [DeSean] being from California he has a lot of connections, and he put me in a position to do stuff with so many different people,” he says. “I worked with The Game and Snoop Dogg all through DeSean.”

New ventures

Dorzon’s relationship with Taylor, who now plays for the Buffalo Bills, has resulted in a business partnership that includes the recent launch of his food truck, Victory Truck.

For years, Dorzon said he resisted the idea of expanding his business to a food truck because he was content with the pay and flexibility of being a private chef. But after doing more research — and reading about a California chef who made $1.2 million in one year from a food truck — he decided to give the idea some more serious thought.

On November 30, 2017, Victory Truck held its grand opening and in January 2018 it hit the streets of D.C. for the first time.

“The first night we went out we had 300 people waiting outside for food,” he says. “We made about $4,500 in three hours.”

He says the food truck is a stepping stone to expanding his business and one day opening up a full-service restaurant.

“There are a lot of foodies out there who are 40-plus and not on Instagram all the time, and I want them to know who I am as a chef,” says Dorzon. “I can do the food truck for a year or two years and show up in all areas of [D.C., Maryland and Virginia] and show people who I am. So when it’s time to open a restaurant they can say, ‘I’ve heard of the Victory Truck, so this must be the restaurant.'”

I’m more successful now as a chef than I was playing professional football.

Tobias Dorzon

personal chef, founder of Victory Chefs


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