You've got to go out on a limb sometimes because that's where the fruit is.
I think sometimes when it comes to sports, and especially relationships between players and coaches, that people lose track, lose a sense of reality.
Maybe I'm stupid or whatever, but to me if I got a concussion, if I could see straight and I could carry a football then I'm not telling anybody.
And any time you feed your ego, it's a one-way street. . . . There were so many things I had to deal with that erased the positives I got from playing the game that it wasn't worth it. It's like eating a Big Mac and drinking a Diet Coke.
I've had a lot of clouds in my life since I got into pro football -- too many -- but now I feel like I can see really clearly for the first time. And I can see the Super Bowl from here.
Texas was such a welcoming place, and with its unbelievable history and tradition, it's extra special to be a part of that.
I want to really start focusing on what I want to accomplish and what it is I want to achieve, but not micromanaging this or that and focusing on the little things.
Criticism is a great motivation. Failure is not an option to me.
I seem to have very few casual readers, only passionate and appreciative ones.
Several professional athletes have wrongly taught many young Americans by example that the only way to succeed in sports is to take steroids.
All great programmers learn the same way. They poke the box. They code something and see what the computer does. They change it and see what the computer does. They repeat the process again and again until they figure out how the box works.