A lot of motivational speakers - players, coaches, or whatever - they kind of speak in these kind of age-old mantras, or cliches or whatnot. Kobe was very much not like that.Collection: Motivational
I've heard a lot of motivational speakers throughout the years.Collection: Motivational
Even just listening to a sad country song, yeah, I can get pretty emotional.Collection: Sad
I think that's one of the cool things about football - there's a place for every kid to play, regardless of size, shape or speed.Collection: Cool
The reality is, it's a hard game physically, and the older you get, the competitor in you and the player in you obviously want to keep playing and keep going, and through the rivers of the season, your family and friends are certainly taking the brunt of all the positives and negatives going on.Collection: Positive
I think that in most sports, outside of golf and maybe some other things, it benefits you to be in the best shape possible, to be portrayed with minimal body fat, on your diet, as a watchful athlete.Collection: Sports
I'm a big fan of the beard oil. It really keeps it soft. I use the beard wash too because my wife is really on me to make sure there's not all types of bacteria and food left up in there.Collection: Food
I tell people this all the time: I think Jason Peters is probably the best athlete I've ever seen play.Collection: Best
I think as a leader, you just take accountability. That's what leadership is. Leadership is taking accountability yourself and holding others to the same standard, regardless of what's going on.Collection: Leadership
I think the biggest difference between football and a lot of other sports is that being in a transition period doesn't mean that you can't compete and be competitive.Collection: Sports
I've always felt that you know you have a really good team when your best players are your hardest workers.
Sometimes it's so easy for me to get caught up in my own head, selfishly looking at things from my own perspective, that I forget how important it is to uplift other people. Not by these rah-rah speeches and not by getting in somebody's face but just by being a genuinely happy, emotional guy.
There's certainly tangible value whenever you're out there getting reps - there's always something you can learn, something you can get better at.
Some guys, I look at them, I'm kind of wondering why they don't have a beard. You can see they'd have a great one, that they could be doing so much better.
I appreciate being a member of the Philadelphia Eagles and playing in the NFL a little bit more each and every day because I realize I'm one day closer to never doing this again.
That's kind of how offensive linemen are. They usually love playing for whoever's coaching the team.
Anything that any player does to give back to the community, I'm in awe of, whether you're starting your own foundation, joining other foundations, giving your time, whatever.
Everybody's going to get crushed at some point. Everybody's going to go through a downturn or struggle, right?
When you have guys who are accountable to themselves, accountable to making sure they improve each and every day on the practice field and in every game, which is what I think we have here, you're going to get better. It's just the natural process of it.
You know, in football - this isn't basketball. One draft pick isn't going to make us a Super Bowl champion. It might be a big start to a Super Bowl championship, but it's always going to be about the team.
I enjoy compliments from guys more than from girls. If a guy has a beard, he knows what he's talking about.
I think offensive line play in general is really a position of service; you don't really have stats, you don't have the glory of scoring touchdowns.
From a player's standpoint, it's on you to make sure that you're watching the film, you're doing everything during the week necessary to improve, to make sure you understand the finer coaching points, every little detail, so that when you're in the middle of the game, you're not playing slow or apprehensive.
I think there's no question the majority of Philadelphia Eagles teams are labeled tough, hard-nosed, physical football teams. I think a large part of that is the vibe, the energy, and what the city demands.
It's nice whenever you're get recognized... but I just think a lot of the individual stuff gets overplayed.
When you're watching, you can't do anything. What are they doing? Why are they doing this? It's not fun at all. I don't even know why fans watch the games.
I think it's a unique breed of athlete on the offensive line. We're built differently than a lot of other major athletes.
I feel a sense of responsibility, not just to my teammates but to myself to do things the right way and to put everything I have into it, and I think that's most of the people in the NFL.
On the offensive line, although you can't just be eating anything, it directly benefits you to be heavy, especially if your frame can handle it.