I can be a receiver.

Football is a very instinctual game, and it's very fast-paced.

I'm always trying to be the most complete back I can be.

If they need me to have 25 carries and eight catches a game, whatever they need me to do, I'm ready to go. Or if they need me to have eight carries and six catches but play the whole game and pass protect and help shifts on the D-ends, I'm ready to go.

Back in the day, a lot of running backs used to be 230 pounds, ground and pound the ball right up the middle. One thing I pride myself is being able to do what those guys do, as well.

One of the main reasons I went to Stanford was to run in a pro-style offense and show I can run between the tackles 25 to 30 times consistently.

You see how powerful some of the things you say and you do can be on people, especially young people.

I play with a chip on my shoulder always, I feel like people don't always give me credit for my skills and talents and that's just the way it is. I also don't care too much, I don't feel like I'm crazy disrespected. I have a chip on my shoulder at all times.

All the great players you ask always expect greatness.

We all see color. We do. And anyone who says he doesn't see color is confused or isn't telling the truth. Except... and I know how this sounds, but I can't remember any point in my life where I saw other people and thought of their color.

Maybe at some level, even at an early age, without ever being aware of it, I was reacting to something. To people judging me based on how I looked instead of what I could do.

Some of my best childhood memories are of watching Terrell Davis with my dad. I used to hang out when I was, like, 4 and 5 years old and play Power Rangers in the locker room with him and Shannon Sharpe and Rod Smith. And I loved Terrell. He was awesome.

There are certain things that people love to do, and they can't really explain it. That's me and football. The game gives me hope. It lets me be myself.

I train every single day.

I keep myself sane with stuff that's fun and not physical.

I mean, at the end of the day, I just want to win.

A win's a win.

One of my big passions in the offseason, or just when I get time off in general, is playing music, and I've been fortunate to be around people who are a lot more talented than I am.

My childhood neighbor played piano, and he told me we'd get all the girls if I learned how to play-and I was probably in eighth grade, going into high school, so I said, 'Sign me up.'

I love Mac Miller. I'm a big Drake fan. I love Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, Bob Marley.

I probably have the most versatile playlist in the world, from country to rap to classic rock to classical.

I think you can get better at everything. That's in football. That's in life.

At the end of the day, nobody has higher expectations for me than myself. I don't really try to prove anyone wrong anymore as much as I try to prove myself right.

I used to get so upset when my parents took away my phone and then I realized it's because they wanted the best for me and my brothers. I have a whole new appreciation for how they raised us.

Yeah, I worked with a chef when I first got into the league. We did all my blood work and found out exactly what I'm sensitive to, what I'm deficient in, what my body needs. I had to cut out a lot of things - chicken, tuna, wheat, and soy.

The less I think about meals and everything else, the more I can focus on my sport, and the better I play.

Winning is the most important thing. You want to focus on the game and the team.

If I have the worst season in the world, the best season in the world, whatever. If I'm playing football, I'm happy, and no one can take that away from me.

I used to have a potbelly pig named Terrance. He died of obesity.

I think when you're running through a hole and you're hit in certain, different ways, you have to be able to move and change and make people miss.

I've always tried to be a complete athlete and not limit myself to one position or one sport. It really helped mold my whole football game.

A lot of times, I got confused for a kicker. And I've been compared to every white player in the NFL.

I felt like I could play with anybody, but some people felt differently.

I can jump high; I can dunk - nobody really believes that I can.

I just try to do the best I can for myself and the people around me.

Sometimes you have to take a risk if you want great things to happen.

It really does frustrate me when I watch MLS, and I see our best U-17 players - who, again, are so talented and so capable - being rostered... but then not being put on the field much to actually play. I watch that, and I just think about how I was given a chance... a real chance... and it changed my life.

I set my own personal goals; I'm not playing to satisfy fans.

The Premier League is an unbelievable league.

I played one year of competitive basketball, actually. I don't remember what grade I was in, maybe middle school or something. I was the point guard - I was the smallest one always. I did my best; I thought I did pretty good. I was always a little bit better at soccer, so I had to make the decision.

I think it's good to have competition.

My dad taught me, like, no matter what, when I go out and play against these bigger players, just to be myself. I knew that I was good enough and that I had the ability to. I never shy away from anyone, and I don't think anyone should.

Lionel Messi, getting to meet him, you're a little star-struck in the beginning, of course.

Being able to play at club level at a high level and then getting called into the national team, it's amazing.

The biggest thing my dad taught me was to play without fear.

The World Cup is as big as it gets.

I was very young, but I just remember going to school every day in England, which I didn't enjoy. Every day, as soon as the bell would ring, we would go out and be on this little - it looked like a basketball court, but it was a soccer court with goals and a hard floor.

The expectations some Americans put on me is too much, is what I would say. But I don't take it that way. I know no one means harm to me like that or wanting to put too much pressure on me.

I've already played against some of my biggest idols.