When you're not hitting and they're making good pitches, it's hard.

I played right field in Minor Leagues a lot before I started playing centerfield.

I love playing center.

Sometimes, there is not a lot of pressure, so you can relax.

It's hard being an everyday player.

I hate when pitchers get me out multiple times. It's probably an ego thing, but I don't like that.

That's how baseball works. You put some good swings on the ball and it goes out of there.

I've said it before, every day in the cage, I'm trying to be consistent and keep my load and keep my body right and my mind right.

Every day before the game, I know what I want to do. The days I feel off, it's knowing what it is I want to do and getting it back.

I'm understanding how to use my swing and working in the cage every day to repeat what I'm doing. Just not trying to do too much.

You take a couple of days off, and your swing is going to be off. I think it takes 15, 20 at-bats to really feel comfortable again.

The more positions you can play, the more ways you can help the team.

I think you just have extra adrenaline playing at home.

I think any way you can help offensively or defensively, and if you can get both in one day, that's a huge confidence booster and everyone wants to do that.

I know what I need to do to keep my body in shape to last 162 games.

I know what a full season is like in the big leagues. It's not going to be a surprise anymore.

I think when you have some success, you're living the dream, and you want to have more success.

The offseason after the 2014 season, I worked with hitting coach Damon Mashore. I always had power in batting practice but couldn't take it into a game consistently. We made a little adjustment with my hands, lowered them a bit to get a consistent path to the ball, a natural uppercut to elevate the ball and backspin some balls.

I've been around clubhouses a long time, I know how to maneuver around the clubhouse.

I respect the game, on and off the field.

I'm just trying to stay within myself every day and keep going.

I'm learning. Watching video. Understanding what I'm good at, what I'm not good at.

During the season, you just grind, it's a cat-and-mouse game.

I think growing into a frame is important, not being - in my case - 160-170 pounds.

Our hitting coaches have done a great job of understanding when I don't look right at the plate and getting me back on track.

Being the guy that some kids look up to is pretty cool.

The pressure of the World Series and the playoffs, it gets to you. But I hope I feel like that every year. Because hopefully we're playing into November every year.

I can't do anything with my hair. White guy hair.

I guess sometimes when the game is on the line you kind of focus a little more.

I have to go out and perform.

I was just getting away from my game plan. What I was doing really, I wasn't using it to my advantage in '18. And that was it.

When you don't get hits it's depressing.

At the end of the day, that's why we're playing the games, for the postseason.

When I was drafted, I didn't know any better. I didn't think I had to hit for power.

I could get better at baserunning.

Growing up, my favorite player was either Derek Jeter or Manny Ramirez.

It's weird coming into a game in the later innings, in a World Series game.

I never really had problems with lefties.

I take great pride in my defense because the bat is not always going to be there.

I grew up playing in the outfield and junior year of high school I went over to first base and got some tidbits from my dad, but it kind of came naturally to me.

Respect the game on and off the field and if you do that, you're going to have the respect among your peers.

If I could help the pitcher as much as I can, or I could save three to five errors a year with my defense, then that's just a big help for my teammates.

I created a little thing with my hands, just to create a more consistent plane to backspin balls, and obviously growing into your body helps. It's kind of complicated, more about starting the barrel flat and then creating a movement - flat to up, I guess - going towards the pitcher.

It was really cool coming back here to Chase Field. I played here in high school and went to a lot of games as a kid.

I'm just trying to play a game. I don't think I should have to worry about who's gonna come on the field and whatnot.

As a hitter, I think if we wanted to change something, we should scoot the mound back. But that's never gonna happen.

I've always had trouble keeping weight on, or putting weight on as well.

The Met-Rx products... helped me take my workouts to the next level.

I just say what comes to my mind and sometimes it's not the brightest.

I guess I make a lot of stupid comments that are, like, pretty irrelevant to a lot of things.