I draw plays every day.

Mariota is special in a lot of ways. He's a dynamic dual threat on the field, and he is humble - no-nonsense, full of character - off the field.

I love finishers.

Carson Wentz, when you watch him on tape, No. 1, I just like a big guy that has athleticism.

Some people feel pressure; some people don't.

Tebow is the kind of guy who could revolutionize the game. He's the 'wildcat' who can throw. Most of the teams that have the wildcat back there, it's Ronnie Brown, it's Jerious Norwood, it's whoever you want to say it is. This guy here is 250 pounds of concrete cyanide, man. And he can throw. He throws well enough at any level to play quarterback.

When you're the head coach, you coach 53 people, and their wives and their girlfriends and their families and all those people.

You miss the adversity. The journey is what I'm talking about. Helping a guy get better. Seeing a guy get a contract. And seeing a seventh-round choice or free agent make the team.

All I really have going is football. I don't know what I would do without it.

There are not a lot of things that Andrew Luck can't do, but the thing I like about him is his work ethic. He's a workaholic, and that's what impresses me the most.

Just to get cufflinks on my shirt is a challenge.

If it wasn't for football, a lot of the best times of my life, my brother's life, my dad's life, wouldn't exist.

I break down the tape like I'm a quality-control coach, just like I was with the Packers in 1992. I break it down by hand, every play.

I had all kinds of different quarterbacks. But we never drafted a first-rounder.

I compete with myself. I try to get more done than you. I don't know why.

There are very few passions in my life - The man upstairs, family, and football.

All I ever wanted to do was coach, 'cause I knew I wasn't gonna be a player.

It doesn't make much sense to blitz a guy that gets rid of the ball in less than 1.5 seconds.

I get excited for big games in December.

You have to help your players understand that when they speak to the media, or when they tweet or text or e-mail, a lot of times, they become public knowledge.

I spend most of my time looking at game film.

If you're a young kid out there, put away your Twitter accounts if you want to be a pro football player. Somebody's going to hack your account; somebody's going to cause you problems.

This whole social media scene makes me sick.

I think when you get Robert Griffin, one of the most explosive quarterbacks to ever play the position, in a Mike Shanahan-type system, the possibilities are very exciting, I think, with Mike Shanahan's imagination.

Eli Manning is the one man I just don't want to see in the playoffs. He is a flatliner.

You think of Brady, you think of Rodgers, Roethliseber, Eli Manning. They're icemen. They have no feelings - none. They're able to concentrate on a snap-by-snap basis.

When we had a great defense at Tampa Bay, we always measured our defenses against the best quarterbacks.

Cancer is tough. It is a relentless opponent that won't seem to go away.

From the standpoint that you try to adjust your offense to your quarterback, you try to adjust your football team around your players. You do the best you can with the hand that you have, and you've got to add some parts along the way.

The Gruden-McVay relationship goes all the way back to 1970. John McVay and my dad are best of friends. My dad continued to work with McVay as a 49er. When John McVay became the general manager, he hired my dad to be one of his scouts.

I learned from Al Davis. We didn't have any secretaries. Secretaries, really, in Oakland were young football people.

We've got enough issues in this country without worrying about some of the things we're worrying about. It's unbelievable to me. And as long as I'm alive, I know what football gave me. It taught me my work ethic. It gave me a sense of discipline.

I'm a bit snobbish about breakfast: eggs benedict, or eggs royale, or something like that. Or just some really amazing, proper brown toast with smoked salmon, lemon, and black pepper. That's a great start to the day.

There's never been a time when there hasn't been ritualistic dancing, and I think clubbing is our modern incarnation of that.

A lot of my creative ideas begin in the pub, talking through possibilities with collaborators.

If you're a traveling artist, you probably experience insomnia at some point. You need things to be the right temperature, the right light... it's essential.

I love starting a track in one place and not knowing where it's going to end up.

Learning how to be calm and centered in any situation is a skill for life, whatever you do.

Well, I don't really use MIDI that much. But I do record audio around me a lot, and just layer it up and see what effect it has, without any aforethought.

I love that tension between machine sounds and organic sounds, and also the contrast between abrasive sounds and soft sounds.

Some machine-y music is great, but you can apply any groove to any song now - there's literally a massive drop-down menu on most programs. And that's what takes the human being out of the process.

I got this pretend grass stuff called LazyLawn on my roof. Now I can go out on my terrace in bare feet, and it looks exactly like a lawn. This is what science should be for.

I did classical music when I was a teenager, but the experience of performing a classical concert felt too frighteningly pristine for me to continue with it.

I've always been obsessed with contrast in records, and using harsher elements to make the quieter ones more powerful.

I have always been interested in incorporating real places into the music I make. Bringing the outside into the controlled world of recorded sound just gives life and physicality.

Singularity' goes through a process of purification and signification. If you listen to it, you can hear quite a chaotic and disruptive beginning and by the end, you're in such an opposite zone.

I'm very impulsive and I always had a belief in instinct leading the way.

It is funny how we talk about nature as this separate entity when we are nature, and nature is us.

I have the inability to stop thinking and switch off from work at night, which causes a lot of sleeplessness.

It's extraordinary to hear from people who are bereaved, or gone through a divorce, and they still take the time to tell me how a certain track or album helped them through tough times, or kept them sane.