If anybody wants to fight me they know where to find me. I'm not a hard guy to find. Come get some.

Fighting is not something that I enjoy doing. It's something that I do that I feel that I have to do.

I don't recommend anybody becoming a fighter.

Sometimes I feel like I'm the only one who's in tune with what's really going on.

There's no reason for me to come and fight for fun. I don't do that. That's not what I do.

I'm not out here trying putting on an act like I'm crazy. In my opinion, everyone else is crazy. They're the ones who put on an act for you, doing what they're told in front of the camera.

Once I turned pro, I was like okay, this is not fun and games now.

Everybody wants to do a fight with me, champions at 170, champions at 185.

I will always tell the truth.

For me, I already fought some of the best people there are. I already did, you know, what I need to do for me.

I'm not fanatical or in love with being an MMA fighter.

I just try to be as healthy as I can, pretty much.

Sometimes, the hardest things are just the simple things. Basically, get out of your own head and just go play the game you know how to play.

It doesn't matter if it's first-, second-, third-, fourth-, fifth-string snaps - any time you get a snap and get to go out there and practice, you build a database of information.

I think the big thing is don't be afraid to fail.

Nobody aspires to be a backup. And although I take great pride in the supporting roles I've played in both Philadelphia and Kansas City, part of me still cringes every time I hear myself described that way. Not only is it limiting and one-dimensional, it doesn't come close to describing who I really am.

It took me years to separate Nick Foles the person from Nick Foles the football player.

I can't do something unless my heart is in it.

I don't play for myself. I play for my teammates and play for the people that helped me get to where I am. I know they're watching me every week, and I want to play for them. It's just in my heart, and that's who I am.

When you are having a rough day... you think you are failing. But failure is a part of life. It's about building character and growing.

Since that moment in Houston where I fractured my collarbone, I've experienced a lot more experiences in the NFL than I had up to that point. A lot of them great, some of them not so great.

I'm a laid-back Texas boy.

I know that throughout my career, I haven't always played great games.

When you're playing in the NFL, you can only do this for a short amount of time. Guys retire before they're 30. If you play forever, you play into your 40s - and you're still a young man with a lot of life left to live.

I'm very fortunate to be playing, and I know that any given day could be the last. And I'll be thankful for the time I have had to play this game. But I'm going to give my all every single day.

Keeping our priorities straight, our faith, our family, and values will keep us grounded.

If you think you're going to be a backup, you're going to be a backup.

Everything you do in life is a process that you work at it, and you can't give up.

I only care about winning and putting points on the board.

I'm into scripture every day.

I love everything about this city, Philadelphia.

I know I have the ability to start, and I have the ability to play.

Third-string quarterbacks, fourth-string quarterbacks - they get their opportunities, and they shine.

If you have to name me starting quarterback to go be a starting quarterback, then I probably have some issues I need to address.

From the moment you enter the league, everyone wants to slap a label on you - some tidy description of what they think you bring to the game. And more often than not, that tag sticks with you, regardless of whether it's accurate.

I guess my perfect day would be relaxing with my wife somewhere peaceful and secluded, or just lounging on the couch and watching TV.

Any time a quarterback can protect the ball and not throw interceptions, that's huge.

Getting through the reads in an efficient manner. I don't want to stay on receivers too long to where a bad decision is made.

When I was in Kansas City and having a tough time in my career, I decided to go to seminary to continue my spiritual growth.

I've been overlooked, praised, questioned, lauded, labeled, celebrated, and derided - sometimes all in the span of a single week. That's life in the NFL.

I shouldn't have to come out and say, 'Hey, I should be a starter again.' There's a lot of guys that say that, that shouldn't be starters. The key is to go out on the field and lead your team to show people that, 'Hey, this guy is a good guy in the locker room. He can lead a team. He did it on the field. He's shown it.'

That's something that's so often overlooked in this game - the dynamics of the locker room.

Everyone knows I'm sort of goofy. Some guys are really serious when they play. I'm not.

Getting all the things down game-management wise, that's what I want to excel at.

Now, to be a father, that changes everything.

You could ask yourself, 'Hey, when you were 20, are you the same person?' You're not. You may have the same values, you might look a little older, you might have some things that are the same, but your heart, everything about you, starts growing, changing - good or bad. It just depends on how you approach life.

I ran a high-tempo offense in college. You don't really get caught up in it.

I think, as a quarterback and a leader, it's not necessarily what you do in the limelight. Obviously, you want guys handling themselves in an appropriate manner for the organization and the team, but you need to be who you are. If you're a guy who does that and can be a leader, and naturally that's what you want to do, awesome.

I want to be a pastor in a high school.

I think, as people, we deal with struggles.