I have a unique perspective just from the career that I've had.

There are so many things that I've just continued to get better at in my game.

I'm just trying to be the best version of me that I can be.

Knowing who I am as a player and working on my deficiencies, communication is something I try to pride myself on.

I think, fortunately and unfortunately, I've got a lot of experience in playing for teams that have been in this situation where we lost a few games and we've got to stay the course, we've got to right the ship, and we've got to do all of that stuff.

You've just got to continue to prepare in the film room, continue to prepare running the game plan and doing everything on the practice field and hope that it translates.

It's not an easy game.

If the play-caller has confidence in you, you can feel it on the headset. You can feel it by the way he's calling plays.

The biggest thing in this game - to last - is to have belief in yourself. Because when the owner stops believing in you and the GM stops believing in you and the coaches stop believing in you, sometimes all you have is yourself.

Football is something so ingrained in me, something I love doing and definitely something I want to do.

That's why you play the game. You play the game for your teammates, who really want to play with and for you.

I like Backgammon.

I like KenKen.

I've had a different career than a lot of different quarterbacks, but this has been a career that I've loved and a position that I like being in.

There's a lot of things you can't learn unless you actually experience it.

Just in terms of the demeanor and the approach and just making sure that I'm consistent in the way I do things - that is the biggest thing for me.

For all the ladies out there, I'm taken. I'm sorry.

I really enjoy helping younger guys out, because this league is about playing it forward a little bit.

There were guys who helped me out when I was young.

I have zero ego.

I want to bring energy. I want my play to be infectious to other guys.

I'm very proud of the fact I went to Harvard and I loved my four years there.

I think rather than further the stereotypes of me going into the league and being 'the Harvard guy,' I shattered those when I was a rookie and I couldn't call a play in the huddle.

It really all started in Buffalo, when it was cold, I wanted to see if I could grow facial hair and lo and behold it just kept growing.

I never imagined even playing in the NFL. It seemed like a pipe dream.

Whenever I go to a new team the jabs about being a Harvard guy are always more prevalent. This is mainly because people don't know much about me other than being the Harvard guy that did well on his Wonderlic test. The more time I spend with people, the less the Harvard stuff comes up.

I find the game mentally challenging and really enjoy the chess match that occurs every week between the offense and the opposing defense.

I feel like I have been a quick study in terms of picking up the different offensive schemes I have been exposed to. I think I offer a dependability and dedication that is very important to being successful.

Squats and hang cleans. I love them. You can just feel yourself getting bigger and better.

I wasn't born this super, superior athlete.

I've had to work hard my whole life to gain what I have, and that's why I have such a fun time doing those things that nobody likes. Like squatting or hang cleans or getting up in the morning, because I think that I realize in the end what it's going to do for me and what it has done for me in the past.

Sometimes I think that the one thing I love most about being an adult is the right to buy candy whenever and wherever I want.

I've learned it's important not to limit yourself. You can do whatever you really love to do, no matter what it is.

As a kid I decided that a Canadian accent doesn't sound tough. I thought guys should sound like Marlon Brando. So now I have a phony accent that I can't shake, so it's not phony anymore.

All my characters are me. I'm not a good enough actor to become a character. I hear about actors who become the role and I think 'I wonder what that feels like.' Because for me, they're all me.

Falling in love is a narcissistic endeavor. You play the role of lover, and you find someone to act it out on.

Freedom is such a gift.

Show me a man who wouldn't give it all up for Emma Stone, and I'll show you a liar.

Women are better than men.

I sometimes forget to have breakfast in the morning, but when I actually buy a box of cereal, I will probably eat it not only for breakfast but also as a snack later on.

Muscles. We're talking about muscles? They're like pets, basically, and they're not worth it. They're just not worth it. You have to feed them all the time and take care of them, and if you don't, they just go away. They run away.

The theme for me is love and the lack of it. We all want that and we don't know how to get it, and everything we do is some kind of attempt to capture it for ourselves.

I've been thinking about a bank robbery my whole life.

I turned 30, and everyone told me I would feel different, and I didn't.

I loved growing up in Canada. It's a great place to grow up because - well, at least where I grew up - it's very multicultural. There's also good health care and a good education system.

I don't really have that much angst to get rid of.

I don't believe my house was haunted. I think I had an overactive imagination, and I was so convinced that those around me became convinced, too.

I think the 'Law of Attraction' comes from a rich, white, privileged perspective.

I think about death a lot, like I think we all do. I don't think of suicide as an option, but as fun. It's an interesting idea that you can control how you go. It's this thing that's looming, and you can control it.

Cars can have a hypnotic effect. You can get in a car and get out and not really remember the trip.