I want to be the best that I can be because I want to win a Super Bowl.

I don't want to go out there and jeopardize myself getting hurt in camp.

I want to continue to grow, and as long as I keep going out there doing what I'm doing and don't fall off from what I've learned already as they keep adding things on, I'll be fine.

I gotta go play with people who want to see me succeed, who want me to be great.

I don't think I should settle for anything less than what I'm valued at.

I feel like a lot of runners in the NFL: the more they get the ball, the more they get into a rhythm.

When I carry the ball, I don't just take a direct hit. I get out of bounds when I can, get to the ground, try to avoid taking a pounding on my shoulders and legs. If I do that, I think I'll be fine.

Being in my rhythm, I can never tell whether I got 15 carries or 25 carries. It's never really a difference to me. I just go out and play.

The first album that I bought with my own money was 50 Cent's 'Get Rich or Die Tryin'.' That was, like, the 5th grade, 6th grade.

I can't take nothing for granted. I have to really protect myself - either get out of bounds or continue to finish the play.

It was never a thing that bothered me, being cold or if there's snow. It never fazed me.

Rottweilers are really protective. They always want to be around you, and they are really cuddly. They are good around family.

If I only get eight carries, and we win the game, I'm fine with that.

I'm not a guy who always complains or talks about getting carries.

I use my mind. I set up blocks. I wait for things to open. I time up things. I use a lot of skill catching the ball.

My aunt has this video from when I was 6 years old, no teeth or nothing, and I told my mom and my aunt that I was going to the NFL.

The irony is, when people now compliment my ability to make something out of nothing on the football field, my mom is the one who's been doing so in real life all along.

When people come up to me and are like, 'I really like your music,' it feels good to know that it's not all about football for me anymore.

I just feel like I try to get out of each game healthy.

I don't necessarily care about the money aspect of it. I just want to be valued where I'm at. If I am playing this game, I want to set standards for all the other running backs behind me, like Todd Gurley and Ezekiel Elliott, Melvin Gordon, guys like that.

I think if you deflate a football, then you're definitely cheating.

I feel I'm one of those guys that doesn't necessarily depend on athletic ability.

It is okay to play tough and try to hit guys hard in the course of the play - that's fine - but I don't like unnecessary roughness or things that happen after the play.

I'm not a real greedy guy.