Of course, this is important to me. You always want to go out and perform. I can`t treat it like it`s too big, though. If I put too much relevance on it, you get antsy, you get tight. I don`t want to do that. I have to treat it like the rest of the games we`ve had.
Everything`s great. I haven`t had a problem out of anything.
You can't worry about what you can't control. I worry about how I play on the field. As long as I'm doing well, I can be satisfied.
She told me it would be good to get away for a day and clear my mind, so we went to Great Adventure. She made me ride the Kingda Ka, but I kept my eyes closed the whole time.
That's just the business,
Finally getting that call saying I was on the team? Needless to say I was very happy. This is my hometown. Then, the next day, my dreams came crashing down. I understand that this is a business and you can`t take stuff personally, but it was a very, very tough time.
Tom Heckert (vice president of player personnel) and my running backs coach (Ted Williams) both called me and told me they still want me here,
I did all I could do and that?s all I can ask. I thought I had a good camp and now all I can do is put it in the Lord?s hands.
But this is home for me. I`ve grown a lot since I came here. I feel like I`ve come a long way as a player the last two years. I want to be here and I realized that the organization wants me here, too.
More than 35 percent of the children exposed to a single traumatic event will develop serious mental health problems ... The real crisis of Katrina is the hundreds of thousands of ravaged, displaced and traumatized children.