Say I had been with a guy like Tom Brady, Peyton Manning or Drew Brees all of my career. Are you kidding me?
A lot of people think I'm stuck up. Pretty much that I'm arrogant. I only do that when I'm on the field.
Don't say I don't get along with my teammates. I just don't get along with some of the guys on the team.
I think at some point during the course of the game, I will have an impact - whether it's blocking or whether it's catching the football.
People forget that I'm a human being, just because I play a sport that everybody loves. We're human. We're not invincible. We share the same feelings and emotions that people on the outside feel. I don't think people really understand that.
But if you look at the big scheme of things, I have never failed, regardless of anything I have had to go through: from Dallas, to the sharpie, to me getting involved with a debate with my coach, a lot of people look to see my fail.
I don't want that to be the headline.
I don't have to play football.
A lot of people have to deal with the feeling that their worlds are caving in.
I knew I was going to have success here.
I know the microphones and cameras are on me. They're looking at my gestures and taking it and running with it because of things that have happened in the past. It's very unfair.
I didn't know who my daddy was until I was 10 or 12. Surprising as it may seem, he was living right across the street.
I wanted a NBA basketball gym at my house and that's what I worked hard for and I was able to achieve that.
It doesn't matter what any of my teammates have said about me.
It doesn't matter what people say about me, whether they're in Philly, or whether they're in San Francisco... all across the world.
Off the field I'm down to earth. I'm a very caring person. I'm a very giving person.
When I go out there and play I just play.
I left a lot - a lot - of touchdowns on the field throughout the last two or three years.
You have a white guy as an announcer and sportscaster. Me, I'm black. I do it and I've already done some stuff in the past. We're more expressive than the white guys. You look at the skill players. We're the ones that get into the end zone. We get in the end zone more than they do.
I have donated money to the kids overseas, the open hand project and the homeless.
I had my family before I played football.
A lot of people expect to see the same type of character that they see on the field off the field, and that throws them for a loop.
I'm content where I am. I know I am going to be a Cowboy for life.
Terrell has 25 million reasons why he should be alive.
Once I step on the field, by the things I do in practice and the way I practice, you can't tell that I don't love the game. But I just know it deep down.
Follow AzQuotes on Facebook, Twitter and Google+. Every day we present the best quotes! Improve yourself, find your inspiration, share with friends
or simply: