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At Harvard, I grew up a lot in terms of being able to deal with different types of people because where I grew up in Arizona, it's predominately white and predominantly Mormon families, so there's not a whole lot of diversity.
Ryan Fitzpatrick
Coming to Harvard was an eye-opening experience because there's so much diversity on campus.
Any way that I can help the Harvard football program and Harvard is great.
I don't see myself being able to stay away from football.
You feel pressure when other people's expectations are higher than your own.
I want to be in the playoffs.
I feel like I keep progressing.
I've seen a lot of things and I've experienced a lot of things.
I've got to take advantage of every day.
I feel like I've gotten better every year.
For us as players, revenue sharing, getting a larger percentage of the pie, is important, but also the overall growth of that pie is important.
I've been through a lot. I've had so many ups and downs in my career. I think a lot of it is you just have to be the same guy every day.
You've gotta come to work - regardless if you're 6-2 or 2-6 - and put your work in, just try to have the same spirit and go about your business the same way every day.
That's what I've always tried to do. I've always tried to prepare the same. I've always just tried to keep the same routine throughout the season and go out there and try to be consistent on Sundays.
I've been called every name in the book.
What a humbling experience, being an NFL quarterback.
Harvard has plenty of people that are way more important than football players.
There are so many high-highs and there are so many low-lows in this game.
I don't think the day that I was drafted that I expected to be the starting quarterback for the Rams as a seventh-round pick.
I was a third string guy for a couple of years.
I'm the Harvard guy everywhere, every day. There are worse things to be called, worse things to be known by I guess.
My wife is also from Harvard and we do have some family in the Cambridge area so we try to make it back at least once a year. We really enjoyed our time out there.
I play because I love the relationships.
I play because I love the game.
I'm trying to do the best I can every day.
I've been a lot of places and worked with a lot of different guys. High draft picks. Low draft picks.
When I got drafted, I just wanted a jersey. Once they gave me the jerseys, like, I was just hoping that they kept me on the team.
Absolutely I'd be happy with my career.
My career has been so different than most guys. I've kind of bounced around and always, one way or another, ended up in the starting lineup. So I would say my career has been very unique.
I have enjoyed every single step of the journey that I've been on.
Unfortunately, football's hard and you're going to have bad games sometimes.
I'm getting better as a quarterback. A lot of that is an understanding of the game, of myself, of who I'm playing against.
When you play quarterback and the offense doesn't play well, a lot of that is because of the quarterback. You're going to receive the criticism.
I would have loved to stay in Buffalo and all that.
I've never been fast, but I can move well enough to do what I need to do.
One thing that I've learned about myself is I have to trust what I see. And that maybe sounds silly, but there's things that I feel or see during a game that, you know, I used to explain it as I have an angel on one shoulder that's telling me to run the play and the devil on the other shoulder that's telling me really what I should do.
I know myself so well. So I know if I'm not confident in the play, it's not going to be a good play.
As you get older, life gets more complicated.
Competition definitely brings out the best in you.
I've had so many ups and downs in my career. When it's going good, you learn to enjoy the ride.
My normal is craziness - moving around and jumping from team to team and having to get used to different guys in a short period of time.
You never know what's going to happen in the NFL. That's probably the thing I've learned most - expect the unexpected and go from there.
I wouldn't trade my experience for anybody's.
I've been called worse than a Harvard kid.
I'm not gonna throw a Ryan Leaf bullet, but I've got a good enough arm, where I think it'll turn some heads and keep them interested.
I try to be the same guy every day, no matter the situation, no matter the adversity.
That's one of the things with a championship-caliber team, is how it deals with injuries.
The two things that make you a good head coach in this league are if you can get the players to respect you and if you can come across with a clear, consistent message.
Any time I see Kansas City on the schedule, especially when it's an away game, you start to think about the experience of playing in Arrowhead and how difficult it is to come in and play with the noise and how great those fans are.
I feel like the luckiest guy in the world sometimes, getting to go outside and play football with my friends.