When you have an opportunity to help your team in crunch time - as a kicker - that's a dream come true.

I guess, for me, the ultimate goal is to help me team win games every time I step on the field.

I'm enjoying watching my kids grow and play sports. That's a ton of fun.

You see these people that work their whole life and when they stop working, they stop living. Not me.

I don't know if I'm ever going to quit playing football. I'm just kidding.

On teams that have won championships and got to the big game, there's a certain vibe and feel in that locker room. Everyone talks about how there's a brotherhood in that locker room, there's not a lot of dissent, there's not guys that go off on their own. It's a team atmosphere.

You've got to trust your steps, trust your guys that are on the field with you, and when the ball is on the ground, you've got to do that every single time.

Every kicker that's in this league has kicked a million or so balls. You just have that swing; you know what you have to do, and you go out there and do it.

I think the most important asset to kicking is being mentally headstrong.

You try and take every kick exactly the same, no matter if it's the beginning or the last minute.

I mean, if I was going to leave New England, it wasn't going to be just for the sake of leaving.

The X's and O's with Bill Belichick is pretty amazing.

One thing I always noticed out of Bill Parcells is that he always wanted a good class of blue-collar, hardworking guys that he felt like he could win games with that way... When the difficult times came about he knew who was going to perform.

I bleed blue, and it's Colts blue now.

I just try to help my team win the best I can.

The way I look at it is, if you're going to play, you better put 100 percent effort into it all the time.

Will I still get a slice of pizza? Will I drink a beer or two? Absolutely. You still have to live, but I try to do things in moderation.

I don't ever take an extended period off between minicamp and the start of training camp.

This is a hard enough sport when you're giving 100 percent. If you're giving anything less than that, it'll swallow you up.

A lot of people can kick a ball a long way, but sometimes you get in a little funk and you work your way out of it.

Sometimes you have to work through some things, and the mental side of kicking is definitely there.

There's a brotherhood with the specialists. There's not many of them and we don't get any respect, so we have to show a little respect for each other. We have to help each other out if we have the opportunity.

I like my smart-aleck self.

I'm not a quitter.