 I can't hold it back on my own. Does anybody call you Janoris in your life? Nobody call me Janoris. No one? No. No member of your family calls you Janoris? No. You're Jackrabbit? Jackrabbit or rabbit? Jackrabbit or rabbit. And you asked the Titans to list you on the roster as Jackrabbit? Because that's what everybody calls you. Correct. Explain how you became Jackrabbit Jenkins. Well, it started at the University of Florida, my freshman year. I was out there making plays on the field, but I didn't know what I was doing. Remind you, I had one early in the spring. So when you go in the spring, they just throw you out there. But I was making plays. We got a meeting room one day, and the coach was like, making a lot of plays. You moving really fast. We're going to call you Jackrabbit. And then ever since that day, I just ran with it. But you didn't actually chase rabbits. Of course. You did. That was part of my nature. That was part of my living. That was part of my growing up. How did you not end up on offense being so fast? Because I always been quick. And I was real physical in high school. So I always wanted to hit people. But I played running back in high school. But when I got to college, they moved me to corner. Have you been surprised if you could play this long? Not really. I haven't been surprised. I mean, it's a position that guys, once you hit 30, you start to, but you've just, it's like you've gotten better. Oh, it's all about taking care of your body. Understanding the game, mental reps, just being a pro. I feel like I've been doing a great job of that since I've been in the lead. And I just got to continue. Dave McGinnis works with us on Titans Radio. My God. He loves, he loves Jackrabbit. My God. He talks about the fact that you've become more of a pro as you've gotten older. And that that's what's really allowed you to do it. Where would you say you've become more of a pro? And who helped you to become a pro? Just studying. Oining out the field. People like Cortland Finnegan, Dominique Rodgers-Tamarty, just being under those guys that's at a young age and learning from those guys and understanding the game helped me become a great pro. I learned how to film, study through Cortland. I mean, I just learned. At first, I came in, I was young, here, there. But then I got settled in and just learned how to become a pro. What's the hardest thing about covering an NFL wide receiver? The hardest thing? Just being consistent. You got to be consistent at cornerback. Because at any moment, you don't know if the ball is coming or not. So you always got to be consistent and just learning how to take care of your body. The other thing that I've never understood that's really hard for people is you're going to fail as a corner in the NFL. They're going to catch passes. It's going to happen. How do you get over it? And how long did it take you to learn to have that put it aside after one play and go on? Well, in the NFL, you got to understand. Everybody get paid. Everybody going to make play. At the end of the day, if somebody make a play on you, you got to brush it off. Because guess what? It's a whole game. One play, don't determine the whole game. You just got to continue to work.