 The thing that we didn't know until you got here is about your incredible preparation. And if you watch in practice, the attention to detail on the route run, the communication with the teammates, even the core work you're doing while the first team defense is on, you are non-stop. Ten years ago you didn't know to do that coming out of Clemson. Nobody 21 years old knows to do that. How did you learn to be that kind of pro like what we used to see out of Eddie George years ago? I appreciate it. Obviously the young me didn't know any of those tactics. I felt like my skill could keep me in this thing as long as I wanted to play. Obviously skill takes you so far, but I would say I picked that up from guys around me like J.J. White and Andre Johnson being in Houston and seeing the way they practice and seeing things they did when nobody was watching. To me I knew I wanted to be where those guys were one day and I felt like that was the standard. J.J. used to do cardio during practice where he would run sprints during practice while the first team offense was out there. And it's just something that I picked up and I would say just watching the greats around me and never feeling like I know it all or I'm where I want to be. Year 11 and I'm still doing those same things that I did a couple years ago. Titans in the king cap, Henry, Hans Spears, Pitches Levis looking deep for Hopkins. The living legend is there. Titans! How proud does it make you that the young guys are now following you around doing a lot of the same things at practice? It makes me feel good because I learned there from someone who is going to be a future Hall of Famer and hopefully that's something that they feel like will help their game. Sometimes it's not something where just overnight it's going to take effect but over time it's something that you pick up that mentality and you want to do something when you feel like nobody else is. What makes DeAndre Hopkins' game as a wide receiver unique? I would say my knowledge of football, my knowledge of defenses. Being able to get open, not necessarily being a 4-3-4-4 guy but just my knowledge of defenses and I would say being able to catch contested balls. I feel like that's something that separates me, just my focus. I'm in the balls and air. It's a 50-50 ball, I feel like it's mine. Throws deep downfield, there's Hopkins all alone! 20, 15, 10, 5, end zone! Ladies and gentlemen, give him 61 yards! Touchdown Titans! It feels like in watching you on and off the field, you like the puzzle of the details of the game. Is that one of the parts of football that you really enjoy the most? It is. I think part of it is probably due to playing quarterback when I was young and still kind of having that mentality. I feel like I'm a quarterback in my position and just trying to see everything. I grew up playing quarterback. I grew up in a football family where my grandfather was Hall of Fame, South Carolina, my uncle's Hall of Fame in South Carolina. I've been introduced to football at a young age and knowing not just my position but what everybody else's position is as well and how it affects me. Weren't you supposed to be a defensive back originally when you went to Clemson? I was. I was recruited very highly out of high school as a safety, defensive back, got the state record in South Carolina. Just about every college recruited me as a defensive back, not a receiver. But I wanted to go somewhere where I had the opportunity to play both and Clemson at the time didn't have the greatest receivers and they gave me that opportunity. So five pro bowls, three times all pro statistics that are already Hall of Fame worthy potentially. Thank you. Year 11, what's left for you to do in football? What are your goals? You know obviously a super bowl is everybody's reasoning of playing the game and my goal is to pass down what I can to other players, the knowledge, certain skill sets that I have. Try to sharpen someone else and for me it's giving back what I've gained and trying to help someone else get to that goal of winning the championship or just being the best version of themselves on the football field and off the field.