 My playing style, I'm an animal out there on the field, man. It's business out there on the field, man. I feel like I'm a beast. I tell people, don't try to describe me as running back on a receiver. I'm a baller. When I get out there, it's lights out. I like getting hit. Any chance I get the ball, if somebody in there, I'm going to try to run you over. You don't care what your name is or what your occupation is. I'm trying to bring the hammer. I'm going to try to get to you. I'm going to talk my spec. I started playing football when I was younger, like five or six years old. My mama actually got me into it. I think she told me I was getting on her nerves all the time, just being around the house as a little kid. She wanted me to do something, and she introduced me to football, and I haven't looked back. I took a different route than a lot of guys, and a lot of guys don't go to junior college. So I had to go to junior college for two years, and get it out of the mud. It really taught me how to be a man. You know, the first time I ever washed and closed, I'm home when I was in junior college. I called my mom, and I was like, hey, what do I do with this? I put this in there, and it was crazy, man. And seeing the things she did for me and my brother and my sister, she had to work three jobs just to survive for us. With the 29th pick in the 2013 NFL Draft, the Minnesota Vikings flag, Cordeiro Patterson, wide receiver, Tennessee. When I got the opportunity to do what I do and play a ball, I'm like, if my mom can go out there and work three jobs, I can go out there and play three positions. I don't care where they put me, I'm going to make a play. You can put me at safety, I'm going to get an inception. You can put me at DN, I'm going to get a sack. That's just the mindset I have, and nobody can take that confidence away from me. I'm not cocky, never been, but my confidence level is above the roof. Family on me, family on two, one, two, three! What motivates me is my family. You know, first it was my mom and my sister and my brother, you know, just being the youngest, you know, just looking out to my siblings, and you know, my mom, she was a single mother. I taught my mom and sister probably three or four times a day, you know, just calling each other, just checking up on each other, you know, and they always say, you should be playing more, you know, you know how your family gets. As a little kid, they say, my kid should be out there playing, and I have kids of my own, so it's just, you know, it just makes me scry each and every day. Fatherhood changed my life, you know, a lot, you know, because when a kid's first born, man, it's just a blessing, you know, just, none of those kids going to look up me to, you know, the end of time, you know, and I got to be there for those kids, you know, each and every day. I wanted to know, like, my dad was funny, he was always playing with us, you know, he just did everything he could to make sure he's taking care of the house, and that's just something I try to do each and every day. You know, I got a tatted on my left, a family football, you know, and then my three Fs, you know, I'll stick to it, you know, and I'm a big believer in that. You know, I always got to put God first before my family, and after my family, you know, it's football. I really love Atlanta, man. It really do feel like home. You know, a lot of places I've been to, it felt like home, but this really feel like that expected for me. You know, I'm only three hours away from my man home, so it's just like, it really feels like home, and I really appreciate, you know, all the fans and stuff, so I can't forget about those guys. You know, everywhere I go, you know, I always try to make sure I'm a fan favorite. That's what I do. I'm going to win your fans over. Just the atmosphere being here in Atlanta, man. You know, I feel like they're really embracing the God I can really be.