> Moss enters the 2007 season as a veteran of nine NFL seasons with the Minnesota Vikings -(1998-2004) and Oakland Raiders (2005-06). He has played in 138 career games with 132 starts and has caught 676 passes for 10,700 yards (15.8 avg.) and 101 touchdowns.
> Moss is one of seven players in NFL history to record more than 100 receiving touchdowns and is one of 27 players in league annals to record more than 10,000 receiving yards. His 101 career receiving touchdowns rank fifth on the NFL's all-time list, his 10,700 career receiving yards rank 21st and his 676 career receptions rank 29th.
> Moss has recorded seven seasons with 1,000 or more receiving yards and has caught 10 or more touchdown passes in six seasons. The Marshall product is the only player in NFL history to record 1,000 or more receiving yards in each of his first six NFL seasons.
> Moss was named to the Associated Press All-Pro Team following the 1998, 2000 and 2003 seasons and has earned five career Pro Bowl selections (1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003).
> Moss caught his 100th career touchdown pass while playing in his 132nd career game (10/8/06). Moss and Jerry Rice (100 touchdowns in 120 games) are the only two players in NFL history to record 100 touchdown receptions in fewer than 140 NFL games.
> Moss became the first receiver in league history to record 1,000-yard seasons in his first six years.
> Moss enters the 2007 season having recorded 48 games with 100 or more receiving yards, including three such games in the playoffs.
> Moss surpassed the 10,000 receiving yard plateau for his career at Denver (12/24/05), becoming the 25th player in NFL history to achieve the milestone.
> Moss enters 2007 having caught at least one pass in 134 of his 138 career regular season games played and in 142 of 146 games including playoffs.
> Moss was named the Most Outstanding Player of the 2002 Pro Bowl after setting records for catches (nine) and receiving yards (212) in the game along with scoring the final touchdown of the day in a 51-31 win by the NFC.
> Moss led the NFL in receiving touchdowns in 1998, 2000 and 2003. He led the NFC in receiving yards in 1999 (1,413) and 2002 (1,347). He led the NFC in receptions in 2002 (106) and ranked second in 2003 (111).
> Moss has caught three touchdown passes in a game five times, the last time coming vs. San Francisco (9/28/03).
> In 138 career regular season games, Moss has 16 catches and 10 touchdowns of 60-plus yards, 29 catches and 19 touchdowns of 50-plus yards and 57 catches and 31 touchdowns of 40-plus yards.
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MOSS: THE MAN
ENTREPRENEUR
Moss, recently stepped into another exciting leading role as Chairman and majority partner of the burgeoning INTA JUICE beverage franchise. He not only serves as Chairman of the Board, but plays an active role in the marketing and branding of the Fort Collins-based juice bar. Moss has helped the company become one of the fastest growing juice bar franchises in the 2 billion ( ) dollar smoothie industry--now spanning 15 states. Since Moss joined INTA JUICE the beverage company has grown from 23 stores to 108, which is more than a 400% increase in total size of the corporation. The franchise expects to double in size by the end of 2008.
YOUTH ADVOCATE
Committed to empowering and supporting the youth, Moss consistently supports youth advocacy programs that focus on educating, uplifting and championing issues surrounding today’s youth. Moss serves as a Goodwill Ambassador for two national youth initiatives including, American Youth Football Association and The Urban Youth Racing School (UYRS).
American Youth Football
American Youth Football is the nation’s largest youth football organization with 450,000 participants in all 50 states. AYF is committed to Giving Back and in its ten year existence can account for more than $12 million worth of donations and grants to communities that support youth football.
UYRS
UYRS introduces inner city children to the world motorsports. The program is committed to providing diversity, educational and mentoring opportunities to inner city children via the world of motorsports.
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Explosive, playmaking wide receiver who has established himself as one of the most dangerous offensive players in the NFL since entering the league in 1998...Has played in 109 regular season league games in seven seasons, starting 104...Has also played in and started eight playoff contests.
Started 104 consecutive games, including playoffs, from the 10th game of his rookie season through Week Nine in 2004...Has 574 receptions for 9,142 yards and 90 touchdowns in seven professional seasons...Set an NFL record for most receiving yards in a player s first 7 seasons, his 9,142 yards topped Jerry Rice's 9,072...90 touchdown catches ranks ninth in league history...Is the only receiver in league history to record 1,000-yard seasons in his first 6 seasons...Named Associated Press All-Pro in 1998, 2000 and 2003...Earned Pro Bowl appearances in 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002 and 2003...Named 2000 Pro Bowl Most Outstanding Player after setting records for catches (9) and receiving yards (212) in the game along with scoring the final TD of the day in a 51-31 win by the NFC...Has been named NFC Offensive Player of the Week four times in his career...Led the NFL in receiving TDs in 1998, 2000, 2003...Led the NFC in receiving yards in 1999 (1,413) and 2002 (1,347)...Led the NFC in receptions in 2002 (106) and ranked second in 2003 (111).
Since entering the league in 1998, Moss has 91 TDs in 109 games (90 receiving, 1 punt return) and has thrown 2 TD passes...Only St. Louis RB Marshall Faulk has more TDs since 1998 than Moss with 92...Has caught a pass in 107 of his 109 career regular-season games played and 115 of 117 games including playoffs...Had streak of 101 consecutive regular-season games with a catch snapped vs. Tennessee (10/24/04)...Before the Tennessee game, he had caught a pass in every game he played in his career...Has caught a TD in 6 of his 8 career playoff games.
Combined with Daunte Culpepper for 53 career TDs, making them the 10th-most prolific quarterback-receiver combination in NFL history...Ranks second in Vikings history with 90 receiving TDs, trailing Cris Carter (110) and has 91 total TDs...Ranks third in Vikings history in career scoring with 552 points...Has caught three TD passes in a game five times, the last coming vs. San Francisco (9/28/03).
In nine career Monday Night Football games Moss has 49 catches for 941 yards (19.2 avg.) and 11 TDs...Holds a Vikings record with 26 plays of 50 yards in his career 25 receptions and a punt return&In 109 career regular-season games, Moss has 13 catches and eight TDs of 60 yards, 25 catches and 17 TDs of 50 yards, and 52 catches and 28 TDs of 40 yards...Broke Vikings playoff record with 9th career receiving TD...Broke his own Vikings record for single-season receiving yards with 1,637 in 2003, surpassing his previous record of 1,437 in 2000...Combined with Cris Carter for a team-record 2,711 receiving yards in 2000, breaking the mark of 2,654 yards the duo set in the 1999 season...Led the NFC in receiving yards in 1999 with 1,413, the first Vikings WR to lead the NFC since Ahmad Rashad in 1979...Set a Vikings record for most receiving yards in consecutive games with 331 in 1999 (204 at Chicago, 11/14/99 and 127 vs. San Diego, 11/28/99)...Became the first Vikings WR to throw a TD pass when he hit Cris Carter on a reverse pass at NY Giants (12/26/99) and threw his second career TD pass to D'Wayne Bates vs. Miami (12/21/02)...Only rookie in 1998 to earn a berth in the Pro Bowl.
In 2 seasons at Marshall, Moss re-wrote the school record book and proved to be one of the most productive receivers in NCAA history...Caught 145 passes for 2,720 yards with 53 touchdowns...Consensus first-team All-America in 1996 and 1997...Finished fourth in the 1997 Heisman Trophy voting behind Charles Woodson, Peyton Manning and Ryan Leaf...Recipient of the 1997 Fred Biletnikoff Award...His 25 receiving touchdowns in 1997 broke the NCAA Division I single-season record of 23.
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2006 (13/13 - Oakland): Started 13 games and logged 42 catches for 553 yards ... Moved to fifth all-time in the NFL for career touchdown receptions against San Francisco (10/8). San Diego (9/11): Started at wide receiver, caught four balls for 47 yards. Baltimore (9/17): Started at wide receiver, caught two passes for 32 yards. Cleveland (10/1): Started at wide receiver, caught a five-yard touchdown for his 100th career touchdown (99 touchdown receptions, 1 rushing). San Francisco (10/8): Started at wide receiver, had five catches for 52 yards and caught his 100th touchdown reception. Denver (10/15): Started at wide receiver, caught five passes for 86 yards, including a 51-yarder. Arizona (10/22): Started at wide receiver, had seven catches for 129 yards and one touchdown. Pittsburgh (10/29): Started at wide receiver, caught two balls for 20 yards. Seattle (11/6): Started at wide receiver, caught six passes for 76 yards. Denver (11/12): Started at wide receiver, caught one pass for eight yards. Kansas City (11/19): Started at wide receiver. San Diego (11/26): Started at wide receiver, caught three passes for 26 yards. Houston (12/3): Started at wide receiver, caught four balls for 44 yards. Cincinnati (12/10): Started at wide receiver, caught two passes for 28 yards before leaving the game with an ankle injury ... Inactive for the last three games.
2005 (16/15 - Oakland): Played in all 16 games with 15 starts in his first season with the Raiders ... Led the team in receiving yards and receiving touchdowns ... Finished the year with 60 catches for 1,005 yards and eight touchdowns ... Became the first Raider since 2002 to top 1,000 receiving yards ... Topped 100 receiving yards four times and led the team in receiving yards eight times, including the first four games of the season ... Was on the receiving end of the team's three longest passes of the season ... Moved into 25th place on the NFL all-time receiving yardage list in Week 12 against Miami (11/27) ... A week later at San Diego (12/4), he topped 10,000 career yards from scrimmage ... On Christmas Eve at Denver (12/24), he became the fourth-fastest player in NFL history to reach 10,000 career receiving yards, doing so in his 124th career game ... Finished the season with a fl ourish, catching seven balls for 116 yards and two touchdowns on New Year's Eve against the New York Giants (12/31), pushing his season yardage total over 1,000.
Started at wide receiver and topped the 100-yard mark in his Raiders debut against New England (9/8). Caught five passes for 130 yards and a touchdown. Scored on just his second catch as a Raider when he hooked up with QB Kerry Collins on a 73-yard bomb in the second quarter.
Started at wide receiver, recording 100 receiving yards and a touchdown against Kansas City (9/18). Had five catches for 127 yards and caught a game-long 64-yard pass in the third quarter for the Raiders second touchdown of the game.
Started at wide receiver and caught four passes for 123 yards, averaging 30.8 yards per grab against Dallas (10/2). Recorded a season-long 79-yard reception on the Raiders second offensive play of the game, setting up the team's first score.
Started at wide receiver, catching six passes for a game-high 87 yards and one touchdown against Denver (11/13).
Started at wide receiver, and recorded fourth 100-plus yard receiving game of the season with seven receptions for 116 yards and a season-high two touchdowns against the N.Y. Giants (12/31). Surpassed the 1,000 receiving yard plateau with an 18-yard reception in the fourth quarter to finish the season with 1,005 receiving yards.
2004: Started 13 games at wide receiver and finished the season with 49 catches for 767 yards...Caught 13 touchdown passes to lead the Vikings for the fifth straight season and the sixth time in his career...Rranked third in the NFC and tied for fifth in the NFL in receiving touchdowns...Notched 10 TDs for the sixth time in his seven NFL seasons...Broke the 100-yard receiving mark three times on the season, with 119 against Chicago (9/26), 104 versus Seattle (12/12) and 102 at Detroit (12/19)...Caught a TD in 10 of the 11 games in which he caught a pass during the regular season...Caught three passes of 50 yards on the season and six of 40 .
2003: Started at 16 league games at wide receiver and set career highs in receptions (111) and receiving yards (1,632), and tied a career high with 17 touchdown catches...Selected to start for NFC in Pro Bowl, his fifth selection to the game in six seasons...Named All-Pro by Associated Press for the third time in his career...Ranked second in the NFL in receptions and receiving yards, trailing only St. Louis' Torry Holt in both categories...1,632 yards broke his own Vikings single-season receiving yardage record, surpassing his previous mark of 1,437 in 2000...Went over the 1,000-yard mark again, making him the first NFL player to accomplish the feat in their first six seasons...Set a Vikings record for fewest games needed to reach 1,000 yards receiving, accomplishing the feat in 10 games...Tied Vikings receiving touchdowns record with 17, a mark held by himself and Cris Carter...Caught a touchdown in 11 of the team's 16 games and had two or more scoring catches in five games on the season with the Vikings going 4-1 in those games...Joined Cris Carter as the only Vikings player to post back-to-back 100 -catch seasons...Tied his own team record with eight games of 100 receiving yards...Tied Vikings record with 4 straight games over 100 yards receiving, matching the mark set by Jake Reed, Cris Carter and himself...Went over the 150-yard mark in three games on the season, 150 at Green Bay (9/7), 172 vs. San Francisco (9/28) and 151 vs. Denver (10/19), with the Vikings winning all three games.
2002: Started all 16 league games at wide receiver and surpassed the 100-reception plateau for the first time in his career...Totaled 106 catches for 1,347 yards and seven touchdowns...Selected to the Pro Bowl for the fourth time...Named All-NFC by Pro Football Weekly&Led the NFC in receptions and receiving yards...Became only the second Vikings player to break the 100-catch plateau, joining Cris Carter (1994, 1995)...Went over the 1,000-yard mark for the fifth straight season, the only NFL player to do so in each of his first five seasons...Led or tied for the team lead in catches in 12 games...Led or tied for team lead in receiving yards in 11 games...Went over the 100-yard mark in seven games on the season, just short of his career-high eight in 2000...Went over the 100-yard mark in each of the final three games as the Vikings ended the season on a three-game winning streak.
2001: Started all 16 league games and went over the 1,000-yard receiving mark for the fourth straight season, setting an NFL record to start a career...Caught a then-career-high 82 passes for 1,233 yards and 10 touchdowns...Ranked fourth in the NFL in receiving touchdowns, sixth in receiving yards and seventh in receptions...Went over the 100-yard mark 4 times on the season, including a three-game stretch at Pittsburgh (12/2), vs. Tennessee (12/9) and at Detroit (12/16)...Had seven of his 10 TD catches in the final eight games of the season...Set a Vikings record with three straight games with a 60 yard catch, at Pittsburgh (12/2), vs. Tennessee (12/9) and at Detroit (12/16)...(11/19) vs. NYG: Named NFC Offensive Player of the Week for performance on Monday Night Football when he had a season-high 10 catches for 171 yards and three touchdowns, the fourth time in his career he has had three receiving touchdowns...(1/7/02) @ BAL: Completed a 29-yard pass to Cris Carter in the regular-season finale, his 2nd career completion to Carter.
2000: Started all 16 league games at wide receiver and caught 77 passes for 1,437 yards and 15 touchdowns...Earned third straight trip to the Pro Bowl...Named to the Associated Press All-Pro team...Named to USA Today All-Pro team...Named to College & Pro Football Newsweekly All-Pro 1st-team...1,437 receiving yards broke his own Vikings record, surpassing his previous total of 1,413 set the year before...His 15 touchdowns are the second-highest total of his career and led the NFL for the second time in his first three seasons in the league...Ranked second in the NFC in receiving yards and for scoring among non-kickers with 92 points, and ranked sixth in the NFC in receptions...Broke his own team record by going over 100 yards receiving in eight games on the season, breaking his old mark of seven set in 1999.
1999: Started every game of the season at receiver and finished the season with 80 catches for 1,413 yards and 11 touchdowns...Selected to the Pro Bowl for the second straight season where he went on to be named MVP of the game...Named to the USA Today All-Pro team...Chosen for the 1999 All-Madden Team...Broke Cris Carter's team record for receiving yards in a season with 1,413...Set a new Vikings record for 100-yard receiving games in a season with seven.
1998: Played in all 16 games as a rookie, starting 11, and caught 69 passes for 1,313 yards and 17 touchdowns...Named Offensive Rookie of the Year by Associated Press, College & Pro Football Weekly and Football Digest...Named Rookie of the Year by Sports Illustrated, The Sporting News, The Football News and Pro Football Weekly...Named the Professional Football Writers of America's NFC Rookie of the Year...Named All-Rookie by Pro Football Weekly, College & Pro Football Weekly, Football News and Football Digest...Named All-Pro by Associated Press, Sports Illustrated, College & Pro Football Weekly, The Sporting News, Football Digest and USA Today...Selected to Pro Football Weekly's All-NFC and All-NFL teams...Named to the All-Madden Team...Earned the NFL Alumni Best at Each Position award for WRs...Honored as the NFL Offensive Rookie of the Month for November...Named the NFC Offensive Player of the Week for back-to-back performances vs. Green Bay (11/22) and at Dallas (11/26)...Set new NFL record for touchdown receptions by a rookie with 17, breaking the mark of 13 set by Green Bay's Bill Howton in 1952 and San Diego's John Jefferson in 1979...Tied Elroy Crazy Legs Hirsch with 10 touchdows of 40 yards.
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Full Name: Randy Moss
Born: February 13, 1977 in Rand, WV
Height: 6" 4'
Weight 210 lbs.
Age: 30
Position: WR
Experience: 10 Years
College: Marshall
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Keeping It Real!
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The Randy Moss Autographed collection comes with a custom Randy Moss numbered hologram and matching certificate of authenticity. The custom hologram guarantees the authenticity of the autographed item. Each item purchased from therealrandymoss.com is guaranteed to be authentic and in mint condition and comes with a money back guarantee.
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]]>News Release: Randy Moss hands out clothing at church -- he New England Patriots [team stats] wide receiver donated sweatshirts and baseball caps from his clothing line at St. John’s Episcopal Church. He also provided a free roast beef meal.
News Release: GAMEDAY: Patriots blow past Bills, but don't make playoffs -- ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. -- The wind was gusting so hard at Ralph Wilson Stadium on Sunday that when it was blowing at Junior Seau's back, the veteran New England Patriots linebacker felt 20-something again.
News Release: GAMEDAY: Patriots bury Cardinals in a flurry of points in wintry conditions -- FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- New England is peaking in time for the postseason, whipping Arizona 47-7 with a blizzard of points on a snow-covered field Sunday.
News Release: Patriots 48, Dolphins 28: Matt Cassel, Randy Moss dominate Dolphins -- Now that’s more like it.
The Patriots’ offense ran up an amazing 530 yards of offense. Matt Cassel went 30 for 43, 415 yards, 3 passing touchdowns, and a rushing touchdown. Randy Moss and Wes Welker both had 8 receptions for over 100 yards. Moss caught all 3 of Cassel’s touchdown passes.
Offensively, the Patriots dominated the Dolphins from the start.
News Release: Welcome back, Randy Moss! -- Remember the days when Randy Moss would score tons of touchdowns?
Well, he’s looking a lot like that wideout this week. Moss has hauled in eight passes for 125 yards with three touchdowns in Miami. His third score came on a 29-yard pass from Matt Cassel, who has scored four times.
Even without Tom Brady, the Patriots suddenly have an explosive and fantasy-relevant offense once again.
News Release: Randy Moss receives honor from US Postal Service -- Randy Moss received an extraordinary honor and it was declared "Randy Moss Day" in Charleston, WV on March 21, 2008.
News Release: Randy Moss receives an extraordinary honor -- Randy Moss received an extraordinary honor from the US Postal Service on "Randy Moss Day" in Charleston, WV on March 21,2008.
News Release: Randy Moss speaks at Boy & Girls Club Dinner -- Randy Moss inspired the crowd as thefeature speaker at the Boys & Girls Club Dinner in Huntington, WV on March 21, 2008.
News Release: Moss inspires many at Boys & Girls Club dinner -- Randy Moss inspired the crowd as the feature speaker at the Boys & Girls Club Dinner in Huntington, WV on March 21, 2008.
News Release: Moss inspires many at Boys & Girls Club dinner -- Randy Moss inspired the crowd as the feature speaker at the Boys & Girls Club Dinner in Huntington, WV on March 21, 2008.
News Release: US Postal Service envelope to honor Randy Moss -- Randy Moss is being honored with a commemorative envelope from the U.S. Postal Service.
Charleston, WV Mayor Danny Jones plans to make a presentation to the New England Patriots receiver Friday afternoon, March 21, 2008 at the state Cultural Center.
In addition to an illustration of the former DuPont High School and Marshall University standout, the envelope lists Moss' career and 2007 season statistics.
Each envelope will include a canceled first-class stamp featuring a Patriots helmet.
Five-thousand envelopes will be printed and available at Appalachian District post offices.
News Release: USPS envelope to honor Randy Moss -- Randy Moss is being honored with a commemorative envelope from the U.S. Postal Service.
Charleston, WV Mayor Danny Jones plans to make a presentation to the New England Patriots receiver Friday afternoon, March 21, 2008 at the state Cultural Center.
In addition to an illustration of the former DuPont High School and Marshall University standout, the envelope lists Moss' career and 2007 season statistics.
Each envelope will include a canceled first-class stamp featuring a Patriots helmet.
Five-thousand envelopes will be printed and available at Appalachian District post offices.
News Release: Randy Moss statement about Brett Favre retirement -- Randy Moss statement about Brett Favre retirement, announced this morning, March 4, 2008
"It has been a blessing and a privilege to watch Brett Favre in his prime, with the MVP’s and the Super Bowls."
"He is a great competitor and he will be missed."
All I can say is ‘Brett, I love you and I enjoyed my time watching you. In my heart, a legend is stepping away from the game.’ " - Randy Moss, via TheRealRandyMoss.com, March 4, 2008
News Release: Randy Moss statement about Brett Favre retirement -- Randy Moss statement about Brett Favre retirement, announced this morning, March 4, 2008
"It has been a blessing and a privilege to watch Brett Favre in his prime, with the MVP’s and the Super Bowls."
"He is a great competitor and he will be missed."
All I can say is ‘Brett, I love you and I enjoyed my time watching you. In my heart, a legend is stepping away from the game.’ " - Randy Moss, via TheRealRandyMoss.com, March 4, 2008
News Release: Randy Moss signs with Patriots -- Free agent wide receiver Randy Moss has signed a three-year contract to play for the New England Patriots on Monday, March 3, 2008, according to NFL.com.
News Release: Moss signs with Patriots -- Free agent wide receiver Randy Moss signed a three-year contract to play for the New England Patriots on Monday, March 3, 2008, according to NFL.com.
News Release: Randy signs with Patriots - A message to the fans -- “I’m very happy to get the business end of football done. Now we can concentrate on football."
“I want to take time out to thank all of the fans for their support and for wishing me well in my return to New England.
“I’m ready to get back. We have some unfinished business to take care of.” - Randy Moss, via TheRealRandyMoss.com, March 3, 2008
News Release: Randy's message to the fans, March 3, 2008 -- “I want to take time out to thank all of the fans for their support and for wishing me well in my return to New England. I’m ready to get back. We have some unfinished business to take care of.” - Randy Moss, via TheRealRandyMoss.com, March 3, 2008
News Release: Randy's message to the fans, March 3, 2008 -- “I want to take time out to thank all of the fans for their support and for wishing me well in my return to New England. I’m ready to get back. We have some unfinished business to take care of.” - Randy Moss, via TheRealRandyMoss.com, March 3, 2008
News Release: SUPER BOWL: Patriots finish 18-1; Giants win 17-14 -- The New England Patriots finish with an 18-1 record as the NY Giants claim Super Bowl XLII by a score of 17-14.
News Release: SUPER BOWL: Patriots finish 18-1; Giants win 17-14 -- Randy Moss caught a fourth quarter TD pass to give the Patriots a lead, but the NY Giants comeback to claim a 17-14 win in Super Bowl XLII.
News Release: SUPER BOWL CHAT: Donnie Jones of Randy Moss Enterprises in AZ -- Randy’s ‘right hand man’ Donnie Jones of Randy Moss Enterprises is in Glendale, AZ as the Patriots prepare for Super Bowl XLII.
Jones took a few minutes from the hustle and bustle of the Super Bowl to talk to Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com on Thursday prior to the big game.
JW: Some of the hoopla has died down since Media Day on Tuesday hasn’t it? What’s the feeling in Arizona today?
DJ: “It’s starting to feel like business again. Randy is really concentrating on the game now.”
JW: It seemed like he had a lot of fun at Media Day.
DJ: “Yes. I thought he did. I talked to him afterwards and he was still laughing. The ‘Jennifer Garner Award’ (given to Randy at the interview session from an entertainment news show, an honor "from" a fellow West Virginia native) loosened him up quite a bit. He was fine after that. He’s trying to enjoy it and at the same time keep a level head and finish the mission. The Patriots have been there and done that. But this is all brand new to Randy. He wants to do the right things to help his team win.”
JW: Thanks for your time.
DJ: “I’ll keep the fans updated as best as I can. I’m sure they realize why he can’t be on the site right now. But I’ll let you know what’s going on until after the game.”
News Release: SUPER BOWL COVERAGE: Moss, Brady address Burress 'guarantee' -- Randy Moss and Tom Brady were asked by media members about Plaxico Burress' guarantee of a Giants victory in Super Bowl XLII.
News Release: SUPER BOWL: You can vote for MVP during 4th quarter -- Who will be the Most Valuable Player of Super Bowl XLII? In the fourth quarter, fans can vote for the Super Bowl MVP on NFL.com/Superbowl
News Release: MEDIA DAY comments from Randy Moss -- Randy Moss spoke to the media during the Super Bowl media day at University of Phoenix Stadium on Tuesday, January 29, 2008.
News Release: SUPER BOWL CHAT! Randy checks in & has a message for his fans -- Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com
January 23, 2008
JW: What was your feeling when the clock ran out and the confetti started pouring out and you knew the Patriots had won the AFC Championship?
RM: “I was still in shock. I had never been in that situation and I didn’t know what to expect. I don’t know what kind of emotions I was showing. My biggest thing is to get a Super Bowl ring. It was definitely an accomplishment, winning the AFC Championship. It’s a stepping stone to our ultimate goal. The championship and the confetti was good, but it isn’t the ultimate prize.”
JW: The Patriots are in a place that no other team has been in, 18-0 and headed to the Super Bowl. Can you look back at the last four and a half months and put into perspective?
RM: “No I can’t. Coach Belichick has kept us so grounded with the humble pie. We don’t look ahead and we don’t look backwards. We just look at who we’re facing that week and nothing else.”
JW: This is your first trip to the Super Bowl, which has been something you’ve always wanted. Has it sunk in?
RM: “No, to be honest it has not. I’ve said from the beginning of the season as we’ve written these blogs that I expected things to work out well here. But with the undefeated record and records being broken, I didn’t really expect that. I expected us to make the Super Bowl and whatever happens there happens.”
JW: You’ve proven yourself as a team player time and time again all season, especially in the playoffs, but are you looking forward to having a huge game yourself also?
RM: “The opposing teams and the defensive coordinators know what I’m capable of doing. So to answer your question, all I want to do is to go out there and do whatever I can to help my team win this game. If it is going out there and blocking, getting one catch or 11 catches, no touchdowns, three touchdowns – whatever it may be. This is the last football game of the season. We’ll have time to rest our bodies and our minds and reflect back on it afterwards, At this point, it doesn’t have anything to do with statistics, MVP’s and things like that. It’s about getting the job done.”
JW: New England fans have showered you with an incredible amount of love and support all season. What’s that been like?
RM: “It’s been great, tremendous. In the last few days they’ve shown a lot of appreciation and a lot of support and I definitely thank them for that.”
JW: There’s still more work to do. Will the game preparation change much since it is such a spectacle with all of the hype with the Super Bowl and a two-week process?
RM: “The edge that we have is that the coaches and a lot of the players have been in this situation before. They’ve been here and been successful. They’re letting us know what to expect when the lights come on. That may be the only edge we have on the New York Giants. We beat them in the regular season, but they’re the hottest team right now, not us. We have a lot to prove on Super Bowl Sunday. It’s not going to be a cake walk. We’ll have to go out there and play four quarters of football and see what the outcome is.”
JW: What would winning a Super Bowl mean for you personally?
RM: “It is everything I’ve worked and strived for. I’ve been determined to make it happen, with my off season conditioning and the sacrifices that I’ve had to go through to maintain. All of the work that I’ve put in for 10 years, all of the hurt, all the heartache, all of the criticism, all of the love that’s been given to me – it’s all of that wrapped up together. This is the highest level and I’ve been able to win at every level that I’ve been on. To win a championship on every level would mean a lot to my resume.”
JW: We usually answer fan’s individual questions at this time, but I wanted to give you an opportunity to address the hundreds of letters from fans that have poured in supporting you lately through TheRealRandyMoss.com
RM: “Athletes and celebrities are human, just like everyone else. I’m very thankful to have people backing me. Just knowing that I have the support and love from the people that you may have not even met – that’s saying a lot. That speaks high and loud and it speaks volumes. Obviously with everything that I’ve been through, knowing that 10 years later people still believe and trust in me, it feels great. Thanks to all the people that wrote me. I send you my love. It feels good knowing that I have you in my corner. I feel the love you’re giving me. It’s impossible for me to meet everybody or to call everybody, but know that I appreciate you. I’m a player, a person and a father. So I thank you for helping me stay focused.”
News Release: SUPER BOWL CHAT! Randy checks in & has a message for his fans -- Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com
JW: What was your feeling when the clock ran out, the confetti started pouring and you knew the Patriots won the AFC Championship?
RM: “I was still in shock. I had never been in that situation and I didn’t know what to expect. I don’t know what kind of emotions I was showing. My biggest thing is to get a Super Bowl ring. It was definitely an accomplishment, winning the AFC Championship. It’s a stepping stone to our ultimate goal. The championship and the confetti was good, but it isn’t the ultimate prize.”
JW: The Patriots are in a place that no other team has been in, 18-0 and headed to the Super Bowl. Can you look back at the last four and a half months and put into perspective?
RM: “No I can’t. Coach Belichick has kept us so grounded with the humble pie. We don’t look ahead and we don’t look backwards. We just look at who we’re facing that week and nothing else.”
JW: This is your first trip to the Super Bowl, which has been something you’ve always wanted. Has it sunk in?
RM: “No, to be honest it has not. I’ve said from the beginning of the season as we’ve written these blogs that I expected things to work out well here. But with the undefeated record and records being broken, I didn’t really expect that. I expected us to make the Super Bowl and whatever happens there happens.”
JW: You’ve proven yourself as a team player time and time again all season, especially in the playoffs, but are you looking forward to having a huge game yourself also?
RM: “The opposing teams and the defensive coordinators know what I’m capable of doing. So to answer your question, all I want to do is to go out there and do whatever I can to help my team win this game. If it is going out there and blocking, getting one catch or 11 catches, no touchdowns, three touchdowns – whatever it may be. This is the last football game of the season. We’ll have time to rest our bodies and our minds and reflect back on it afterwards, At this point, it doesn’t have anything to do with statistics, MVP’s and things like that. It’s about getting the job done.”
JW: New England fans have showered you with an incredible amount of love and support all season. What’s that been like?
RM: “It’s been great, tremendous. In the last few days they’ve shown a lot of appreciation and a lot of support and I definitely thank them for that.”
JW: There’s still more work to do. Will the game preparation change much since it is such a spectacle with all of the hype with the Super Bowl and a two-week process?
RM: “The edge that we have is that the coaches and a lot of the players have been in this situation before. They’ve been here and been successful. They’re letting us know what to expect when the lights come on. That may be the only edge we have on the New York Giants. We beat them in the regular season, but they’re the hottest team right now, not us. We have a lot to prove on Super Bowl Sunday. It’s not going to be a cake walk. We’ll have to go out there and play four quarters of football and see what the outcome is.”
JW: What would winning a Super Bowl mean for you personally?
RM: “It is everything I’ve worked and strived for. I’ve been determined to make it happen, with my off season conditioning and the sacrifices that I’ve had to go through to maintain. All of the work that I’ve put in for 10 years, all of the hurt, all the heartache, all of the criticism, all of the love that’s been given to me – it’s all of that wrapped up together. This is the highest level and I’ve been able to win at every level that I’ve been on. To win a championship on every level would mean a lot to my resume.”
JW: We usually answer fan’s individual questions at this time, but I wanted to give you an opportunity to address the hundreds of letters from fans that have poured in supporting you lately through TheRealRandyMoss.com
RM: “Athletes and celebrities are human, just like everyone else. I’m very thankful to have people backing me. Just knowing that I have the support and love from the people that you may have not even met – that’s saying a lot. That speaks high and loud and it speaks volumes. Obviously with everything that I’ve been through, knowing that 10 years later people still believe and trust in me, it feels great. Thanks to all the people that wrote me. I send you my love. It feels good knowing that I have you in my corner. I feel the love you’re giving me. It’s impossible for me to meet everybody or to call everybody, but know that I appreciate you. I’m a player, a person and a father. So I thank you for helping me stay focused.”
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Randy appreciates the support of his fans -- This week’s interview is with Donnie Jones, a representative of Randy Moss Enterprises.
JW: Donnie, I appreciate you joining us this week.
DJ: “Randy wanted to get in touch with the fans through me and let them know that he appreciates their support. Right now he is concentrating on the game and the team, but he wants to say thanks and he looks forward to getting back with them next week.”
JW: How does Randy feel about being one win away from the Super Bowl?
DJ: “He is ecstatic, but of course the Patriots way is one game at a time. They’ve made it to the game that puts you in the game that is everyone’s ultimate goal. He is happy and ready to go.”
JW: A lot of the so-called favorites go knocked off last week – the Cowboys and Colts in particular. Was that part of the Humble Pie sessions this week in New England?
DJ: “Yes. Randy realizes that anything can happen now. It’s championship football. If you get this far, of course you’re a quality team. The seedings really don’t mean anything at this point.”
JW: How’s the weather there in New England?
DJ: “It’s cold!”
JW: Thanks a lot.
Want to ask Randy a question?
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News Release: SUPER BOWL BOUND! -- The New England Patriots are headed to the SUPER BOWL, after defeating the San Diego Chargers 21-12 for the AFC Championship on Sunday.
News Release: Message from Randy -- “Randy wanted to get in touch with the fans through me and let them know that he appreciates their support. Right now he is concentrating on the game and the team, but he wants to say thanks and he looks forward to getting back with the fans next week on TheRealRandyMoss.com.” - Donnie Jones, Randy Moss Enterprises
News Release: Search With Randy Moss -- Search the Web & Win Prizes from Randy Moss
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News Release: Patriots defeat Jags; advance to AFC Title game -- The New England Patriots eliminated the Jacksonville Jaguars 31-20 to advance to the AFC Championship game, improving their season record to 17-0.
News Release: Patriots defeat Jags; advance to AFC title game -- The New England Patriots eliminated the Jacksonville Jaguars 31-20 in a Divisional Playoff to advance to the AFC Championship game, improving their season record to 17-0.
News Release: Moss unanimously selected to AP 2007 NFL All-Pro team -- Randy Moss has been unanimously selected to AP 2007 NFL All-Pro team.
News Release: Moss unanimously selected to AP 2007 NFL All-Pro team -- Randy Moss has been unanimously selected to AP 2007 NFL All-Pro team.
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Check out Randy's exclusive interview on TheRealRandyMoss.com this week, 12/31/07 -- December 31, 2008
Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week.
JW: A perfect season 16-0. An NFL record 23 TD catches in a single season. Were these accomplishments realistic goals in August or has everything just fallen in place perfectly – better than anyone could have dared dream five months ago?
RM: “For me as an individual, there were goals that I had as a wide receiver, to come in and try my best and let everything else fall into place. There were goals at the beginning, but once things started happening I just let them happen and tried to keep myself focused.”
JW: You stated that you may only celebrate the 16-0 record for 24 but no more than 48 hours. How did you celebrate?
RM: “Just thinking about it and smiling about it – talking about it amongst friends. That’s what I consider celebrating. Once we get back to practice and start getting ready for the first game of the playoffs, that’s all going to be behind us.”
JW: Do you feel a sense of vindication now, after having your best season ever, after some may have written you off?
RM: “No, not really. I have always been considered a good wide receiver. I think this year, I made a statement that set myself apart from the rest of the group of receivers – including the receivers of the past. The main thing is that I’m still out there playing football and loving what I do. I was looking forward to the record falling and wanted things to happen the way they did. But going out there and playing one game at a time is how this all happened.”
JW: How much does having this week off help, in allowing bodies to heal after a long grueling regular season?
RM: “It will help, if we take this one day at a time. I think everyone will get themselves healthy and get ready to play some football.”
JW: You know you play at home a week from Saturday but your opponent won’t be known until this weekend. Will you watch any of the games?
RM: “Oh yes. I’m always watching football. I’ll be watching.”
JW: And now some questions that were submitted by fans on TheRealRandyMoss.com
From Stephen E., Valencia, CA
“Hey Randy! In 1998, I had never heard of Randy Moss and I happened to catch a segment that one of the networks ran on opening day about you. After I saw that, I said I had to keep an eye on this kid... I became a huge fan that year. Well, let me just say that this season topped off a decade of great football, thank you! I have a couple of questions about the play for TD #23. Basically, I'm just curious what ran through your mind when:
A) You lined up and knew the ball was going right back to you (after that first miss)
B) When you knew you had the safety beat (and did you realize at that point the CB and had played on Welker)
C) When you had the ball in your hands and were steps away from the end zone.
Last question - Who gets the ball? You or Tommy Boy? Maybe have it cut in half?”
RM: “Nothing really was going through my mind. You don’t really think in football, you react. I was just concentrating on the ball. I saw Brady throw it and I saw it in the air. I was just running and reacting to what I was seeing. As far as the ball goes, at this point I really don’t know. We’ll probably wait until the season is over to worry about that. We don’t have a whole lot of time to reflect back on the past because of what’s at stake in front of us. We’re looking ahead.”
From Jared J., Providence, Rhode Island
“I give you all the respect in the world Randy. In my opinion you are the best receiver in the game. I can only imagine what your numbers would look like if you played with Tommy boy your whole career. But I just wanted to ask you what songs do you listen to on game day? And if you haven't already do you plan on watching any Celtics games this year? KG & the boyz are ballin! Also where do I get my Rand university shirt!”
RM: “Rand University shirts are not for sale. Second, I watch the Celtics every chance I get. I’m a big fan of basketball. Thirdly, I don’t listen to a lot of music but I do enjoy something upbeat like T.I, Young Jeezy or some old school music.”
From Jim Fout, Belle, WV [Randy’s high school basketball coach]
“We would like to say hello and great job on your outstanding season. Now on to bigger and better things, like a NFL Championship. When you see or talk to your Mother and Eric tell them that Coach Fout said, Hello. Sincerely, Jim & Connie Fout “
RM: “I appreciate it. I’m looking forward to what’s ahead. Thanks!”
From Rob V, Manchester, NH
“Congrats man you deserve it. We only get to live a life once thank you for creating great moments in all of ours! P.S - Time for the fro????”
RM: “Yes, I think it may be time for it. We have to get through the first round first. But it will come out in time.”
From Jackie P, Leesburg, FL
“First let me say how much I love you, and I love watching you play. I fell in love with you while playing for the Vikings, watching you make all those impossible touchdowns, so I've been a fan for years now. I'm a 53 y/o single lady that loves Randy Moss. You are the best thing since the computer, I am your greatest fan, I don't care who you play for, if you're there, then they're my team. I fly my Patriots flags every week. You should hear me talking trash to the men about you and the Patriots, I let them have it. I am so proud of you, they haven't begun to talk about you yet. You will be the best football player of all times and you can take that to the bank. May God continue to bless you and keep you strong, so you can break a million other records.”
RM: “[Laughs] Wow. That’s a nice compliment and I definitely appreciate it. I look forward to giving you some more excitement.”
From Marie B, Goodhue, MN
“Randy, I just want to tell you that you are the greatest. I am a 68 yr. old grandmother that just can't wait for the Patriots to play. I will definitely be praying that your team wins the Super Bowl.
You and Tom Brady are my favorites to watch. We live in Minnesota and my husband still has a Randy Moss t-shirt from when you played for the Vikings.
I realize you probably won't even see this e-mail but it makes me feel so good just to compliment you on your season with New England.
God Bless and I know you'll WIN THE SUPER BOWL. I have a lot of faith in your team getting there. It’s been fun watching New England play the best football ever!!!!! Marie in Minnesota.”
RM: “Hopefully we can just keep giving you the excitement you’ve been having. Thank you.”
Want to ask Randy a question?
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News Release: PERFECT! Patriots go 16-0 with victory over Giants -- New England wraps up a perfect regular season with a 38-35 come from behind win over the New York Giants on Saturday night.
News Release: Randy Moss sets new season TD reception record -- Randy Moss set a new NFL regular season record with his 23rd TD reception, as Tom Brady sets a new TD pass mark with his 50th of the season -- on the same play. Check out the video!
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com -- December 26, 2007
Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week.
JW: A win this week over the Giants gives the Patriots a perfect regular season at 16-0. That is quite an accomplishment over a 17-week span to take on all comers and come out on top.
RM: “It’s a credit to the teams’ success and how hard we work. From an individual standpoint, I tried to put myself in the best shape that I could possibly be in to go in and play a whole season. This year, I haven’t done anything different than any past years. Everything I’ve been doing this year I should have been doing years ago. It was just about being in the right situation.”
JW: You appeared to be drawing triple coverage last week (a 28-7 victory over the Dolphins. Moss caught five passes for 50 yards and two touchdowns). It appeared that the defense was trying to deny you more, especially in the second half.
RM: “That’s every week. We had a game plan to go downfield. Once Tom [Brady] saw me running, he wanted to give me a chance and see if he could throw it up there and have me run under it. There was some physical play going on. That’s part of the game. Sometimes you’re going to get the bear and sometimes the bear is going to get you. Fortunately we won so we’re looking forward to the next game with the New York Giants. We’ll see what happens.”
JW: Tom Brady is about to conclude the best regular season ever for a QB. What’s it been like to watch him up close and personal after admiring his work from afar?
RM: “I’ve always admired his work. I always wondered ‘How does he do it?’ There are only a few selected quarterbacks out there that really stand out – Favre, Manning and Tommy boy. What he’s accomplished so far this year – it’s hard to reflect on it right now. That’s one thing we try not to do in the season is look back. We have straight ahead tunnel vision. I can’t really sit down and evaluate it yet. It’s a busy season. They work us hard. The time to sit back and reflect on things like that will be once the season is over.”
JW: And now some questions that were submitted by fans on TheRealRandyMoss.com
From Susan W., Salem, Mass
Randy, Yes, you are the best, but can we talk about the beard. What’s up?? The beard looks good but let’s trim it a bit. David Ortiz has a personal beard trimmer, Manny does too. Let’s get you one! I'm a hairdresser in New Hampshire and I think that you need one too. You are a guy with style now we just need to make the beard neat and trim. What do you think?? Again you are the best and good luck with the rest of the year.
Go Pats!!!! All the way, you will have a ring!!!!
RM: “I don’t really care too much about the beard. It’s eventually going to get cut off. It just hasn’t been a priority. I’m not really caring about my appearance right now. I’ll shape it up but right now I’m just so focused on getting out here and working and playing hard and continuing what we’ve been doing. My main objective is to do my job and feed my family. With the weather and how cold it is, the way we practice and the games we’re going to be playing outside, I’m trying to keep myself warm I guess.”
From Jennifer H, Midlothian, Texas
Dear Mr. Moss, Congratulations on having an amazing football season. I have a few questions for you. I am an educator, and I think professional athletes have a profound influence on our youth.
What drives you to be disciplined in working out? What advice would you give a junior high or high school athlete that would also like to be in the NFL?
RM: “The results you get from working out is what drives you. We train our whole body. When you have success, you’re going to want to continue what you’re doing. You don’t want to lose your step or become unpolished. If there is anything I could give the young kids as far as training goes, it’s making sure that you’re physically fit and conditioned. Make sure that you’ve got your wind, the ability to breathe and you’re in shape. You have to be able to run and to hang on.”
From Bobbie C, Saint Paul, MN
Hey Randy! Thanks for sharing your talent with us. When you left MN, my husband and I gave up our Season Tickets option and decided to use that cash to travel to one of your games each year. First year, we traveled to Oakland (Raider win over Cowboys); second year, we traveled to Denver (Raider loss); third year, we traveled to New England (Patriot win over Redskins). My husband's goal is to attend a game in every stadium - so we've been having a great time together - I get to watch you play and he gets to see other stadiums and we get to travel! Thanks for helping to bring us closer. Anyway, we're sitting here watching the fluffy snow come down - talking about going to Hawaii in Feb. One year, you were voted into the pro-bowl, but you didn't attend. Barring an injury, do you plan to pay in the Pro Bowl? We'd hate to travel all the way to Hawaii and have you not be there.
RM: “Yes, I plan on playing in the Pro Bowl and I’m actually excited to go over there with a great group of guys such as my teammates. That’s one thing I’ve loved – the fans. Whether I’m at home or on the road, I’ve always loved the fans. I love feeling the hype from the fans, with them cheering and tailgating.”
From Kevin J. Salem, Mass
Randy, Obviously you're one of the most, if not the most, athletically gifted receivers to come in the league. You make highlight-reel catches almost every game. Would you credit those more towards your natural ability, your work ethic, or your concentration at the time of the catch?
RM: “It’s a combination of all of them. You have to be focused and you have to concentrate. The ability that God blessed me with – I have to use that too. It’s all into one. Without one, I don’t have the other.”
From Sean N, Haddonfield, NJ
Hi my name is Sean I’m a 5th grader in Haddonfield NJ. You are my favorite football player. I asked for your jersey for Christmas and I always do your touchdown dance when I score. Can you tell me what you do before a game and what team meetings are like and also what do you do to get ready for a game. Is humble pie good? Thanks for your time. Good luck for the rest of the season.
RM: “Before a game I study my game plan. I may get in the hot tub and warm up my body and get my thoughts together. I try to study before I go out. Then I get my headphones on and listen to a little music. But I try to have a mellow, laid back atmosphere because once those lights come on, you have to throw that switch on to go out there and play football. Lawrence Taylor used to call it “crazed dogs” so you have to turn from being a good, humble guy to a gnat – you know how gnats are. You have to be able to turn it on and off. And with you doing the celebration, that’s a cool thing. One thing that I can honestly say is it’s great to see how the kids have always accepted me, no matter what I’ve been through. It’s a good feeling to hear from the kids and knowing that they still look at me as a great receiver. Hopefully you’re keeping up your class work and tell your 5th grade class that I said ‘Hello’ and best of luck.”
Want to ask Randy a question?
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News Release: Gazette Sportsman of the Year: Randy Moss -- Moss resurrects career — and public image — after trade to Patriots
By Doug Smock
Charleston (WV) Gazette staff writer
Randy Moss was traded in the offseason for a draft pick used to select John Bowie.
Sounds a little like passing over Michael Jordan for Sam Bowie, doesn’t it? But at least that Bowie played a few seasons for the draft-impaired Portland Trail Blazers.
John Bowie? The former Cincinnati Bearcat cornerback has played but one game.
And Moss, branded an over-the-hill malcontent with a fat contract? Oh, he has 1,314 yards receiving and 21 touchdowns for the New England Patriots, a modern NFL dynasty seriously pursuing 19-0 immortality.
The former DuPont High and Marshall University star is eyeing his first Super Bowl ring, and he appears to be a frontrunner for the NFL’s Comeback Player of the Year award.
Today, he wins a more humble honor: The Charleston (WV) Gazette’s 2007 Sportsman of the Year.
He is the eighth recipient of the honor, which goes annually to the home-grown West Virginia product who made a positive impact on the state and/or national sports scene and who embodies the word “sportsman.”
Moss was selected by the Gazette sports department not only for the resurrection of a Hall of Fame-caliber career, but for his giving back to the community. He has opened two Inta Juice smoothie stores in Charleston, and it’s nothing to see him bus kids from his hometown of Rand to an amusement park or even one of his games.
That gives him as much enjoyment, it seems, as beating double coverage for a long touchdown pass. And if he can stay out of the spotlight, that’s all the better.
“One of the things that I’ve always said is that the recognition that I get for what I do off the field is something that I really don’t care too much for,” Moss said. “I’ve been trying to be good to the kids and show them a better way and a better path to go down. One of the things that I set out to do is to try to help better the people — knowing that I cannot change the world.
“But the little influence that I do have, I try my best to show the people that there’s a better way of living.”
As the calendar year opened, Moss was finishing up his second year with the Oakland Raiders, and his least productive season as a professional. He caught 42 passes for 553 yards, scoring just three touchdowns for the 2-14 Raiders, a languishing franchise that fired coach Art Shell after the season.
New coach Lane Kiffin expressed a desire to have Moss return, but his welcome was clearly worn out. And just as clearly, Moss had become miserable in Oakland.
“He went there with really high hopes and was named captain because of his effort, the way he came in shape and the way he was in practice,” said Tim DiPiero,
Moss’ agent and a Charleston attorney. “It just didn’t work. Part of that, I think, he was just a long way from home. He was never really that comfortable being that far away from family and friends.
“And when you’re losing a lot, it’s hard. He’s always been a winner, been on teams that are competing.”
As the NFL world wondered where he’d turn up next, critics wondered if his career was nearing an end at age 30. Has he lost a step? Has he lost his love for the game?
Kansas City Chiefs president Carl Peterson weighed in: “It’s everyone’s fault except his. I thought Art really tried to work hard this year to make him a leader, but that’s not his personality. He was a great talent but you can’t play at that [current] level for a while and come back.”
Two well-operated franchises begged to differ. The Green Bay Packers negotiated a trade, setting off a spirited debate among the Cheeseheads. They were plenty familiar with Moss’ work — all those touchdowns for division rival Minnesota, and that simulated “moon” at Lambeau Field.
That could well have worked out. Moss received an endorsement from Brett Favre, whose word probably carries more weight in Wisconsin than that of the governor. Favre didn’t mask his anger over his team’s failure to acquire Moss, even hinting he would like to leave. (Favre did recant on that point.)
The New England Patriots, the closest thing to a dynasty in a modern NFL loaded with parity, were also interested. DiPiero said he wasn’t sure that would come about after the Patriots acquired receiver Donte’ Stallworth, but when the team acted, it did so decisively, stealing the spotlight on NFL draft weekend.
With a fourth-round pick to the Raiders and a quickly renegotiated contract, Moss was headed from one coast to the other. Actually, he happened to be in Texas when the deal picked up steam.
“Randy found out and flew back in the middle of the night to sign,” Di-Piero said.
Coach Bill Belichick promised he had done his homework. Quarterback Tom Brady, who has fashioned a Hall of Fame career without much superstar talent at receiver, was ecstatic. Moss expressed joy at joining the three-time champs.
“I’ve made a lot of money, and I still have money in the bank. So by me coming to an organization such as the New England Patriots, why would money be a factor?” Moss said after the trade. “I’m still in awe that I’m a part of this organization.”
Not that it quieted the critics, who had a long, hot summer to suggest Belichick and the Patriots were desperate. Moss’ acquisition was actually celebrated by some in at least one division rival city.
“The Patriots are not getting the Moss that dominated the league his first six seasons,” wrote Randy Myers of the New York Daily News. “He wasn’t much of a factor his final year with the Vikings in 2004, then disappeared into the Black Hole for two seasons in Oakland.
“This trade Sunday is good news for the Jets. If anybody can poison the Patriots’ all-for-one locker room, it’s Moss.”
So how did that trade really work out for the Jets, winners of exactly three games? That was determined in Week 1, when Moss caught nine passes for 138 yards and a 51-yard touchdown in the swamps of New Jersey.
“We got a good glimpse of him ... and he looked like himself to me,” Jets safety Kerry Rhodes said of Moss.
There was a lot more where that came from.
Two touchdowns each against the Chargers, Bills and Bengals, and Moss had pretty much beaten his stats from all of last year. He caught one of Brady’s five touchdowns in a Week 6 win over Dallas, then a battle of unbeatens.
The highlights kept coming. He fought off defenders for 35- and 50-yard touchdowns against Miami, and had nine catches for 145 yards and a touchdown in a “game of the year” against then-undefeated Indianapolis. Down 20-10, Brady hit Moss over the top to the Colts 3-yard line, helping turn the game around.
He has been the AFC’s offensive player of the week twice. Only Philadelphia’s Lito Sheppard has really slowed him down, holding him to 43 yards on five catches. But the Patriots still made the Eagles pay, as Wes Welker caught 13 for 149. Moss scored twice against the Steelers, once beating mouthy safety Anthony Smith on a 63-yard pass.
The Patriots are just five points from the NFL season scoring record of 556 points, set in Moss’ rookie year by his Minnesota Vikings. He is one touchdown away from Jerry Rice’s single-season record of 22, and his 130 career touchdowns tie him for third with former teammate Cris Carter, one behind the Cowboys’ Terrell Owens. Moss is 15th on the all-time yardage list with 12,093.
Most important, the Patriots are 15-0 after beating the hapless Miami Dolphins 28-7 on Sunday. And while Brady appears to be the prohibitive favorite for MVP honors, some suggest Moss is the better choice.
This is more agreement on this: The Patriots are delighted with Moss, and vice versa. And Moss has clicked with Brady and his new teammates.
“One of Randy’s greatest strengths, I think, is he tracks the ball in the air very well,” Brady said. “Everything looks effortless down the field. He really judges the height of the ball, like a center fielder. He knows when to put his hands out, knows not to do it too early because that really triggers the defensive back to put his hands up.
“That’s a big strength of his game. I hope I can throw it as far as he can run.”
From Rodney Harrison, a free safety in his 14th season, fifth with the Patriots: “He didn’t get in any trouble. He works hard. Every time I’m in the weight room, guess what? I see Randy Moss in the weight room.”
From Belichick: “I’m glad we have Randy Moss, let’s put it that way. I’m glad we got him. As a head coach, [I’ve] never had a better receiver than Randy. I’ve been on teams that have had a lot of other good receivers, but he’s very good and he’s been good for this football team.”
Moss continues to marvel about the franchise and its winning atmosphere. The Patriots are a team that has not only dealt with distractions — Belichick’s “Spygate” scandal dominated headlines early in the season — but has channeled them into positive energy.
“They run a professional ship from head to toe,” Moss said last week. “It’s about being punctual, making sure you’re a pro day in and day out, even at home. They put a lot on our shoulders — not all about winning. It’s also about being a good person and being out in the community. It’s an overall concept of what being a member of the New England Patriots means and what it stands for.
“What I’m proud of is that they’re everything that I expected them to be and more.”
Those closest to Moss in the Kanawha Valley say they have enjoyed watching his maturation process, both on and off the field.
“I think all of us were pretty immature at 18, and I don’t think he’s any different,” DiPiero said. “One of the things none of us had to live through, at 18, 19, 20, 21, is everything you did and said is open for public inspection, ridicule or whatever it might be. You build up some calluses, some hurts and you try to figure out how to handle all this.
“And I think he’s definitely grown in how he handles celebrity, how he handles publicity. He’s had his share of things he wishes he could take back what he said, probably two or three things he wishes he hadn’t done, but I’m really proud of what he’s accomplished, not only just in football, but as a person.”
Donnie Jones (no, not the Marshall basketball coach), who has known Moss from his childhood days in Rand and hasn’t missed a Patriots game this year, let loose one little secret: Perhaps Moss really has lost a step.
Then again, Nolan Ryan once lost a few mph off his fastball. Big, whopping deal.
“I don’t know if he has his initial, explosive burst,” Jones said. “When he was a rookie, he ran a 4.2 [40-yard dash]. He probably runs a consistent 4.3, which is still world-class speed. He makes it up with his knowledge of the game.”
That’s a major difference in Moss’ game, now that he has reached 30. In fact, Belichick has called him one of the smartest receivers he has seen, on top of his athletic gifts.
“I’ve learned how teams were defending me and how it was affecting me mentally and physically,” Moss said. “A lot of things I’ve learned, I’ve learned on the run. Being 10 years in now, I’m an experienced veteran. I wasn’t as big on watching film and studying early on. But now I see that it pays off, not just on the field but off the field. I make sure I get my classwork in. That has helped me a lot.”
Moss also has had a big year off the field. He opened his second Inta Juice smoothie store in downtown Charleston and has become a majority partner in the company. DiPiero said Moss is trying to line up possible franchises for Teays Valley, Huntington and Morgantown.
Moss also serves as a goodwill ambassador for the American Youth Football Association and the Urban Youth Racing School. This season, he took 42 local children to the Patriots’ 34-13 victory at Cincinnati.
He dropped in at Marshall spring practice for the second season in a row, a year after helping fund a reunion of the 1996 Division I-AA national championship team. Whether it’s Huntington or Rand, he has a penchant for dropping in unannounced.
(That “University of Rand” thing? Just an inside joke, Jones emphasizes. No disrespect to MU.)
“I know he doesn’t like to tell me, because he knows I’ll have business things for him,” DiPiero joked. “Sometimes I don’t even know he’s coming. He’s close to folks there, and his mother’s here, so yeah, he comes in quietly because he doesn’t want a lot of attention. He does that a lot — not just recently, but over the years.”
Moss wants to show the home folks a Super Bowl ring. Considering his age, the Patriots’ domination so far and the franchise’s general mindset, nothing less will do in the coming weeks. In the years since Moss came one missed field goal from going to Super Bowl as a rookie with Minnesota, he has gained an appreciation for how difficult the road really is.
“No matter what the results are from a team standpoint or an individual standpoint, I’ve always entered the season hoping to at least be able to compete for a Super Bowl,” Moss said. “Now I have an opportunity to at least make the playoffs and make a run for the Super Bowl ring. That’s what I’m happy about.
“It’s still overwhelming to me, the success that we’re having. It’s been a great experience. It’s been a long ride, but a wonderful and a fun ride, too, to be able to be a part of something like this.”
Past Charleston (WV) Gazette Sportsman of the Year winners
2007 — Randy Moss
2006 — Nick Swisher
2005 — Mike D’Antoni
2004 — Girls basketball
2003 — Rich Rodriguez
2002 — Rod Thorn
2001 — Nick Saban
2000 — Brett Nelson
News Release: Moss named Charleston Gazette Sportsman of the Year -- Charleston (WV) Gazette Sportsman of the Year: Randy Moss
Moss resurrects career — and public image — after trade to Patriots
By Doug Smock
Charleston (WV) Gazette staff writer
Randy Moss was traded in the offseason for a draft pick used to select John Bowie.
Sounds a little like passing over Michael Jordan for Sam Bowie, doesn’t it? But at least that Bowie played a few seasons for the draft-impaired Portland Trail Blazers.
John Bowie? The former Cincinnati Bearcat cornerback has played but one game.
And Moss, branded an over-the-hill malcontent with a fat contract? Oh, he has 1,314 yards receiving and 21 touchdowns for the New England Patriots, a modern NFL dynasty seriously pursuing 19-0 immortality.
The former DuPont High and Marshall University star is eyeing his first Super Bowl ring, and he appears to be a frontrunner for the NFL’s Comeback Player of the Year award.
Today, he wins a more humble honor: The Gazette’s 2007 Sportsman of the Year.
He is the eighth recipient of the honor, which goes annually to the home-grown West Virginia product who made a positive impact on the state and/or national sports scene and who embodies the word “sportsman.”
Moss was selected by the Gazette sports department not only for the resurrection of a Hall of Fame-caliber career, but for his giving back to the community. He has opened two Inta Juice smoothie stores in Charleston, and it’s nothing to see him bus kids from his hometown of Rand to an amusement park or even one of his games.
That gives him as much enjoyment, it seems, as beating double coverage for a long touchdown pass. And if he can stay out of the spotlight, that’s all the better.
“One of the things that I’ve always said is that the recognition that I get for what I do off the field is something that I really don’t care too much for,” Moss said. “I’ve been trying to be good to the kids and show them a better way and a better path to go down. One of the things that I set out to do is to try to help better the people — knowing that I cannot change the world.
“But the little influence that I do have, I try my best to show the people that there’s a better way of living.”
As the calendar year opened, Moss was finishing up his second year with the Oakland Raiders, and his least productive season as a professional. He caught 42 passes for 553 yards, scoring just three touchdowns for the 2-14 Raiders, a languishing franchise that fired coach Art Shell after the season.
New coach Lane Kiffin expressed a desire to have Moss return, but his welcome was clearly worn out. And just as clearly, Moss had become miserable in Oakland.
“He went there with really high hopes and was named captain because of his effort, the way he came in shape and the way he was in practice,” said Tim DiPiero,
Moss’ agent and a Charleston attorney. “It just didn’t work. Part of that, I think, he was just a long way from home. He was never really that comfortable being that far away from family and friends.
“And when you’re losing a lot, it’s hard. He’s always been a winner, been on teams that are competing.”
As the NFL world wondered where he’d turn up next, critics wondered if his career was nearing an end at age 30. Has he lost a step? Has he lost his love for the game?
Kansas City Chiefs president Carl Peterson weighed in: “It’s everyone’s fault except his. I thought Art really tried to work hard this year to make him a leader, but that’s not his personality. He was a great talent but you can’t play at that [current] level for a while and come back.”
Two well-operated franchises begged to differ. The Green Bay Packers negotiated a trade, setting off a spirited debate among the Cheeseheads. They were plenty familiar with Moss’ work — all those touchdowns for division rival Minnesota, and that simulated “moon” at Lambeau Field.
That could well have worked out. Moss received an endorsement from Brett Favre, whose word probably carries more weight in Wisconsin than that of the governor. Favre didn’t mask his anger over his team’s failure to acquire Moss, even hinting he would like to leave. (Favre did recant on that point.)
The New England Patriots, the closest thing to a dynasty in a modern NFL loaded with parity, were also interested. DiPiero said he wasn’t sure that would come about after the Patriots acquired receiver Donte’ Stallworth, but when the team acted, it did so decisively, stealing the spotlight on NFL draft weekend.
With a fourth-round pick to the Raiders and a quickly renegotiated contract, Moss was headed from one coast to the other. Actually, he happened to be in Texas when the deal picked up steam.
“Randy found out and flew back in the middle of the night to sign,” Di-Piero said.
Coach Bill Belichick promised he had done his homework. Quarterback Tom Brady, who has fashioned a Hall of Fame career without much superstar talent at receiver, was ecstatic. Moss expressed joy at joining the three-time champs.
“I’ve made a lot of money, and I still have money in the bank. So by me coming to an organization such as the New England Patriots, why would money be a factor?” Moss said after the trade. “I’m still in awe that I’m a part of this organization.”
Not that it quieted the critics, who had a long, hot summer to suggest Belichick and the Patriots were desperate. Moss’ acquisition was actually celebrated by some in at least one division rival city.
“The Patriots are not getting the Moss that dominated the league his first six seasons,” wrote Randy Myers of the New York Daily News. “He wasn’t much of a factor his final year with the Vikings in 2004, then disappeared into the Black Hole for two seasons in Oakland.
“This trade Sunday is good news for the Jets. If anybody can poison the Patriots’ all-for-one locker room, it’s Moss.”
So how did that trade really work out for the Jets, winners of exactly three games? That was determined in Week 1, when Moss caught nine passes for 138 yards and a 51-yard touchdown in the swamps of New Jersey.
“We got a good glimpse of him ... and he looked like himself to me,” Jets safety Kerry Rhodes said of Moss.
There was a lot more where that came from.
Two touchdowns each against the Chargers, Bills and Bengals, and Moss had pretty much beaten his stats from all of last year. He caught one of Brady’s five touchdowns in a Week 6 win over Dallas, then a battle of unbeatens.
The highlights kept coming. He fought off defenders for 35- and 50-yard touchdowns against Miami, and had nine catches for 145 yards and a touchdown in a “game of the year” against then-undefeated Indianapolis. Down 20-10, Brady hit Moss over the top to the Colts 3-yard line, helping turn the game around.
He has been the AFC’s offensive player of the week twice. Only Philadelphia’s Lito Sheppard has really slowed him down, holding him to 43 yards on five catches. But the Patriots still made the Eagles pay, as Wes Welker caught 13 for 149. Moss scored twice against the Steelers, once beating mouthy safety Anthony Smith on a 63-yard pass.
The Patriots are just five points from the NFL season scoring record of 556 points, set in Moss’ rookie year by his Minnesota Vikings. He is one touchdown away from Jerry Rice’s single-season record of 22, and his 130 career touchdowns tie him for third with former teammate Cris Carter, one behind the Cowboys’ Terrell Owens. Moss is 15th on the all-time yardage list with 12,093.
Most important, the Patriots are 15-0 after beating the hapless Miami Dolphins 28-7 on Sunday. And while Brady appears to be the prohibitive favorite for MVP honors, some suggest Moss is the better choice.
This is more agreement on this: The Patriots are delighted with Moss, and vice versa. And Moss has clicked with Brady and his new teammates.
“One of Randy’s greatest strengths, I think, is he tracks the ball in the air very well,” Brady said. “Everything looks effortless down the field. He really judges the height of the ball, like a center fielder. He knows when to put his hands out, knows not to do it too early because that really triggers the defensive back to put his hands up.
“That’s a big strength of his game. I hope I can throw it as far as he can run.”
From Rodney Harrison, a free safety in his 14th season, fifth with the Patriots: “He didn’t get in any trouble. He works hard. Every time I’m in the weight room, guess what? I see Randy Moss in the weight room.”
From Belichick: “I’m glad we have Randy Moss, let’s put it that way. I’m glad we got him. As a head coach, [I’ve] never had a better receiver than Randy. I’ve been on teams that have had a lot of other good receivers, but he’s very good and he’s been good for this football team.”
Moss continues to marvel about the franchise and its winning atmosphere. The Patriots are a team that has not only dealt with distractions — Belichick’s “Spygate” scandal dominated headlines early in the season — but has channeled them into positive energy.
“They run a professional ship from head to toe,” Moss said last week. “It’s about being punctual, making sure you’re a pro day in and day out, even at home. They put a lot on our shoulders — not all about winning. It’s also about being a good person and being out in the community. It’s an overall concept of what being a member of the New England Patriots means and what it stands for.
“What I’m proud of is that they’re everything that I expected them to be and more.”
Those closest to Moss in the Kanawha Valley say they have enjoyed watching his maturation process, both on and off the field.
“I think all of us were pretty immature at 18, and I don’t think he’s any different,” DiPiero said. “One of the things none of us had to live through, at 18, 19, 20, 21, is everything you did and said is open for public inspection, ridicule or whatever it might be. You build up some calluses, some hurts and you try to figure out how to handle all this.
“And I think he’s definitely grown in how he handles celebrity, how he handles publicity. He’s had his share of things he wishes he could take back what he said, probably two or three things he wishes he hadn’t done, but I’m really proud of what he’s accomplished, not only just in football, but as a person.”
Donnie Jones (no, not the Marshall basketball coach), who has known Moss from his childhood days in Rand and hasn’t missed a Patriots game this year, let loose one little secret: Perhaps Moss really has lost a step.
Then again, Nolan Ryan once lost a few mph off his fastball. Big, whopping deal.
“I don’t know if he has his initial, explosive burst,” Jones said. “When he was a rookie, he ran a 4.2 [40-yard dash]. He probably runs a consistent 4.3, which is still world-class speed. He makes it up with his knowledge of the game.”
That’s a major difference in Moss’ game, now that he has reached 30. In fact, Belichick has called him one of the smartest receivers he has seen, on top of his athletic gifts.
“I’ve learned how teams were defending me and how it was affecting me mentally and physically,” Moss said. “A lot of things I’ve learned, I’ve learned on the run. Being 10 years in now, I’m an experienced veteran. I wasn’t as big on watching film and studying early on. But now I see that it pays off, not just on the field but off the field. I make sure I get my classwork in. That has helped me a lot.”
Moss also has had a big year off the field. He opened his second Inta Juice smoothie store in downtown Charleston and has become a majority partner in the company. DiPiero said Moss is trying to line up possible franchises for Teays Valley, Huntington and Morgantown.
Moss also serves as a goodwill ambassador for the American Youth Football Association and the Urban Youth Racing School. This season, he took 42 local children to the Patriots’ 34-13 victory at Cincinnati.
He dropped in at Marshall spring practice for the second season in a row, a year after helping fund a reunion of the 1996 Division I-AA national championship team. Whether it’s Huntington or Rand, he has a penchant for dropping in unannounced.
(That “University of Rand” thing? Just an inside joke, Jones emphasizes. No disrespect to MU.)
“I know he doesn’t like to tell me, because he knows I’ll have business things for him,” DiPiero joked. “Sometimes I don’t even know he’s coming. He’s close to folks there, and his mother’s here, so yeah, he comes in quietly because he doesn’t want a lot of attention. He does that a lot — not just recently, but over the years.”
Moss wants to show the home folks a Super Bowl ring. Considering his age, the Patriots’ domination so far and the franchise’s general mindset, nothing less will do in the coming weeks. In the years since Moss came one missed field goal from going to Super Bowl as a rookie with Minnesota, he has gained an appreciation for how difficult the road really is.
“No matter what the results are from a team standpoint or an individual standpoint, I’ve always entered the season hoping to at least be able to compete for a Super Bowl,” Moss said. “Now I have an opportunity to at least make the playoffs and make a run for the Super Bowl ring. That’s what I’m happy about.
“It’s still overwhelming to me, the success that we’re having. It’s been a great experience. It’s been a long ride, but a wonderful and a fun ride, too, to be able to be a part of something like this.”
To contact staff writer Doug Smock, use e-mail or call 348-5130.
Past Sportsman of the Year winners
2007 — Randy Moss
2006 — Nick Swisher
2005 — Mike D’Antoni
2004 — Girls basketball
2003 — Rich Rodriguez
2002 — Rod Thorn
2001 — Nick Saban
2000 — Brett Nelson
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week. -- Dec. 19, 2007
“My hope is that everyone will have a blessed and a happy holiday and to be able to spend time with their loved ones. I wish everyone a Merry Christmas!” – Randy Moss
Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week.
JW: You were selected to the AFC Pro Bowl roster with seven of your Patriots teammates, it was announced on Tuesday. Congratulations.
RM: “I appreciate it. I’m very happy and blessed to be in this position, 10 years into this league. I’ve put in a lot of time and hard work. The sad thing is I think we could have had more than eight.”
JW: The selection announced this week was based on fan balloting as well as coaches and players. But in the fan balloting alone, announced last week, you proved to be a favorite by placing fifth overall and the No. 1 wide receiver by the fans for the Pro Bowl.
RM: “I think they have recognized when I first came into this league, my love and passion for this game was very obvious. And now I have a chance with a great organization like the Patriots, to come in and do the things that I’m capable of doing. I hope to just continue what we’ve been doing.”
JW: Only two teams have started 14-0 in the NFL ever. Can you put that into perspective?
RM: “Around here the coach allows us to enjoy our victories and success only on Sunday’s. By the time Monday rolls around, we’ve let that go. We’re moving onto the next team. No one in the locker room is talking about what we’ve accomplished so far. We still have a few more games left on the schedule. We’ll see what happens week in and week out.”
JW: Clinching the No. 1 seed in the playoffs has to be a big advantage doesn’t it?
RM: “It’s not really that big of an advantage. Any team on any given Sunday can win – at home or away. We have to maintain and bring our energy level up and ride that throughout the playoffs. Once you get in the playoffs, it’s a one game season. Anything can happen. Home field advantage doesn’t guarantee you anything.”
JW: You have a home game against the Dolphins this week, and they just won their first game of the year last week with a win over Baltimore. Your thoughts?
RM: “The Dolphins will be coming in on an emotional high. Our preparation this week hasn’t changed. Their record is what it is and our record is what it is. When Sunday is here, we’ll put our players on the field and try to execute the plays that are called. Trust me when I tell you that we’re not looking ahead. We’re looking right at the Dolphins.”
Here are some questions from the fans, submitted via TheRealRandyMoss.com
From Sharrod G., Greenville, SC
“What's going Moss, how does it feel to be going back to Hawaii? Congratulations! How did you get the good news? And what did you say when you got the good news?”
RM: “Coach Belichick called and told me that I made the Pro Bowl. I’m thankful to be picked but I’m not all hyped up over it. But I’ve never been for individual awards because this is a team sport. But it is a blessing and a pleasure to be able to go back there once again and mingle with the guys that were chosen. I’m not looking at the Pro Bowl yet. I am looking to play this week and even into January.”
From Sydney S., Annandale, Virginia
“Randy, is it tough going into every game being such a huge favorite to win? Do you prefer the underdog role?”
RM: “Teams are coming at us each week. We just have to go out there and play for 60 minutes week in and week out.”
From Rick S., Cottage Grove, MN
“Randy I live in Minny and we miss you around here. But now I love watching you do your thing and win in NE. How does this Patriots team compare with the 15-1 '98 Vikings?”
RM: “We had a lot of athletes that were making plays during my rookie year with the Vikings. But this year it’s more of a team concept and doing things as a whole unit. We still have playmakers that can open a game up at any given time.”
Want to ask Randy a question?
Click on the "Email me” link on the top right hand corner of the main page of TheRealRandyMoss.com.
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News Release: Randy sends out holiday wishes to the fans -- “My hope is that everyone will have a blessed and a happy holiday and to be able to spend time with their loved ones. I wish everyone a Merry Christmas!” – Randy Moss
News Release: Moss selected to represent Patriots, AFC in Pro Bowl -- Eight Patriots earned spots on the AFC roster for the Pro Bowl.
The NFL announced today that Patriots QB Tom Brady, C Dan Koppen, OT Matt Light, OG Logan Mankins, WR Randy Moss, CB Asante Samuel, LB Mike Vrabel and DL Vince Wilfork have earned All-Star honors.
News Release: Moss in Top Five for Pro Bowl balloting -- New England’s Randy Moss was the top vote getter among the NFL wide recievers when the Pro Bowl fan balloting ended this week. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady also was among the top five overall.
Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Favre, with 842,167 votes, led all NFL All-Stars in balloting for the 2008 NFL Pro Bowl. Presented by Sprint, 2008 Pro Bowl voting came to an end on Tuesday, Dec. 11.
Brady (776,475 votes) ranked second overall heading into the final week of voting, Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning (740,302 votes), Moss (606,238 votes) and Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo (604,027 votes) rounded out the top five on NFL.com. Romo received the highest number of votes from voters using Sprint's service.
The teams will be announced at 4 p.m. (ET) Tuesday, December 18 on a special NFL Total Access 2008 NFL Pro Bowl Selection Show on NFL Network. The Pro Bowl will be played at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii on Sunday, February 10 and will be televised by FOX.
Fans who voted for their Pro Bowl players will then be able to enter for a chance to win a trip to Hawaii to attend the NFL Pro Bowl in the 2008 NFL Pro Bowl Sweepstakes sponsored by Sprint. The Grand Prize includes an all-expense paid 5-day, 4-night trip for the winner and one guest to the 2008 NFL Pro Bowl in Honolulu. In addition to air transportation, ground transportation, hotel accommodations and two game tickets, the winner and guests will experience an insider tour of the sidelines and locker room at Aloha Stadium. There is no purchase necessary to enter or win. See NFL.com for details and official rules.
The AFC and NFC All-Star squads are made up of the consensus votes of fans, players and coaches. Each group's vote counts one-third towards determining the 43-man rosters that represent the American Football Conference and National Football Conference in the Pro Bowl. NFL players and coaches will cast their votes December 13-14.
The NFL is the only sports league that combines voting by fans, coaches and players to determine its all-star teams. It was the first professional sports league to offer online all-star voting in 1995.
Listed below are the top 10 overall All-Star vote-getters and the players with the most votes at each position through December 4:
NFL All-Star Top 10 vote-getters
Position Name, Team Votes
QB Brett Favre, Packers 842,167
QB Tom Brady, Patriots 776,475
QB Payton Manning, Colts 740,302
WR Randy Moss, Patriots 606,238
QB Tony Romo, Cowboys 604,027
RB Adrian Peterson, Vikings 557,873
RB Joseph Addai, Colts 537,110
WR Terrell Owens, Cowboys 507,620
KR Devin Hester, Bears 446,643
RB LaDainian Tomlinson, Chargers 441,624
News Release: MOSS SETS TEAM RECORD FOR TOUCHTOWNS -- Randy Moss set a new team record during the Steelers/Pats matchup, with his first touchdown catch of the day, a 4-yard reception from Tom Brady. Moss broke the Patriots record with his 18th overall touchdown of the season, topping Curtis Martin’s previous record of 17 touchdowns in 1996. Moss followed up his first touchdown catch by hauling in a 63-yard touchdown reception from Tom Brady in the second quarter to give the Patriots a 14-3 lead. The reception was Moss’s longest of the season, topping a 55-yard grab at Indianapolis on Nov. 4. It was also Moss’s fourth catch of 50 yards or longer this season and was the 33rd reception of 50 yards or longer in his career. The 63-yard touchdown was Moss’s 11th touchdown catch of 60 yards or longer in his career. It was the second longest reception of the season for the Patriots, trailing only a 69-yard scoring pass from Brady to Donte Stallworth at Dallas on Oct. 14.
News Release: MOSS GETS CLOSER TO SINGLE-SEASON TD RECORD -- Moss remains one of the most dominant players in the league, as he continues to put up impressive numbers for the Pats. During the last match up with the Pittsburgh Steelers, he ended the day with seven catches for 135 yards, it was the 54th 100-yard receiving day of his 10-year career, and the third-most in NFL history.
With two touchdowns against the Steelers, that gave him 19 TD’s for the season, which is the second most of any receiver in the NFL. After recently passing Sterling Sharpe (1994) and Mark Clayton (1984) for second place (for TDs in a single season), Moss is impressively closing in behind the 22-touchdown season for Jerry Rice (1987).
Additionally, Moss broke a New England Patriots franchise record last week with 19 scores. He has 1,264 receiving yards for the season, making him just the second player in franchise history to surpass the 1,200 yard-mark.
News Release: MOSS STAYS FOCUSED ON THE FIELD -- Moss continues to stay focused on the field with seven catches for 135 yards and two touchdowns against the Steelers. In All-Pro form, Moss continues to roll on a record-breaking path and only needs four touchdown catches to break Jerry Rice’s single-season mark of 22. The all-time record for touchdown catches in a game is five.
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week. -- Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week.
JW: Nice win over the Steelers last week. [Randy had seven catches for 135 yards and two touchdowns in New England's 34-13 win over Pittsburgh. It was his eighth 100-yard game of the season and sixth multi-touchdown game of the year.] How did that feel?
RM: “It worked out well. It felt good, knowing all of the hype that went on prior to the game. It was good to get that one under the belt.”
JW: Can you describe the Brady-to-Moss-to-Brady-to-Gaffney flea flicker play that went for a TD? Anymore tricks up your sleeve?
RM: “Not much to explain – what you saw was what it was. Other than me dropping the ball, that wasn’t supposed to happen. But everything else was. There’s no telling what this offense will do. The sky’s the limit. Every team has gadgets. It’s just up to the 11 guys on the field to execute the play that is called. Luckily on that play, all 11 guys were operating on the same page and you saw what the results were.”
JW: The New York Jets are just 3-10, yet they've been playing teams pretty tough lately. What are your feelings about this week's game?
RM: “I know it’s a big game because it’s our next game. We have teams gunning for us, wanting to knock us off. We just have to continue to do what we’ve been doing each week – coaching well, players playing well and executing on Sunday. We know this is not going to be a cake walk. It’s going to be a hard fought game. As long as we’re not looking ahead or down the road, I think it will be a pretty good game.”
JW: This is the Patriots first Sunday 1 p.m. game in eight weeks. Football can be such a routine type of sport, how much has the prime time schedule altered your preparation?
RM: “A lot of fans and people wake up every morning and don’t even have to set their alarm clock. Their bodies are in a routine of waking up every morning at the same time. Football players can be the same way. We’re used to playing on Sundays and your body gets used to playing on Sunday afternoons. It sometimes gets hard because your body has to adjust to the time you’re playing. It may not be until Sunday night or Monday night. But that’s part of it. Our schedules can change. It can be hard.”
Here are some questions from the fans, submitted via TheRealRandyMoss.com
From Susan W. Ripley, WV
“Hi Randy, I've been pulling for you ever since your high school days. I knew if you ever found the right team you would get to do what you always wanted to do. I can't tell you how happy I am to see you finally get with a team that allows you to play.
I think it great what you do with the kids. Someday maybe you can have a day for your adult fans. You have a lot of them. I would love to meet you. I'm 73, and a big fan of yours. I wish you all the luck in the world. I'm so proud of you. I was wondering how old your children are now. Are they interested in sports?”
RM: “My kids are into sports, from soccer all the way to golf. With you following me since high school, that’s refreshing and a good feeling to know. I remember playing in Ripley when I was in high school. It makes me feel that I must be doing something right, knowing that you enjoy watching me play and following the things that I do in the community with the kids. One of these days, maybe we can go back to the Randy Moss Appreciation Days. But I have to find something new to do. I have to change it up. There’s no telling what will come this year. Hopefully Miss Susan, we’ll get a chance to meet one day.”
From Peyton J. Alexandria, VA
“What was that the strangest touchdown you've ever been a part of? Because I know you were also part of one of the most amazing touchdowns in Minnesota (with the lateral), but you looked like you really enjoyed sticking it to the Steelers.”
RM: “I enjoy playing every game. There’s not one touchdown that stands out. There are certain games, against certain teams that you’ve scored on maybe. There’s the special pass the other night against Pittsburgh or the backwards lateral to Moe Williams in Minnesota – those are plays. If I had to pick, it would be one of those two.”
From Cassandra S., Sewickley, PA
“I am a retired ballerina. I watched your training video and was curious as to where you train this way?”
RM: “I train in South Florida. Everything you see in that video is not sugar coated. Everything that we’re doing is real and legit. One of the main reasons I wanted to put out that video was to show how professional athletes work. In the sport that we play, each position trains differently. I wanted to show how I prepared myself, being a wide receiver and playing for this many years.”
From Tim N, Northbrook, IL
“Hey Randy! Thanks for providing the world with sick one-handed catches and overhead catches for all of us to see. It makes the world a much better place. And when you were a kid, did you do anything that helped you get that insane speed you have?”
RM: “[Laughs]. It really didn’t have anything to do with what I did as a kid. God blessed me with the talent and ability to go out there and showcase my talent. If I told you that I went out there and did this and did that – I’d be lying. It’s just a God-given ability that I’ve been blessed with. I’m just taking advantage of the blessing that he gave me.”
From Ernest S., Beale AFB, Cal.
“Patriots fan since 1980... Currently in the military and have watched many seasons overseas. If you good morph into any type of body frame, what position would you play on defense?”
RM: “With my mind and my determination with my killer instinct, I think I’d like to be a nose tackle or a middle linebacker. The reason why I say that is because they’re in the middle of the defense and if you have one of those that is real, real good like a Hall of Famer, they can dictate how the game going to go for four quarters. So that’s where I would want to play.”
JW: We’ll talk to you again next week.
RM: “All right buddy. Thanks. Talk to you then.”
Want to ask Randy a question?
Click on the "Email me” link on the top right hand corner of the main page of TheRealRandyMoss.com.
MEDIA: If referencing the content above or anywhere else on this website, please credit TheRealRandyMoss.com. Thank you.
News Release: Moss named AFC Offensive Player of the Month - Nov. 2007 -- The NFL has announced that New England Patriots wide receiver Randy Moss has been named the AFC Offensive Player of the Month for November.
Linebacker James Harrison of the Pittsburgh Steelers and kick returner Joshua Cribbs of the Cleveland Browns are the AFC Defensive and Special Teams Players of the Month for November, the NFL also announced.
OFFENSE: WR RANDY MOSS, NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS
Moss, the NFL's leader in touchdown receptions (17), finished November with 24 receptions for 316 yards (13.2 average) and five touchdowns as New England clinched its fifth consecutive AFC East title and posted a 3-0 record for the month. He averaged 105.3 receiving yards-per-game in November and had two games with at least 125 receiving yards. In a match-up against the Colts on Nov. 4, Moss posted nine receptions for 145 yards (16.1 average) with one touchdown. Against Buffalo on Nov. 18, the veteran receiver was named AFC Offensive Player of the Week after recording 10 receptions for 128 yards (12.8 average) with a career and franchise-high four touchdowns. All four TD receptions came in the first half, tying the all-time NFL record for most touchdown receptions before halftime. In the same game, Moss became the Patriots' single-season touchdown reception leader, surpassing Stanley Morgan (12 in 1979).
In his 10th season from Marshall, this is Moss' first career Player of the Month Award. Moss is the second Patriot to win the award this season (Tom Brady in September and October).
News Release: Randy Ties His Own Record with 17 Touchdowns -- Moss caught Brady’s first touchdown pass during the Ravens/Patriots game on Dec 3rd. It was Moss’ 17th scoring catch of the season, tying his career high. Moss also had 17 as a rookie with Minnesota in 1998 and again in 2003.
With four catches Monday night, the 10th-year veteran has 751 for his career, the 25th player in league history to hit that mark.
Moss has 1,129 yards receiving on 75 catches this season.
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com -- JW: The Patriots were in a battle on Monday Night and came out on top against a tough Ravens defense. What are your thoughts about the game and having to go out there for one last offensive possession in the last minute and a half and win it?
RM: “It felt good during the week. We were well-prepared to go out there and make things happen in situations like that.”
JW: You know you're going to get every team's best shot week in and week out. How has it been, keeping that mental edge over several weeks in a row?
RM: “It’s hard. It’s really, really hard to know that we have to go out there and play our best game every week. Every man that has played this game knows how hard it is, week in and week out. You have to get yourself prepared to go out there and compete.”
JW: This week the Patriots will play at home against Pittsburgh, another likely playoff team. Any thoughts against going up against the Steelers?
RM: “I liked Coach [Mike] Tomlin when he was in Minnesota and his style of play. When he got the head coaching job in Pittsburgh, I knew he was going to pick up where Coach [Bill] Cowher left off. They’re playing good football. We’ve got our work cut out for us this week once again. We’ll go out there and see what we can do on Sunday.”
JW: It has been very obvious that you and Tom Brady have bonded on the field. He also spoke out on your behalf last week. That had to feel very good.
RM: “We have good chemistry. That’s what a team is all about. You don’t let people take shots at your brothers. And that goes for coaches included. That’s one of the reasons that I wanted to come to New England. They carry themselves in a professional manner. Everybody thought that I wanted to come up here and win a Super Bowl and this and that. Yes, I want to win a Super Bowl and that’s the ultimate goal in our sport. But having a great team and a great locker room, that also plays into where a guy wants to go.”
Here are some questions from the fans, submitted via TheRealRandyMoss.com
From Bobby B., Chestnut Hill, Mass.
“First off, I really hope you read this! You’re the freakin man, love having you on the Pats. I have been a Boston sports fan all my life and I am especially addicted to the Pats and the Sox. In the past 6 years the Pats have won 3 super bowls and the Sox have won 2 world series. Is driving in Boston hard for a non Bostonian such as yourself?”
RM: “No, it’s not been hard. You just have to find your way around. The weather shouldn’t be a factor because the people around here know what to expect and they know how to drive around in it. There won’t be any problems.”
From Tom S., Ft. Lauderdale, FL
“My wife and I are ministers from the Fort Lauderdale area, but watched you in MN when we lived there. We just were in East Africa ministering in a crusade, and saw several kids wearing number 84 in purple there, and really look up to you! Just wanted to tell you that.”
RM: “I appreciate that. For a kid in another country to know who you are and to represent you like that, that’s a great feeling to have. I’m happy to hear that.”
From Helen M., Alexandria, Va.
“Randy, What do you say to people who question your passion for the game? Do you worry about quieting your critics because it seems like people pick on you no matter what.”
RM: “It really doesn’t hurt me or bother me. It really just pushes me to go out there and do better. But some people react and take things differently. I’ve been in this game for 10 years. I’ve been double and triple covered for 10 years. Obviously, whatever I’m doing, I must be doing something good because defenses are still preparing for me 10 years later.”
From Bill D. Bloomington, IN
“Randy, you are my favorite sports athlete of all time. Please wear your "war afro" on the sidelines sometime this year. Anyway, thanks for all the happiness you've brought me with your amazing touchdown receptions over the years. I also think you are hilarious, with some of your comments and antics. You rule! I'm so glad you can now showcase your talents on a good team. And thank you for providing this website for your fans and for answering our questions.
RM: “Bill, the game that I will wear my fro out will be sometime in the playoffs. Whenever I do wear it out, I expect another email from you that week…”
Want to ask Randy a question?
Click on the "Email me” link on the top right hand corner of the main page of TheRealRandyMoss.com.
MEDIA: If referencing the content above or anywhere else on this website, please credit TheRealRandyMoss.com. Thank you.
News Release: RANDY MOSS NAMED THE AFC PLAYER OF THE WEEK FOR NFL WEEK 11 -- Wide receiver Randy Moss of the New England Patriots Named AFC Player of the Week for NFL Week11 of the 2007 season (November 18-19), the NFL announced today. Moss played a prominent role as the Patriots defeated Buffalo 56-10 and improved to 10-0. The veteran receiver hauled in 10 receptions for 128 yards (12.8 average) and set a franchise record with a career-high four touchdown receptions. Moss' four touchdown receptions in the first half tied an NFL record for the most touchdown catches before the half. The last NFL player to accomplish the feat was ROY GREEN (11/13/83). In the first quarter, Moss hauled in his 13th TD reception of the season and surpassed STANLEY MORGAN (12) for most touchdown receptions in a season in franchise history. Moss leads the league with 1,052 receiving yards and became the first Patriot since TROY BROWN in 2001 to reach the mark.
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week. -- Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week.
Nov. 27, 2007
JW: The Patriots have clinched the AFC East Division. That's one team goal accomplished, right?
RM: “It was a good thing for us to get that done early in the season. Usually it’s closer to the end of the season.”
JW: The 31-28 win over Philadelphia last week was one of the closest games this season, along with the Colts game. Does the team feel that this type of win makes you "battle-tested"?
RM: “I don’t really know what to call it. Knowing what’s at stake, we’re doing things the right way. We know what we have to do, week in and week out to win the game and make sure we’re playing football for four quarters. We know that we can’t come out and play that style of game. We have to play 60 minutes of football.”
JW: You moved into the 25th spot all-time in NFL receptions in the second quarter [a 7-yard catch], passing Andre Rison who had 743 career receptions. [Moss finished with five catches for 43 yards against Philadelphia]. Pretty cool stuff considering all of the great WR's that have played this game.
RM: “I don’t really pay attention to records. They’re made to be broken.”
JW: It's the big stage again coming up on Monday Night at Baltimore. Any thoughts about the Ravens game?
RM: All I know is that it’s going to be another week with a hard battle. Baltimore’s defense is the heart and soul of that team. We know we’ve got our work cut out for us this week. They’re going to be fired up for Monday Night Football, with a nationally televised game. We’ll need to play from start to finish.”
Now, here’s
From Sean G., Brighton, Mass.
“Randy, what is the extent of your friendship with the Kevin Garnett? Has it been re-kindled to a certain degree now that your paths have re-converged back here in New England? I can't even begin to describe the level of amazement I've had with the two of you. In my opinion, the two of you may be the single most unique talents I've ever been witness to.”
RM: “There’s a mutual understanding that we have for one another. We’re at work at almost the same time of the year, pretty much. The mutual respect and love that we have for one another has grown throughout the years. Since we both came to Boston, we’re definitely happy to see one another, doing basically the same things that we were doing while we were in Minnesota. He wants to see me happy and doing well and I want the same for him.”
From Tony R, Franklin, MA
“You have mentioned in the past that you believe Bill B. is one of the best coaches in NFL history. Where would you place Tom Brady in terms of QB's?”
RM: “There was only one quarterback that I watched growing up like him and that’s Joe Montana. He was able to do so many things, with his arm and his mind. That’s the same kind of style that Tom Brady has. I’ve always ranked Tom at the top of the list, and not just the game we play today but of all times. Everybody has their own opinion and that’s mine. If Tom Brady is not the greatest, then he’s in the top three. And Bill Belichick is definitely the greatest coach of all time, in my eyes.”
From Roger S., Peabody, Mass
“Randy, Unreal start, knew you were going to do it. So, I was down in WV and had a chance to try Inta-Juice. When are you bringing it here?”
RM: There’s no exact time set for when Inta Juice will be in Massachusetts, but hopefully we can find an investor or investors to see the concept and love it and bring it to the people. Hopefully by next summer we can have Inta Juice in this area.”
From Artin T, Tujunga, CA
“Hey Randy, I think your the best WR of all time your my favorite player, you a freak! So any ways who is your favorite rapper?
RM: “I really don’t have a favorite rapper. I just listen to artists that keeps me upbeat or to relax me. I listen to all kinds of music – rap, R&B, a little soul. I listen to a lot of music so I don’t have just one artist to pick out.”
From John S. Panama City, FL
Mr Randy Moss: I wanted to acknowledge that I was wrong about you joining the New England Patriots. I thought you would be a "negative" influence to the team. I was totally wrong. I realized I was wrong in the first game. Please accept my apology. Sincerely, John
P.S. I am from MA currently living in FL and have been a New England sports fan all my life.
RM: “John, you’re not the first and you won’t be the last. Everybody is entitled to their own opinion. It’s not up top me to try to change people’s perception. They just have to believe what they believe. Football is my profession, so naturally guys are going to get bad raps dealing with a high profile sport. I’ve always told people not to judge me until you’ve met me. I’ve proven a lot of people wrong but that wasn’t my goal. That’s just the person I am. I respect life and the Man up above. People have a right to their opinion and all I can do is go out here and play football.”
From David F, Jersey City, NJ
“Randy, I know you've had some great fans in Oakland and especially in Minnesota, but as a guy who has lived a few different places in this country, the Boston faithful seem to be the most creative. A lot of us are now replacing the word "Awesome" with "Mossome." Dude, you are taking it to another level, and when something is beyond awesome, it has now become Mossome. Just wanted to make sure you knew that. Be easy.”
RM: “[Laughs] I’ve always loved and approached the game the same way, so I’m happy and I feel very blessed to be back in a positive spotlight. I must be doing something right for people to realize that I’m doing something good.”
Randy Moss extends his sympathy and best wishes for the family of Sean Taylor and the Washington Redskins organization:
“Sean Taylor was a tremendous player. I didn’t know him on a personal level, but the times that I did meet him or play against him I had the utmost respect for him. He was an up and coming star, especially at his position. It’s sad. My heart goes out to his family, his friends and his loved ones. A lot of people and the whole football community are praying for him and his family.”
Want to ask Randy a question?
Click on the "Email me” link on the top right hand corner of the main page of TheRealRandyMoss.com.
MEDIA: If referencing the content above or anywhere else on this website, please credit TheRealRandyMoss.com. Thank you.
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview -- Nov. 20, 2007
Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week.
JW: In this Thanksgiving week, what are you thankful for?
RM: “I’m just thankful for living and glad that I have a good family around me.”
JW: Turkey or just more humble pie casserole on the table this week?
RM: “I don’t want the humble pie. But I’m going to have to eat it anyway. I guess I’ll have a little bit of both.”
JW: You scored four TDs in the first half last week in a 56-10 victory over the Bills. Was it just a matter of being in the zone, kind of like basketball when everything you shoot goes in?
RM: “I believe it was the whole unit clicking as one. The result was me catching the ball from Brady but it takes everyone doing the right thing to be able to move the ball. It was just us executing on all cylinders. It could have been anybody scoring those touchdowns. Everybody was just doing their thing, doing what they were supposed to do.”
JW: There was some speculation this weekend that there may be a sort of competition between you and other top wide receivers in the league. Is there anything to that?
RM: “No. There’s no competing. Terrell Owens got four touchdowns and I got four touchdowns. I don’t think it’s competing against other wide receivers. I compete more with the receivers on the other side of the field that I am playing against on Sunday. I’m not worried about somebody playing a game somewhere else. It’s not like that. The whole league is competitive. But we don’t really do it like that, like people think we do.”
JW: The Patriots are playing on national TV quite a bit this season. Do you like that big stage or does it become a distraction?
RM: “If you feed in to all the hype and the buzz around a national TV game, you can get caught up in it a little bit. I don’t. I try to keep my mind on having a good day. But sometimes you can’t help it. I can’t say I don’t listen to it and watch it. But for the most part, I try to stay away from it.”
Here are some questions from fans that wrote in from TheRealRandyMoss.com
From Hiroko Yokoyama, Japan
“I didn't know The NFL and American football anything until watched Randy on TV.
Randy has a great smile. After that, I've been studying about The NFL.
Question: Do you have a dinner with your teammate? Thank you.”
RM: “We have friends off the field as teammates. There will be groups of guys that hang around each other. The families get together – the kids, wives, girlfriends. When it comes to the New England Patriots, we are a family.”
From James K., Burnsville, Minn.
“You've played through injuries many times. Do you have a secret to being able to do this? Is it simply being mentally tough?”
RM: “Yes, I think so. I am a clean athlete. I don’t put stuff in my body. The only thing I might have is maybe an Advil or something like that. It’s about being mentally tough. You’ll have nicks and bruises. But you’ve got the organization and the fans depending on you to get out there and help the team win. It’s all mental unless you have a real serious injury.”
From Dylan K. Charlottesville, VA
“Hey Randy, I have seen you go up for some balls that seem impossible to catch, but somehow you always come down with them. I know you have made a lot of great catches, but if you had to choose, what would you consider your greatest catch? And on the other side of that what is the hardest you have ever been hit?”
RM: “When it comes to catches, it just becomes routine. I really don’t have a favorite catch. There’s so much that goes into it, from the quarterback throwing the ball and the line blocking. What makes for a big catch is playing in a big game, but I really don’t rank them. I just try to get my team going. As far as being hit, I’ve had a few licks put on me in my career. Darren Sharper of the Green Bay Packers might have licked me once or twice.”
From Will E., Australia
“G day from Australia. I’m probz ur biggest fan in Australia. Bring back the fro!
Cheers,
Will
PS. Yes I said fro it was awesome!”
RM: “Thanks Will. By letting my fro out, that means I’m ready to make it happen by all means necessary. Hopefully before this year is out, I’ll bring the fro back out.”
JW: Anything else on your mind this week?
RM: “I just want to wish everyone a Happy Thanksgiving. Don’t forget to kiss and hug your loved ones.”
JW: Thanks a lot Randy. We’ll talk to you next week.
RM: “OK man. Later.”
Want to ask Randy a question?
Click on the "Email me” link on the top right hand corner of the main page of TheRealRandyMoss.com.
MEDIA: If referencing the content above or anywhere else on this website, please credit TheRealRandyMoss.com. Thank you.
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Check out Randy's weekly interview & webmail chat -- Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com and see if Randy answered your question this week.
Nov. 15, 2007
JW: How did you spend your time off with the bye week last week?
RM: “I just rested my body and healed up. That’s about it.”
JW: What are your thoughts about the Buffalo Bills and playing on national TV again on Sunday night?
RM: “It’s a great thing anytime you can go out there and play in the national spotlight. Everybody is going to be pumped up, knowing that it’s the Sunday night game. We’re just going to see what happens.”
JW: You were a good candidate for some rest. You have hardly come out of the nine games so far -- one statistic that was published this week showed that you have been in 84 percent of the Patriots offensive plays. How much is that you just wanting to be on the field as much as possible? [Randy has 56 receptions for 924 yards and 12 touchdowns after nine games].
RM: “I just want to be out on the field. It’s a love of the game of football. It’s going well. Being here and seeing the love of the game that the rest of the team has, that’s inspiring to me.”
Here are some questions from fans that wrote in from the form on TheRealRandyMoss.com.
From Damian V., Spring Valley, NY: “Hey, I was just wondering, how hard is it being a receiver? I'm a receiver, I play for my freshmen football team, I'm always nervous that I'm going to drop the pass, but I'm pretty good. Since you are like the best receiver, how do u overcome the pressure?”
RM: “Sometimes as a receiver, you’ll feel the presence of a defender coming. You just have to catch the ball and prepare for the hit. You’re going to get hit anyway. It happens to the best of them. You just have to play hard and move on to the next play. That’s how I do it.”
From Jason M, Charlestown, Mass.: “Much respect for not just walking back to the huddle but running. Welcome to New England and Glad to have you.”
RM: “That’s nice. I appreciate it.”
From Robert P. Hope Mills, NC: “What is up buddy? I have been a fan of yours for a while now. I just wanted to congratulate you on joining the Patriots and also helping them to the undefeated start. I just wanted some insight if at all possible. How good was Cris Carter and how influential was he in your development? How do you feel about returning kicks and punts?”
RM: “I’m getting to old to be back there returning kicks and punts. I’m strictly offense now. Speaking of Cris Carter and my development – Cris played a significant role in my development as a young wide receiver. I was willing to listen and learn. I haven’t forgotten what I went through coming into the league, having a guy like Cris Carter and Jake Reed to teach me the game. Now that I’m a lot older and have been through the game, It’s in me to give back to the younger receivers my experiences and what I know about the game.”
From Sharon W., Walpole, Mass. “My husband, son and I are all huge PATRIOTS Fans. I am proud to admit that I am a Football Fanatic, having loved the game and the Patriots since 1993, when I started watching. In all those years of watching, I have only worn the jersey of one former PATRIOT. Until this year! I am so impressed with your level of dedication to the team and the game, that I drove my husband crazy until we went out to get your jersey. I wasn't even out the door of the store before I tore the tags off and put it on! I want you to know that I wear it proudly. Keep up the great work! THE PATRIOTS ROCK!”
RM: [Laughs] “That’s nice to hear. Thank you.”
Want to ask Randy a question? Click on the “Email Me” link on the top right hand corner of the home page on TheRealRandyMoss.com.
MEDIA: If referencing the content above or anywhere else on this site, please credit TheRealRandyMoss.com. Thank you.
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Randy talks about the Colts game and answers fans questions -- Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com and see if Randy answered your question this week.
Nov. 7, 2007
JW: TV ratings came back saying that more people watched the Patriots/Colts game last week than any other regular season afternoon NFL game in 20 years. Can you look back now and get a feel for how big of an event it was for the fans?
RM: “I knew it was a big event because of the publicity surrounding the game. There were a lot of people getting dinner and their popcorn, getting ready for the kickoff at 4 o’clock. Being a fan, I knew how big it was. But playing the game, I tried not to get into the hype of it.”
JW: How did you manage to keep your emotions in check with a game like that? You seemed pretty calm on the sidelines before the game.
RM: “You try not to let things like that get to you. It’s sometimes hard, especially with a game like that, to not pay attention to what was being said. But we were focused – from the coaches to the players. It was straight tunnel vision.”
JW: The game was different in that the Patriots offense had to work from behind and the defense had to get a huge stop win it in the fourth quarter. Was there a sense that this was an important win for the team, in regards to knowing that you can take an elite team's best shot and respond with a victory?
RM: “We didn’t really get much going until the last 9-10 minutes of the fourth quarter, so it was good to see how we played through adversity. It shows signs of a good team and a team that can stay focused for 60 minutes."
JW: You were a big part of the comeback. I counted six straight plays during a stretch in the fourth quarter that the ball was thrown your way and one commentator’s statistics showed that 7-of-12 passes were thrown to you in the fourth quarter. Does it feel good to know that the team is depending on you heavily in crunch time?
RM: “It’s a good thing. I’ve proven to a certain extent that I can still make plays. They still have faith that I can make it happen. But it’s a team victory and everyone takes care of their job.”
JW: Can you describe the one-handed catch in the middle of the field [during the Patriots/Colts game]? Coach Belichick said afterwards 'Honestly, he does that on a pretty regular basis [in practices]', but it made a lot of fans jaws drop.
RM: “It’s hard to explain. That’s just playing ball.”
JW: Nine games in and you're already in the Patriots record books. With your 4-yard touchdown reception in the second quarter against the Colts, you tied Stanley Morgan’s single-season club record of 12 in 1979. How does that feel?
RM: “I’ve always said that the records that are out there are made to be broken. I really don’t live for records. I live for the moment. Down the road, I know that I'll have a record that will one day be broken. Records are for the people who keep track of things like that.”
JW: How are you spending the bye week?
RM: “It’s really no different. I’m just relaxing my mind and body and waiting to get back up next week.”
JW: Here are some questions from fans who wrote in from the form on TheRealRandyMoss.com:
From Edward D., Pompano Beach, FL
“Randy, I'm serious when I say I watch every single game that you play in, you are an absolute phenom. God has truly blessed you with amazing physical skills, with that being said, I notice that sometimes defenders seem to be talking trash to you. How do you take that? Does it motivate you more to want to shut them up or do you treat it nonchalantly?”
RM: “The younger guys do a lot of trash-talking, but I really don’t do much. But when they talk to me, it really motivates me to get out there and make something happen right away. I’ve done some trash-talking, but I don’t like that. It’s not a part of my make-up. But to go out there and make a play that shuts them up, that’s a good feeling.”
From Dale R., Philippines
“I grew up in Massachusetts and have been living overseas since 1988. I work for UNICEF. Sorry to go back a few games but sometimes there's a bit of delay in us getting to see all the highlights over here. Against Miami one of your two amazing catches against double coverage looked like you literally caught the ball blind behind your back. I've never seen a catch like that. Can you explain how that happened? As an old time Patriots fan I am thrilled to follow your inspiring performance in New England. I love your style.”
RM: [Laughs] “When you’re playing wide receiver, you just have to believe that it’s your ball in the air. The quarterback has to believe in you or he wouldn’t throw it. The coach has to believe in you or he wouldn’t call your number. There are a lot of things going through my head when the ball is in the air. And then at the last minute, it’s going up and making sure that I get the ball and secure the catch. That’s what those plays were in Miami. I was just making a play and securing the ball.”
From Travis W., Waynesboro, PA
“Randy you talk about eating right. What does your diet consist of and what stuff do you cut out of your diet to stay in shape?
RM: “I eat a pretty good portion of chicken – baked, grilled and fried. Carbs. Pasta. Bread. I get my vegetables in, whether it’s V8 juice or fresh vegetables. I cut my sweets down but I still snack on Reeses, Snickers, ice cream and things like that – but not a heavy dose of it. But I basically just work out and make sure to work my body from head to toe. That’s one thing about being in the NFL. We work on everything, even down to the neck muscles.”
JW: That’s it for this week. Thanks Randy.
RM: “OK. We’ll talk to you later.”
Want to ask Randy a question? Click on the “Email Me” link on top right hand corner of this page on TheRealRandyMoss.com.
MEDIA: If referencing the content above or anywhere else on this website, please credit TheRealRandyMoss.com. Thank you.
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Randy checks in with his fans this week -- Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week.
JW: How about those Red Sox?
RM: “Oh, that’s a good thing. They were ballin’. They tore the city down. I like watching baseball when it comes down to the pennant race and World Series. It’s a good thing knowing that the Boston Red Sox won the World Series. I was actually happy for them.”
JW: I know that you were sincere last week when I asked what you thought about facing the Redskins defense and one of the things you said about them was they were 'very, very impressive.' After putting 52 points up on them, how impressive is the Patriots offense?
RM: “I think our execution is something that I think a lot of people aren’t paying attention to. If they really look at what we’re doing – we’re putting 11 guys on the field, the coach is calling the plays and we’re executing the plays. We’re not out there changing things and trying to pull gadget plays. We’re executing the play, and that’s how we’re putting points on the board. We’re just doing what we’re coached to do.”
JW: This weekend's game between the Patriots and Colts could be the game of the regular season. It will be the first game in NFL history between unbeaten teams with seven or more wins. What's your thoughts on the matchup?
RM: “One thing that I’m trying to do is just stay away from the hype. That’s what I’ve tried to do since I’ve been in New England and this week is no different. I just want to have a good week of practice. We’ll go out there on Sunday and put 11 on the field and see if we can execute. If we don’t, it will be a long day. If we do, we can go out there and have fun and do what we love to do. We’ll see what happens.”
JW: Coach Belichick threw quite a compliment out recently, saying that you are "probably the smartest wide receiver I've coached." Do you pride yourself in the mental part of the game, film study, etc.?
RM: “A lot of people get mixed up about me because of my look or me not caring about what people say. They might think that’s cocky or arrogant. I’ve never portrayed myself as a cocky or arrogant player. That being said, a compliment like that coming from a guy like Coach Belichick is something that I smile about. He doesn’t really pat backs or give credit. He’ll give you a little bit but nothing like that. I do take pride in my film study. I do take pride in going out there and knowing what I’m doing. As far as preparation week in and week out, my physical condition, preparing my mind so that I can go out there on Sunday – I do take pride in that. I love this game so much that I take pride in it.”
JW: Now here are some questions that were submitted by fans on TheRealRandyMoss.com
From Eric H., Kannapolis, NC: Randy, do you follow your home state West Virginia Mountaineers? We are going to win it all this year. Also, how close did you come to being a Mountaineer?
RM: “I don’t follow the Mountaineers closely. I watch their games and I like for them to do well, but I came from Marshall University. I really follow Marshall more than I do WVU. But since the Mountaineers are on television more, I have no choice but to watch them.”
From Keldric C., Aubrey, TX: Hey Randy, I have a 17 year old son and he plays receiver for his high school in Denton, Texas. He is a good receiver and they use him for a deep passes because of his speed and the ability to catch the ball. He is a short guy, but how do I keep his ability from going to his head? How do I keep him focused as his father?
RM: “Pick out some of the bad things that he does and make him correct them. As a father we can get carried away too. Just let them have fun. We have to let our kids be kids. Keeping him humble, but give him some praise too.”
From Dom T. Hillsdale, NJ: “The Patriots have been known as a team that when the daily hard work is done likes to have some laughs together to end the day after practice. It's been said that you have quick wit and love to make the guys smile. Who to you is funny and are there any funny stories you would like to share?”
RM: “[Laughs] We all try to make each other laugh. There’s great camaraderie in the locker room. There’s not just one comedian. At the end of the day we like to have fun, but when there is work to be done, there’s no smiling. It’s straight business.”
From Corporal Dan F., USMC, Iraq: Randy, You’re an absolute phenom, and I knew coming to New England would help you in achieving your goals as a player. I’m a die hard Pats fan with the old school Pats fan tattooed on my chest. When I heard you where coming to the Pats I was ecstatic. However since then I was shipped over to Iraq for a 4th tour with 1st Marine division. My brother keeps me updated on all your stats and what not. You guys bring a smile to my face in a time when not much can. Thanks a lot."
RM: “Dan, I know that we haven’t met, but for you representing our country, I’m as much of a big fan of yours as you are of mine. Keep smiling and keep your head up. Just stay tuned to my website. I want to personally thank you Dan for representing the United States. Tell the rest of our people there to keep their head up and keep on going. In a certain sense, we want them to come home. But if there is work to be done, then it needs to be done. Thank you for your support and stay safe.”
JW: Thanks Randy. We’ll be watching.
RM: “All right Jim, thanks.”
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News Release: This Season, Moss Is in the Mood to Play -- The New England Patriots won their eighth consecutive game yesterday by routing the Washington Redskins by 45 points.
News Release: New England wallops Washington to stay unbeaten -- FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- The Patriots rolled up their highest point total in 28 years. Tom Brady threw his career-high 30th touchdown pass.
News Release: Brady gets 6 more TD passes as Patriots stay unbeaten -- MIAMI -- Tom Brady emerged from the locker room Sunday wearing a suit and tie complemented by a pocket scarf, his stylish look marred only by a few small drink stains on one side.
Not half bad
For the second week in a row Tom Brady recorded a career high, this time surpassing his five TD passes against the Cowboys with six against the Dolphins. Brady had 281 yards and five TDs in the first half alone.
But he and the New England Patriots are awfully good.
Flawless at the start and off the bench, Brady threw a team-record six touchdown passes to help the unbeaten Patriots rout the winless Miami Dolphins 49-28.
With his team comfortably ahead, Brady came out early in the fourth quarter, then re-entered and threw for New England's final score. His TD total exceeded his career high of five, set last week against Dallas.
"He's looking awesome," Dolphins linebacker Zach Thomas said. "He has always been awesome. That's where it all starts for them. But he has more talent to work with now."
The Patriots, who led 42-7 at halftime, improved to 7-0 for the first time in their 48-year history.
"We've got a long way to go," Brady said. "Our goals are bigger than winning seven games this year."
Brady completed his first 11 passes for 220 yards and four scores, including throws of 35 and 50 yards to Randy Moss. His other touchdown passes covered 14 and 16 yards to Wes Welker, 30 to Donte Stallworth and 2 to Kyle Brady.
"Those guys are making the plays," Brady said. "I'm just throwing it. They're making my job awful easy."
Brady has 27 touchdown passes after seven games and is on pace for 61. The NFL record is 49 set by Peyton Manning in 2004.
The drubbing was the biggest downer yet for the Dolphins, who fell to 0-7 for the first time in their 41 seasons. They next play the New York Giants in London.
"We can't win in America," defensive end Jason Taylor said. "Maybe we can win overseas."
Miami also lost running back Ronnie Brown to a knee injury in the third quarter. Brown, who came into the game leading the NFL in yards from scrimmage, is scheduled to undergo an MRI exam Monday.
The Patriots have won all seven of their games by at least 17 points, matching a league record to start a season. They showed little letup until backup quarterback Matt Cassel entered the game with 11 minutes left.
When Taylor intercepted Cassel's second pass and returned it 36 yards for a touchdown to make the score 42-21, Patriots coach Bill Belichick sent Brady back in.
"I did it because of the score," Belichick said. "One more turnover, and then it's a 14-point game in the middle of the fourth quarter."
"Coach Belichick looked back over at me and goes, 'Yep, you're going back in,' " Brady said. "By that time I had taken all my stuff off, so I suited back up."
Brady then drove New England 59 yards in four plays, the last a touchdown pass to Welker.
The Patriots were that relentless all afternoon, dominating even on special teams. Willie Andrews returned a kickoff 77 yards for a touchdown. The first time the Patriots punted, Chris Hanson's kick pinned the Dolphins at their 1.
Even when Miami forced New England into a third-and-18 situation, Brady hit Moss for a touchdown. Moss outfought defenders in the end zone for both of his scores, making one of the catches one-handed.
A Patriots record six touchdown passes and a perfect quarterback rating of 158.3 -- just another day on the job for Tom Brady as he and the Patriots trounced the Dolphins, 49-28. More ...
The National Football League's best team showed precisely why it is the league's best team Sunday at Dolphin Stadium, and unfortunately it came at the expense of the Miami Dolphins. More ... "If you want to know why we're 0-7, you look at plays like that, and it says a lot," Miami cornerback Andre Goodman said.
But the entire NFL is struggling to stop Moss, who has 10 touchdown catches in his first season with the Patriots.
"You give him a chance, he usually comes down with it," Brady said. "He's such a mismatch. He has a size and speed advantage on every defender he plays against."
Brady finished 21-for-25 for 354 yards and no turnovers. For the second game in a row, the Patriots scored their highest points total in 23 years. Their 42 points by halftime were a franchise record for a half.
Notes: S Renaldo Hill hurt his right knee on Moss' second touchdown pass. S Courtney Bryan hurt his thigh, further depleting Miami at a position plagued by injuries. ... Taylor's touchdown was the eighth of his career, breaking the modern career NFL record for a defensive lineman he shared with George Martin. ... Patriots RB Laurence Maroney returned after missing three games with a groin injury. He carried six times for 31 yards.
News Release: Coach calls Moss smartest receiver -- FOXBOROUGH - With 44 receptions for an NFL-leading 732 yards and 10 touchdowns, Randy Moss's athletic prowess has been on full display through the season's first seven games.
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Randy stops by for interview and checks his web mail 10/24/2007 -- Oct. 24, 2007
Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week.
JW: Sports gets put into perspective when you see San Diego's Qualcomm Stadium on the news filled with people that have had to evacuate their homes due to the fires in Southern California doesn't it? Do you have any thoughts about the people of Southern California and - since the NFL is a tight knit family - for the Chargers fans?
RM: “A lot of people need to find some perspective in life. That’s the thing with sports – when tragedies happen such as 9/11, Katrina and the fires in California, we can show people that we care. There are people in need. Football season will go on, but my heart goes out to the people in California that are losing their homes and family members. We can generate some money and give back. One of the best things that we can do is give them some kind of excitement by playing on Sundays. That might not be much, but we are entertainers. That’s what we do.”
JW: How much of a difference has it been for you personally, living and working on the East coast for the first time in your professional career?
RM: “It feels good knowing that with a phone call, I’m just a hop, skip and a jump away from my kids or I can have a loved one come up and see me and spend some time with me. It benefits me and my family. It’s one of the things that I love about coming to work. It’s a good thing.”
JW: It seems that Wes Welker and Donte Stallworth have really stepped up their games since coming to New England. Do the receivers motivate each other to become even better?
RM: “The motivation that we receive comes from Tommy [Brady] first. We have a meeting every Saturday night and Tom goes over some adjustments that we have gone over in practice prior to the game. We talk about what we want to do and what we’d like to do. We don’t live from paper clippings and TV. We build off one another. We get hyped and enthused from one another. We play off each other."
JW: Speaking of Wes Welker, he gave a "splitting the defense' gesture after one of his TD's recently. Did you loan that one to him?
RM: “No, I just like to have fun and Wes was just having some fun. He had high hopes for himself and the team and wanted to do whatever it took to make this offense move. By us going out there and having fun, making blocks and catching balls, it’s all in fun. We like having fun. A lot of people that don’t know the ins and outs of football think that the things that we do are easy. But that is just a result of the preparation that we do. But one thing that I can say is that what we have been doing in the off-season and in mini-camp, at this point in the season, it’s been paying off. We just need to keep doing what we’ve been doing – practicing good, being attentive in class and things like that. It’s been paying off.”
JW: The Patriots are at home against the Redskins this weekend. What are your thoughts about facing Joe Gibbs and the young but talented Washington defense?
RM: “They are very, very impressive. Being an offensive player, I’ve been looking at their defense and they’re very fast and they really swarm to the ball. They make plays. They have a very smart defense. This week is going to be a test for us because they’re going to challenge our discipline, as far as the big plays that we’ve been having. We have to take it upon ourselves to continue to do the things that we’ve been doing, and that’s making plays. But it’s not going to be an easy task. We know that we’ve got our work cut out for us. We’ll see what happens on Sunday.”
JW: Now here are some questions that were submitted by fans on TheRealRandyMoss.com
From James K., St. Paul, MN: “Do you watch TV and if you do what is your favorite show?”
RM: “Yes. I stay away from sports and don’t watch unless it’s a big event like Monday Night Football. In my spare time I watch something educational like Animal Planet or Forensic Files. I’m still young. I’m 30 years old and there is a lot for me to learn out there. That’s why I tend to want to watch something educational.”
From Pete A., Hyannis, MA: “Randy I just cant get over those two touchdowns you got in the end zone against Miami, AMAZING, Can you tell us fans how does it feel to snatch a touchdown with four other hands going for the football? I could only imagine the bliss.”
RM: "I don’t want to call it luck because it’s not. It’s something that I’ve done my whole career. It’s just determination and the will to go out there and make things happen. There will be times when I do things like that and come up with the ball and there will be times when I don’t come up with the ball. One of the biggest things I wanted to do when I came into the league was to showcase my talents. That’s all I ever wanted to do. A lot of people have given me a bad rap and said a lot about my game. But a lot of people have forgotten that I was the number one receiver in the league for all these years, and I don’t plan on stopping. I just want to show people that 10 years later, at 30 years old, I’ve still got it.”
From Gerald W., Piscataway, NJ: “Ahh Randy Moss my hero....I have your Dupont Duo tape of you and JWill...How many college offers did you get for basketball?”
RM: “When I started the recruiting process, I had a pretty strict Mom. She didn’t want the phone ringing all of the time. Basketball was another path for me to go down, but she wanted me to pick a sport and stay with it. I was recruited for football and basketball heavily. When I chose football as a career, after that the love for basketball stayed but I didn’t pay much attention to it in recruiting.”
From Sal W., St. Louis, MO: “Hey, Randy. I imagine your children have a good grasp of how great a player you are. Do your kids place pressure on themselves to be great athletes by birth-right? How do you give them perspective?”
RM: “I don't come down on my kids when it comes to sports. I’ve always been a believer that you should let kids be kids. Whenever the time comes that they become of age, they may say ‘Daddy, show me how to do this.’ So basically I want them to come to me with it. Some parents try to influence their kids towards sports, but I don’t do that. I just want them to be careful and prosper and grow – not only physically but mentally. When the time comes when they may need my help, that’s where I’ll come in.”
From Travis W., Waynesboro, PA: “I know you have a clothing line Randy, and I was wondering if your ever going to have shoes from you clothing line?”
RM: “We’re negotiating with several different companies with picking up my clothing line and coming out with a shoe. The only thing I can say is ‘the best things come to those who wait,’ so hopefully by next Fall I will have a shoe out.”
JW: Good luck this week.
RM: “Thanks!”
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News Release: New Randy Moss website launched! -- TheRealRandyMoss.com has been relaunched by UltimatePros with a new look and feel that allow the Randy Moss fans to experience and interact with Randy in many news and exciting ways.
News Release: Moss catches Pats drift -- Still think Randy Moss is going to do something to spoil the party? Still think hes going to be the bad seed to be picked out and discarded before seasons end because he wont play hard? Its not going to happen. Not now. Not this year.
News Release: Moss has praise for Belichick -- Patriots receiver Randy Moss gave coach Bill Belichick a verbal hug following yesterday's 48-27 win over the Cowboys. Speaking for the first time since the Sept. 9 season opener, Moss said he's enjoying his first year in New England and Belichick is one of the reasons.
News Release: Brady's five TD passes push perfect Patriots past Cowboys -- "There will probably be a couple of lashes waiting for us," Randy Moss said. "I'm not saying we're unstoppable, we just work hard at what we do."
News Release: Receivers Moss, Owens take different routes to greatness -- It's fitting that today's matchup between the Patriots and the Dallas Cowboys takes place at Texas Stadium, where a giant star adorns midfield. It represents the Cowboys logo, but it could stand as the symbol of the wide receiver subplot in the matchup of 5-0 teams, as two of the game's most dynamic and dissected pass-catchers, the Patriots' Randy Moss and the Cowboys' Terrell Owens, share the same stage.
News Release: Moss makes Patriots unstoppable -- For all those who thought Randy Moss had lost a step or his desire after two years in the NFL abyss at Oakland, think again.
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Randy stops by for interview and checks his web mail -- Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week.
October 9, 2007
JW: The block that you threw for Donte Stallworth on the reverse was a nice play last week against the Browns. How important is blocking for a wide receiver?
RM: “It was a designed reverse. My job was to take the most dangerous man out in the secondary. Actually I had to come off of my man to hit another one that was coming for Donte.”
JW: Do you take pride in that part of your game?
RM: “A lot of people get things mixed up, like you’re supposed to be making these crushing blocks. We’re not fullbacks or offensive linemen. We’re really supposed to run routes, get open and catch balls. But by being able to block, you’re basically getting in the defender’s way and helping the ball carrier get into the end zone. It may not be an “Oohh” block or hit, but it will hopefully spring the ball carrier.”
JW: In the first four games you had huge statistics, over 100 yards and touchdowns in each. But this week, even though your stats were down, the TV cameras caught you on the sidelines with a huge smile on your face in the second half.
RM: “My thing, with everything that we’re doing, it’s a good sight to see and a good feeling to have. You’re playing football, you love what you’re doing and you get back to work.”
JW: It seems that New England is playing in a big game every week. This week all eyes are going to be on Patriots vs. Dallas. How does it feel to be playing in a huge game every week?
RM: “It feels good. You have to love what you’re doing. We like to come to work every day and prepare and hang out with each other. Going into Dallas, we’re just going to practice, prepare and whatever we put out on the field is what we’re going to put out on the field. So hopefully we’ll have a good week of preparation and we’ll see what happens on Sunday.”
JW: And now some questions that were submitted by fans on TheRealRandyMoss.com
Several fans have asked, including Wes R. of Reading, MA: “What’s the thing that you do after a touchdown that looks like you opening a door or a window with your hands?”
RM: “[laughing] Oh…Earlier, before the season started, a lot of people were talking about maybe I had lost my step and I couldn’t play football any more. So the opening week against the Jets, I had the long ball that Tommy threw to me. It kind of excited me and overwhelmed me, coming off of a leg injury with a hamstring and not being able to practice as much and still split the defense like that. So basically that celebration is just to let the people know that I’m still splitting defenses ten years later.”
JW: There have been many parents of the children that went on the Cincinnati trip writing in to thank you.
RM: “Aw….that’s a good thing. I think the people know how I appreciate and love the kids. It’s just a good feeling to know that you put a smile on kids’ faces by just spending a little bit of your time showing them things in life that they’re not used to seeing. I credit everyone responsible for organizing it right and allowing everyone to have a good time. My hat is off to everyone that was involved.”
JW: A question from Stephen M. in Presque Isle, Maine: “How is living in New England treating you? Have you had a chance to see the area or has it been all football, all of the time?”
RM: “I’m strictly football. I don’t get out much. I like to devote most of my time preparing myself mentally and physically to get out there on Sunday and have a good game. So I don’t get out much during the season. By the time practice is over, it’s time to go home and have dinner and get ready for the next day. But what I have seen and what I have experienced in the New England area, I have really enjoyed it.”
JW: A question from Saliem W. in St. Louis, MO: “What music or artists do you listen to right before a game?
RM: “I usually listen to the same thing, mostly hip hop. I go old school, new school. I listen to Notorious B.I.G., Outkast, TI and Young Jeezy. Sometimes I might slip it up and go R&B and listen to Mary J. Blige or Anthony Hamilton. It really differs, depending on what kind of mood you’re in, what type of game it is, the type of day, the atmosphere and things like that. With me, it differs.”
JW: This one is from an old friend of yours, Kodie Stringer…
RM: “Yea? What did he write?”
JW: Kodie writes: “Uncle Randy, I’m still deciding on what game to come to. But everything is still fine. Is your practice fun? I bet it is. Well that’s all I have to say, so I will see you later. Love, Kodie.”
RM: “OK [laughs]. It’s nice to hear from you and knowing that everything is OK. I hope you decide on a game soon. I can’t wait to see you.”
JW: This letter submitted on your website is from Tommy Colclough, who says he’s a member of the family of a former Patriots player, Jimmy Colclough. “Randy, what’s up? I just finished reading the article about your role in kid’s lives. Your role and vision on how to positively affect kids' lives is remarkable and intelligent. The main reason why I am writing to you is to express my family’s passion for jersey #81. My uncle rocked #81 for the AFL Boston Patriots from 1960-68. He is still in the record books for many receiving categories in Pats history. I just wanted to say welcome to New England and keep up your positive attitude on and off the field because, as you may be starting to learn around here, what you do has such a huge impact on people and the community. In closing, as a Colclough we love seeing a player adorn Jimmy's number and represent everything that is right about life and athletics. Keep rollin' Randy!”
RM: “[Laughs] That’s nice to hear. That’s really cool.”
JW: Thanks for your time. Have a good week.
RM: “I appreciate it. Thanks!”
News Release: Patriots beat Browns behind Brady's 3 TD passes, Seau's 2 INTs -- FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- The Patriots have had plenty to celebrate this season. Junior Seau finally gave in to the temptation.
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Randy checks in with his fans again this week -- Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week.
October 4, 2007
JW: Things are continuing to go well for the Patriots. Last week it was a win over Cincinnati on Monday Night Football.
RM: “It felt good knowing we were on a big stage and with the success we’ve had so far. We wanted to go ahead and show the whole world what we’re made of. I had a lot of people there, a lot of family and a lot of friends. I wanted to come in and have a good game.”
JW: How about the group of 42 children that came over to Cincinnati for the game from your hometown area in West Virginia? What did that mean for you?
RM: “It was very important for me. One thing I’ve always said is that I don’t need a pat on the back or a lot of notoriety or attention for things like that. The kids need us, by that I mean grownups. I was in their shoes before and we never had anyone to show us the better things in life. It doesn’t have to be financial all the time. It can be a conversation or a handshake. But the biggest thing for me was to make sure the kids were ok, because it was a weekday and the concerns about school. I wanted to make sure things went well with the children being away from their parents. I’m a parent and I just wanted to make sure everything went smoothly.”
JW: Do you think that it is important for children to have good role models?
RM: “I think that role models start at home. But at the same time, to have someone else at another level –and it doesn’t have to be a professional sports star – just someone else that the kids can look up to, male or female. I try to be a good role model and do what’s right. I don’t live for the politics. A lot of people in the spotlight live for the politics, but I’m one of those guys that doesn’t. I have a strong faith and belief in God. I’m trying to live by the Bible and doing what’s right. The chances that I’ve had in life and that I’ve taken advantage of is now helping others take advantage of it too. I don’t need anyone to pay me back. My biggest thing is to let these kids see that there’s something out there better than just wasting time and hanging out in their community. A lot of sports stars and organizations need to get a better grasp on how to get through to these kids. Kids are tired of appearances. Do you get what I mean by that? Randy Moss showing up for five minutes doesn’t do anything for those kids. What does something is taking them out somewhere they are able to see things and say ‘If I do things right and I follow the right things in life, then I can have a life like this.’ That’s what I’m trying to show the kids. You don’t have to play football. You can be a doctor or lawyer. But as long as you’re successful, you can come back one day and do it for someone else and never forget that I’ve done it for them. It’s just something that I’m handing down and hopefully one kid or several kids can do the same some day.”
JW: The New England Patriots offensive line seems to be a very underappreciated asset to an outstanding football team. What’s your thoughts?
RM: “When I played high school football, I believe that’s when I developed a team concept. It’s a team sport. I’ve always given offensive linemen praise. For Tom Brady’s five soldiers up front that really protects him and his backside, they do a tremendous job Without them, then no one else on that offense is going anywhere. They’re owed a big credit for the team’s success because without them Brady couldn’t do what he does. Laurence Maroney, Sammy Morris and Kevin Faulk couldn’t do what they do. Me, Wes Welker, Donte Stallworth, Jabar Gaffney and Ben Watson couldn’t do what we do. The Patriots believe in team. There are no ‘I’s’ up here. When you put the team concept together and really go out there and execute your game plan and make things happen, it feels very good. It’s a team effort and it feels good to be a part of that.”
JW: We have some questions from your fans – some from the kids on the trip to Cincinnati and one that was submitted on this website, TheRealRandyMoss.com.
RM: “OK”
JW: First, questions from some of the kids…
From Luke, Charleston
Why did you choose football over basketball?
RM: “The reason I chose football over basketball was because what I was able to do in basketball and football, at that time it was going to take me a shorter time to excel and reach the top. That’s what I wanted to do. I knew that a guy my height, speed, quickness and hands – there were a lot of basketball players with the same skills. So that’s why I chose football because I was able to excel a little faster.”
From Will, Kanawha City
How much weight do you lift?
RM: “Basically you’re asking me what’s my max. When you get to a certain age, you stop maxing out. In the NFL you lift to maintain and keep things where they’re supposed to be. But we lift three times a week.”
From Cameron, Malden
When exercising is hard and you don’t want to do it, how do you do it anyway?
RM: “That’s where a lot of athletes gain that mental edge and mental toughness. When you’re not feeling like you want to do it, it’s just having that mindset and mental toughness. That’s gives you that little slight edge over your opponent – knowing that you’re mentally tougher than they are. When you’re not in the mood to work, it’s just something that’s inside of you that makes you want to be better than the next man. You don’t want to let yourself down or the team down. That allows you to push through it and get tougher.”
JW: And a question from the fans at TheRealRandyMoss.com…
From Benjamin G., Oakley, CA
I’m happy that you’re in a winning situation. It’s funny to see all of the bandwagon fans coming back. I’m a loyal fan that has supported you in the good times and the bad times. What do you think about your loyal fans? Do you appreciate us?
RM: “Benjamin, I definitely appreciate you. I carry myself and try to live my life to the fullest. I try to keep it real. So for the true Randy Moss fans that really know me and understand what I stand for and what I’m about, that actually puts a smile on my face. To see that people do care and people understand the real me...I appreciate the fans that have stuck with me through thick and thin.”
JW: Thanks for your time. Talk to you next week.
RM: “All right Jim. I appreciate it.”
News Release: Bengals latest victim as Patriots score another easy victory -- An offense energized by the addition of receivers Randy Moss, Donte' Stallworth and Wes Welker showed it can grind it out, too.
News Release: KIDS TRIP: 42 children from WV visit with Randy in Cincinnati on Monday Night Football -- CINCINNATI – Not only did Randy Moss and his New England Patriots teammates enjoy their 34-13 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals on Monday Night Football, but 42 children from Randy’s hometown and the surrounding area were on hand to take in the sights and sounds of an NFL game live and in person.
Randy provided tickets, transportation and meals for the youth ranging in ages from 5 to 14 on Oct. 1, 2007 in what has become a regular benefit to children from his hometown of Rand, Charleston and other West Virginia communities.
The children witnessed professional football at its best. The Patriots raised their record to 4-0 on the season. And the big stage of Monday Night Football before a national TV audience on ESPN provided an outstanding atmosphere. Cincinnati drew a record crowd of over 66,000 fans to Paul Brown Stadium for the event.Randy Moss put on quite a display as well. Randy caught nine passes for 102 yards and two touchdowns to increase his NFL leading TD season total to seven. He grabbed a 7-yard TD in the second quarter and a 14-yard TD in the fourth quarter.
The children boarded a charter bus in Rand with their gifts of Randy Moss shirts, hats and masks along with another gift bag.
They were transported to Cincinnati while they munched on pizza and enjoyed juice and soft drinks while watching the “Moss Method” DVD and other feature films on their way to the Queen City, about a four hour drive.
Upon arriving in Cincinnati, a Patriots television crew captured the kids’ arrival on video. They were then escorted inside the stadium where they were able to have a brief meet-and-greet session in the lower level tunnel just outside the Patriots locker room to meet with Randy before the kickoff.
They cheered their hero as he sprinted out of the tunnel and into the bright lights of ESPN and the stadium.
The kids also had a box lunch waiting on them at the stadium, consisting of a ham, turkey or roast beef sandwich, chips, cookies and drinks.
Then it was game time!
Many of the Bengals fans acknowledged the young Moss fans and were very complimentary. The kids took their seats, surrounded by a sea of orange and black clad Cincinnati fans.
One local orange and black adorned fan asked about the group of children and then stated, ‘Well, I hope Randy has a good day but I want the Bengals to win.’
The children were cared for by about eight adult chaperones that are very active in their local communities and are regular volunteers on Randy’s trips. They wore Randy Moss’ DuPont #3 throwback jerseys from his high school days.
A great time was had by all.
“I go to a football game every week, but I was overwhelmed by this one,” said Donnie Jones of DBD Sports and the organizer of all of Randy’s trip with the children. “Randy and I were talking about how well the trip to Cleveland went with the kids to see the Cavaliers play the Nuggets last spring. But this has to be the best trip. If it could be done any better, I’d like to see it. The goal was to give the kids a great experience and one that they will treasure for a lifetime and it was mission accomplished. All of the hard work was worth it.”
Before the bus left Ohio, Randy called to check up on the kids and how things went.
“Randy was very happy,” said Jones. “You could hear it in his voice. He wanted me to tell him all about the trip.”
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Randy checks in with his fans again this week -- Check out another exclusive Randy Moss interview with Jim Workman of TheRealRandyMoss.com + see if Randy answered your question this week.
September 25, 2007
JW: Things are cruising along pretty well right now for the Patriots.
RM: “Yes. We’re making our way. We’re making great strides in doing what we are supposed to do and doing what we’re coached to do.”
JW: One term that people like to throw around is ‘mid-season form’. Do you feel that you’re ahead of schedule of where people expected the Patriots to be?
RM: “No. We’re just going out there to execute a game plan. We have a looooong road to travel. We still have a lot of practice left and we’re still making a lot of mistakes on the field. We still have a lot of things to correct. It may not look like it, but we do.”
JW: This is going to be a big week – the New England Patriots will play at Cincinnati on Monday Night Football.
RM: “We know what type of stage we’re going to be on. But the response is just take it one game at a time. We don’t look down the road. We know where our focus is. We know what’s at stake. We know Cincinnati’s backs are against the wall and they’re looking to change things around for their season. It will be a big task ahead of us. We’ll step up to that challenge.”
JW: It’s also big because it’s close to your home state of West Virginia and there will be some special fans coming to the game.
RM: “I always try to bring some kids out of West Virginia to a game to see me play, or to see a celebrity or a big time event. Luckily this year it was me coming to Cincinnati. I think we’ll have 30-40 kids coming to the game from West Virginia.”
JW: We have some more questions from your fans that were submitted on this website, TheRealRandyMoss.com.
RM: “OK…I’m ready.”
From Michael M., Allentown, PA: Randy, I’m predicting a 2000 yards season for you. I think this may be your biggest season. What do you think?
RM: “I leave it up to the people to pay attention to the statistics. I pay attention to the wins and loss column. Everybody else can worry about the rest. I’m not a big stats guy. I just want to do what I can do to help this team win. My role is to catch the ball and put the ball in the end zone.”
From Frank D., South Waymouth, MA: “I’ve been a Patriots fan since the AFL days in 1960 and a season ticket holder since 1971. I think you’re one of the greatest receivers ever in the NFL, along with Cliff Branch of the Raiders, Raymond Berry of the Colts and even Troy Brown.” What do you think?
RM: “When it’s all said and done the legacy that I leave is all that will be left. I don’t pay attention to who the greatest is. That’s for the people to decide, not me. I’ve got a job to do. I don’t pay attention to much to other people’s jobs. Troy is a possession receiver that finds a way to get it done.”
From Gary S., Roswell, GA: “Some fans and media are predicting a meltdown from you this season if things don’t go your way. How do you respond to that?
RM: “I don’t listen to what they think is going to happen. All I can say is just watch and see what happens. The Patriots are about winning. All of my life, I always wanted to win. So everything is going to be smooth sailing in this neck of the woods.”
From Stephen B., Somerville, MA: “Can you explain what it is like to play under Coach Belichick? Does he prepare you on a daily basis differently than the coaches you’ve had before?
RM: “Yes. Coach Belichick has a presence that you can feel just being around him in a room. That’s the type of guy he is. He is a no nonsense kind of guy. He does lighten up a little bit. Everyone sees the no smiles, no grins. But he is a fun guy to be around and a great coach. He expects a lot and demands a lot from his players.”
From John B., Santa Fe, NM: “I have your video “Moss Methods” and I like what you had to say in it. Do you have any more advice for me?
RM: “That’s all about my makeup. What I say on ‘Moss Methods’ about how I approach my life, my faith, my family and football – that’s how I live. That’s my day-to-day life. I care a lot about my faith, my family and football. I definitely don’t live in the past and I don’t live in the future. I mostly live day to day. A lot of people get mixed up because they choose to live in the past. But what they need to concentrate on is the task at hand and what is going on at the present time. One of the things that I wanted to get out on the ‘Moss Method’ is how I approach my work and how much heart and desire I put into being the best receiver that I can be. What you see on there is how I go about my day-to-day.”
JW: When I watched the ‘Moss Method’ I was impacted by the strong statement you made about your faith.
RM: “My faith is very strong. You need a lot of faith. I grew up in a Baptist church. My mother raised me and my brother and sister up in church heavily. One thing that I always go back to is my faith and the health and guidance that God gives me to go out and meet the people that I meet or make the money that I make, and stay healthy and have a wonderful family. I’m very thankful for everything that I’ve been able to accomplish and for the things that I am ready to accomplish. I do have a strong faith and belief in God.”
JW: Do you share it openly with teammates, especially younger players?
RM: “I don’t really share it unless someone asks me. In this league, you’re dealing with young men and grown men. There are only certain things that they’re going to hear. There are only certain things that they want to listen to. Most of the time, I just keep to myself. I love to have fun on and off the field. As far as opening up and giving them a piece of me, I don’t do that much. They already have a lot on their plate. Sitting down and listening to me…that might take a few years.”
JW: What you look forward to doing on a day off?
RM: “Waking up and feeling that this is my day. There are a lot of days that are structured, so I just do what I need to do on those days.”
JW: Thanks! Good luck this week.
RM: “I appreciate it. We’ll rap later.”
News Release: Moss has been mesmerizing so far -- The results have been so mesmerizing it's tempting to draw grand conclusions, to fast-forward New England's football daydreams directly to Arizona in February, to a dynasty resumed, to gleaming rings even heavier (and gaudier) than the last, to glowing platitudes for yet another Patriots reclamation project.
News Release: Moss scores two more TDs as Patriots roll over Bills 38-7 -- FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- Tom Brady figured out quickly how to play with Randy Moss: throw the ball, then watch in awe.
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Randy checks in & answers Q's from his fans 09/19/2007 -- Randy Moss took time out again this week to talk to Jim Workman at TheRealRandyMoss.com…
Q: On the cover of Sports Illustrated this week, there’s a photo of you wearing a Patriots jersey and a caption that simply reads ‘SCARY’. That says it all doesn’t it?
RM: “With everything that’s been going on and everything that’s been said about me about me trying to get back into playing football…a lot of people doubted me. There were a lot of naysayers that questioned my ability to go out there and make it happen.”
Q: It’s a long season, but going 2-0 and being dominant against two playoff teams so far has to feel pretty good.
RM: “Yes. It has to do with our preparation and how we work and how Coach Belichick prepares us week in and week out. The hard work is paying off, to go out there and go 2-0 and do it in a convincing way.”
Q: How is preparing for a primetime night game different than a day game. How do you spend those extra seven hours?
RM: “It’s more of a matter of relaxing yourself. You have to relax your mind and relax your body. Most of the time I just sleep or spend time with the people that I have in for the game. You have to relax because you can’t get too ahead of yourself. You can’t start being impatient because that’s when things can go wrong. When I start getting dressed and ready to go in the stadium, that’s when I get psyched up.”
Q: The fans in New England gave you a big cheer when you caught your first pass in at home. There are some great sports fans in that area aren’t there?
RM: “They’re fanatics. They love their teams here – the Red Sox, the Celtics, the Pats. They love their sports here. That’s one thing that a lot of people don’t realize. They’re crazy about their teams.”
Q: What is Rand University’s mascot?
RM: “Ummm. Let me think about that. Rand University’s mascot would have to be a 40 bottle. (laughs) That’s a good one for you.”
Q: You gave Rand [WV] a little shout out on Sunday Night Football…
RM: “Everybody enjoyed it. It was my first primetime game [with the Patriots].”
Q: What makes you laugh?
RM: “I don’t get tickled about a lot of things. I think just having a good soul. That’s what really makes me laugh, when my soul is feeling good. That has a lot to do with being happy…being in a good environment. When my soul is happy, I’m happy. It has to do with all of my surroundings, from players to people. It’s my environment. Football is just the icing on the cake.”
Q: As promised, we have some questions from your fans that were submitted on this website, TheRealRandyMoss.com.
RM: “All right…”
From Nick S., Macomb, MI: Hey Randy! I’m ten years old and I want to know, when did you get into football?
RM: “I got into football when I was about nine or ten, playing midget league football back in West Virginia. You grow to love football. As you grow up, from kid to teenager, to young man to a real man, you grow to love the game. I just liked the ball at first. But through the years, I developed a love for it. I’ve been playing mostly my whole life.”
From Joe M., North Tonawanda, NY: Who is the best corner you have to go against in a game?
RM: “The best cornerback? I don’t know. There are some pretty good ones. This might be the year to find out who can. There’s Champ Bailey [Denver Broncos], Chris McAlister of the Ravens, Al Harris of Green Bay [Packers] and there’s a couple other ones. I can’t pick just one.”
From Vahid A., Canoga Park, CA: I think it would be great to see you take the ball and light it like a cigar and then toss it to the ground and stomp it out. Why don’t you do any planned TD celebrations?
RM: “Well, I’m not a big celebrator when it comes to touchdown dances. I was taught at a young age to act like you’ve been there before. As a professional athlete, I have over 100 touchdowns. So that shows that I’ve been there before, so I don’t really have a desire to celebrate like that. I like to have fun with the fans instead of in front of the cameras.”
From Daniel, no hometown given: How did you pick your number that you’re wearing with the Patriots?
RM: “They weren’t going to let me wear No. 6. They told me that 81 was available. So like I said once before when I was in Minnesota, ‘You put a number on my back and I will take care of the number.’ Just give me something and I’ll go out there and play in it and make the number.”
From Joe P., St. Paul, MN: Will you really read this? All I wanna say is I think you’re one of the greatest WRs to ever grace a football field. I wish you wouldn’t have left Minnesota, but I can understand why.
RM: “Joe, this is my personal website, so I do read this. I thank you for considering me one of the best to play at this position. Being a Viking, it got to me too because I never wanted to leave. The Vikings were the team that drafted me and I really felt obligated to bring them home a Super Bowl. We had two shots and we didn’t make it past the NFC Championships twice. There was a lot of hurt inside me when I left because I thought I was supposed to bring those people a championship and I never did.”
From: Lesley S., Oklahoma City, OK: Hey Randy. I was in Charleston, WV this summer and I heard that you’re building a home there. How long is it going to take to build?
RM: “I’m not building a home anywhere until I retire. So I’m not building a home yet.”
From: Wes H, no hometown given: I recently graduated high school and was going to take a year off from college to lift and get some running in and then try to walk on somewhere. I was wandering what you thought about it?
RM: “It could be good or bad. It has to do with your will and determination. Not so much getting your body together. Get your breathing right, get a physical. But go out there with a strong mind and a strong heart, knowing that you can do it. Then go out there and make it happen. That’s what it’s really about.”
From: Willie G, no hometown given: Do you play Madden?
RM: “I play Madden a lot. I really don’t have anyone to play with, so I play against the computer. I can’t seem to win too many games against the computer.”
Q: [Jim Workman]: Do you always play as the Patriots?
RM: “I always play as myself. I’m not going to play with any other team.”
From Rod R., California: Do you think about the Hall of Fame?
RM: “No not at all. That’s long term. That’s down the road. The only time I ever think about it is if someone asks me about it. But do I ever think about ever think that one day I’m going to be a Hall of Famer? No, because I’m still playing football and I still have a lot of football to be played. Once my career is over I may think about it more, in terms of leaving a legacy. That’s what the Hall of Fame is for. One day if I’m in that category, then that’s what I am.”
From Judy R., Onalaska, WI: How do I get a chance to try a Inta Juice smoothie? Any stores coming to Wisconsin?
RM: “I’m not saying that they’re not coming to Wisconsin, but right now the stores are concentrating on areas with warmer climates. But we’re not ruling Wisconsin out. We’re moving more in the South right now.”
From: John T., no hometown given: I know you were at the International Golf outing and I was curious, what’s your handicap?
RM: “Oh man! I just started golfing. I taught myself how to play. I don’t really keep score right now. I’m just focused on hitting the ball on the green. Once I start doing that consistently, then I’ll start keeping score.”
Q: [Jim Workman] That’s all for this week. Thanks a lot. We’ll look forward to seeing you play again this weekend.”
RM: “Thanks Jim. Later…”
News Release: WEEKLY CHAT: Randy talks about Patriots win, plus more 09/11/2007 -- Randy Moss took time out this week to talk to Jim Workman at TheRealRandyMoss.com…
Q: How did it feel to strap on that Patriots helmet for real on Sunday?
RM: “It felt good. It was a long time waiting. I was anticipating what was going to happen. At the same time, I was very anxious.”
Q: How do account for the awesome chemistry that you and Tom Brady had together on Sunday after not appearing in any pre-season games?
RM: “That is just knowing the game of football and loving the game. I think it was a concern for us as an offense – what Brady and I was going to have. As the games progressed and the plays were called, how I was going to run a certain route, how deep I have to be in the route. Our timing just came about during the course of the game.”
Q: Your teammates seem to be just as excited about you being in New England as you are...
RM: “There’s a lot of love in the air. You can really feel it…you can smell it…you can taste it. That’s just something good that they have here in the Patriots organization. There’s a love that we have for one another – players and coaches.”
Q: You were quoted to say ‘I didn't know how much I was going to play or what might happen’ in the post-game press conference. Were their butterflies flapping around in your stomach?
RM: “I had a few butterflies. It was my first game and I really didn’t know what to expect. I hadn’t been out there on the battlefield with the guys. There was some nervousness that set in. I didn’t want to go in there and do anything to hurt the team’s chances of winning and being out there on the field not being able to contribute. I wanted to contribute in a good way.
Q: If you had any doubts about the hamstring, they probably disappeared with the 51-yard TD catch didn’t they?
RM: “It was part of the game. That’s how it happened and I got to it. I had belief that my hamstring was going to be able to hold up. I’ve been doing some work on it. It was a good thing.”
Q: You've always seemed to rise to the occasion on the big stage...at home this week against San Diego...John Madden and National TV on Sunday night...how will that feel?
RM: “It’s going to feel really good because it’s actually our second game that we play and it’s going to be on a big stage against the Chargers. They’re a team that has some Super Bowl hopes. It will be a very, very big game for the whole state, the fans and the organization. We’ll see what happens on Sunday night.”
Q: Do you ever watch any football games at home when you’re not playing?
RM: “I watch a little football. Not much. I try to get more of the educational channels, more news and things like that. I try to get away from football once I’m away from work. But I do watch a little.”
Q: Do you have any 'night before the game rituals? Favorite meal?
RM: “No. I’m not superstitious like that. I just get a shower, go to bed, wake up and do what I do.”
Q: Eating right is very important to you?
RM: “Yes. I still snack though. I have my little candy and snacks. But I’m trying to play light and hold my speed and hold my weight down. So I still try to eat right.”
Q: It’s a big week in music this week...for you is it 50 Cent or Kanye West?
RM: “I don’t really know. I’d probably say 50 Cent. He’s more of my kind of guy. I don’t really listen to either of them very much but I’d probably have to choose 50.”
Q: What kind of projects do you have coming up with the kids?
RM: “We’re bringing some kids to Cincinnati for Monday night [Oct. 1]. We probably have about 40 kids coming to that game. That’s close to home [West Virginia]. Last year they got to come to that game [in Cincinnati] when I was with Oakland, but I got hurt. Hopefully I’ll give the kids something to scream for this year.”
Q: Good talking to you. We’ll have some questions from fans next week.
RM: “No problem. We’ll get them answered. I appreciate it.”
News Release: Gathering Moss pays off for Pats in Week 1 -- The season that can't go wrong opened with buzz and brilliance. As the Patriots huddled during the TV timeout and awaited their first offensive snap of 2007, all of the Meadowlands, from the Jets' sideline to the press box, played Where's Randy? Thirty-year-old Randy Moss, who didn't play a single preseason snap coming off a terrible season in Oakland, wasn't on the field.
News Release: All Eyes on NFL Star Randy Moss at Recent Telly Awards -- All Eyes on NFL Star Randy Moss at Recent Telly Awards
Moss Scores Big During Prestigious Awards
Film on Five-time Pro Bowl Wide Receiver Wins Three Independent Filmmakers Telly Awards
ATLANTA, GA–June 28, 2007–A penetrating film that delves beyond the unsettled persona of NFL wide receiver Randy Moss has won three Telly Awards for independent director and writer David C. Bojorquez of David Productions™, a Vision4Media™ company. The Moss Method is a film and DVD that explores the insider’s perspective of competitive sports and the motivation driving the athlete while also demonstrating Moss’ personal training techniques.
The prestigious Telly Awards honor the very best local, regional, and cable television commercials and programs, as well as the finest video and film productions. Moss shares, “I’m excited that the film has generated this kind of support and recognition. This project was a way for me to bring people into my world and show them a little bit more about who I am. People will get to see how my love for my sport and will to win drives me to push harder each and every day.”
The film not only provides the ultimate inside take on the intensity of Moss’ training, but also shows a side of him that most of the world has never seen. The film’s executive producer Walter Josten of Blue Rider Pictures said, “The raw material in this film was captured with a compelling and insightful eye. It’s more than a training video. It’s forceful storytelling that involves and inspires the viewer.”
The 60-minute DVD and 42-minute film were shot on location at a Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. facility while Moss trained in 2006 and was commissioned by Blue Rider Pictures. The work won Telly Awards (http://www.tellyawards.com/winners/list/entries/?l=david&event=&category=2&award=3) in the
non-broadcast sports documentary, broadcast sports program and editing categories. The Moss Method DVD is $19.95 and available online and at retailers.
About the Companies
Vision4Media, Inc. (www.Vision4Media.com) creates works to enrich society and is headquartered in Brea, Calif. Its David Productions™ (www.DavidProductions.com) division produces customized, leading-edge DVDs, broadband Web sites, broadcast television, films and commercials for cause-related organizations and people-oriented corporations. Journeys Project Films™ is the Vision4Media™ entity that produces original content media focusing on topics of significance to society, such as the grief support DVD Journey of Loss...Discovery of Hope (www.JourneysProject.com).
Blue Rider Pictures (www.BlueRiderPictures.com) is an independent production and financing company, with more than a hundred movies and TV projects to its credit since it was formed in 1991. During the past year, Blue Rider financed 23 movies with budgets totaling more than $200 million, including “Beautiful Ohio” (William Hurt, Julianna Margulies), “Death Defying Acts” (Catherine Zeta-Jones and Guy Pearce), Helen Hunt’s first feature directorial effort, “Then She Found Me” (Matthew Broderick, Colin Firth, Bette Midler) and “Flawless” (Michael Caine, Demi Moore).
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Media Contact: Nikki Barjon, The R Agency, nikkibarjon@theragency.com, 1-201-240-4272
News Release: Randy Moss Announces New Team - Pro Football Player Partners With Inta Juice -- Inta Juice, a Fort Collins-based national juice bar franchise, is pleased to announce its partnership with Randy Moss Enterprises, Inc., the corporation owned by NFL star Randy Moss.
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