Hue Jackson is a great guy.

I want to win football games.

I've got to be smarter with the football.

It's every kid's dream to be drafted No. 1.

I've never done any arm-strengthening drills.

I know I've got a lot of flaws as a quarterback.

I'm a firm believer in your gut being undefeated.

I got to start limiting the hits I take on myself.

It's intimidating to come out and hear the 'Skol' chant.

If I'm not the right fit for the Browns, that's fine by me.

I am way more accurate than my completion percentage shows.

I'm from a small town. I think that's what's going to help me succeed.

I'm not going to bow down to anybody, not going to back away from anybody.

I definitely need to do everything I can to help whoever is going to catch the ball.

I'm not really too focused on where I get drafted. It's what I do after I get drafted.

If I'm fortunate enough to become a Cleveland Brown, you can expect everything from me.

If you didn't want to believe in me, that's OK, because I'll make a believer out of you.

It's football at the end of the day, and throwing the ball is what I love to do the most.

I'm not afraid of the media. I think I know how to handle them because I've been around them enough.

Heaving up a blind pass to maybe pick up 10 yards, rather than throwing the ball away - I can't do that.

Any rookie that can develop a mentorship with a former quarterback like Jim Kelly, it's going to be huge.

You see a lot of smaller-school guys go to the NFL and have success: Carson Wentz, Derek Carr for example.

I don't think I have accuracy problems. I do think when my feet aren't set, I deliver a different type of ball.

That preconceived notion of me being inaccurate is completely false, and I look forward to changing that over time.

There are times in my career where I could've called it quits, and that would've ate at me for the rest of my life.

My mom used to call me Joshy Boucher. I watched 'The Waterboy' so much, my mom started calling me Joshy Boucher. True story.

I truly felt like I was a Division I quarterback, and I'd felt that way for a long time. I just wanted other people to see it.

It's fun to look over there and see a guy with as a great stature as John Elway. It's really cool that he went to one of my games.

The reason I want to be out on the field is to help my team, whatever which way possible I can. When I can't do that, it hurts me.

I want to be the guy that turns around the Cleveland Browns. The guy that does that is going to be immortalized in Cleveland forever.

I'm just trying to be the best quarterback possible. So as long as I'm playing well and improving every day, I will just continue this.

Coming all the way from one scholarship offer, you know, Coach Bohl and Coach Vigen, they believed in me when I came out of junior college.

Literally everybody talks about 56 percent completion percentage. It gets brought up in every meeting. It's something I'm trying to work on.

I'm not going to sit here and say I know everything about everything. I definitely have work to do. The thing is, I'm willing to admit that.

In practice, I think I've thrown it 82 yards, one time. In a game, I don't think I've pushed it that far - probably 60, 65 yards in the air.

I'm going to prove I belong. There's a lot of skepticism about the type of player I am, where I come from, the University of Wyoming, obviously.

In my opinion, there's nothing better than practicing a play all week and then going on the field and thinking, 'This is going to be a touchdown.'

There's a lot of pressure that comes with being a NFL quarterback wherever you're at, and I'm ready to tackle any situation that's in front of me.

I just love how fluid football has to be, how much time and energy it takes to practice and then taking it to the field and executing in a game situation.

I definitely would embrace that opportunity to be the No. 1 overall pick, obviously that every quarterback would love to be that. It's no different for me.

A defensive coordinator is always going to try to throw you something different and get you out of your element, and I have to do better with the pass protection.

Stats are for losers, and the one thing I'd like to point out, while at Wyoming, we won games, and I definitely think that's how quarterbacks are judged in the NFL.

There's got to be a fine line where I can find I'm still throwing the ball how I usually throw it, but it's able to dive down after a certain height and get to the guy.

Any football game, you can be hit one way or another. It's not the safest sport that we play; it's a beautifully violent game, and that's what, in part, I love about it.

The inaccuracy issue. Going back to college having a 56-percent completion percentage. Obviously, it's not great. But I think that it's a little blown out of proportion.

I had to decide if I was going to try a junior college or walk on somewhere. I even thought about changing sports. But I eventually decided that football was my passion.

My dad has sayings for days. 'You bloom where you're planted' ties into farming, but it also sums up the ideals and morals that we have as a family by staying in Firebaugh.

I understand the New York media is a lot more magnified than most markets, but I'm up for that challenge. I'd definitely be suitable, and I'd be primed for a market like that.

I'm a competitor, and I'm sure a lot of people who don't get to play because of an injury, whether it's their pride or their ego, whatever it is, they want to be out on the field.

Whatever team I go to, I'm going to give them everything, show them the type of character that I am because, like I said, my teammates know exactly who I am; they can vouch for me.

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