
"Take it with a grain of salt, obviously, having success is week-to-week ... being comfortable is a state of mind. I've still got to study, I've still got to flip the pages, I've still got to grind. So, being comfortable in the offense is like, you're making your coach comfortable, you're making plays, you're getting open, you're showing that you know what to do on a consistent basis, and you're making plays for your quarterback, and it helps everybody out."
"Probably like a nine out of 10. In terms of understanding the system and the scheme, you've probably got a little bit of juice left to squeeze out of the orange. Obviously, it's important, and I think he was being modest when he said that. I heard that little comment."
"He should study more. Five out of 10, we need to get going. I'll have to talk to Stef. Five out of 10? I went to Ohio State. That's failing. We'll have to clarify what part was 50 percent. We have to have a winning effort, physically, mentally, and whatever the third one was. We'll have to bump it up a little bit to see what was going on."
Stefon Diggs characterized his comfort level in the Patriots offense as five out of ten after posting his first 100-yard game of the season. He emphasized the need to continue studying, flipping pages, and grinding to produce consistent plays, get open, and help his quarterback. Josh McDaniels said Diggs likely understands the system at a much higher level and joked that there is still a little bit of "juice left to squeeze out of the orange." Mike Vrabel teased Diggs about studying more and labeled a five-out-of-ten performance as failing. Diggs later clarified the remark was facetious.
Read at Boston.com
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