Q & A with Miles Austin

Boyzmamacita

CowBabe Up!!!
Messages
29,047
Reaction score
64,100
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
Super Bowl Road Trip: Q&A with Miles Austin of the Dallas Cowboys

The kind folks at Gatorade, who have a performance lab here in Ft. Lauderdale during Super Bowl week, set us up with an interview with Miles Austin of the Dallas Cowboys. We actually knew Austin when he was a high school standout at Garfield high school in New Jersey and we were working at the Bergen Record. Austin is articulate, humble, and cautious. He also hangs out with Tony Romo, was on the cover of Sports Illustrated, and is frequently told that he looks like A-Rod. Yes, he’s aware he was a fantasy football savior this year.

350_Austin3794.jpg


Q: Do people tell you that you look like A-Rod?
A: I get that often. It’s fine with me. I met him a couple times. We never talked about it or anything, though.

Q: Have you had people tell you that you saved their fantasy football season?A: A lot of people tell me that. But I haven’t gotten one dollar from an owner! Everyone says how much I helped them, and they won, and I’m like, ‘can I get 5 percent? 10 percent?’ I haven’t seen one dollar yet. [He only made $1.5 million this year, help the guy out!]

Q: What’s up with your first down celebration?
A: Nothing, really, I just started doing it this year. Actually, last year. I’m up for suggestions if anyone has any.

MilesAustinCodyGreen2.jpg

miles austin and women

Q: Let’s go back to draft day. What was the weekend like for a small college player who wasn’t expected to be taken?
A: I was at the house, chillin’. The first day I wasn’t expected to be drafted, so I went golfing. The second day I was hoping I might get drafted. I was just hanging out in my room and around the 5th-6th round a few people started calling saying they were thinking about drafting me. Then they called and said, ‘well, it doesn’t look like we’re going to draft you, but do you want to come in undrafted?’ There were about 10 teams coming in with that angle. But then Dallas called, and they put Bill Parcells on the phone – it was his last year there – and I was thinking, ‘wow, this is crazy.’ He was telling me how he was a Jersey guy like me, and he wanted to give me a look on special teams.

Q: Who do you hang with on the team?
A: Kevin Ogletree, he’s a rookie, a New York guy. He’s a cool cat. And Sam Hurd, and Romo, and, well, most of the guys on the team. TO when he was here …

Q: Much has been made about how the Cowboys’ locker room “improved” after Terrell Owens left, and how the team was more loose because after plays nobody was *****ing about not getting passes thrown their way.
A: It’s obviously a different locker room [without Owens], but there wasn’t that much of a change. I don’t want to say anything was wrong with someone doing that … I don’t do that, and [Jason Witten] and [Hurd] and [Crayton] don’t … and maybe that has something to do with it, but maybe it doesn’t. Maybe if he was on this team, maybe he would kind of change his tune. Who knows.

Q: It seems like athletes getting in trouble with the law for whatever reason seems to be a weekly occurrence in sports. Why?
A: It is a combination of a bunch of things. On one end, you really shouldn’t put yourself in bad situations. And sometimes, people are looking to get you in trouble – there’s a target on your back. You need to figure out where you need to be, and where you don’t need to be.

Q: You ever feel like there’s a target on your back?
A: Anytime you’re an athlete doing something, there’s target on your back … I usually don’t go to a place where I’d feel like that. In Dallas, I’m going to go places that are familiar to me. Same in Jersey and New York. I’m not going to go to a hood spot where everyone is staring at me when I walk in.

Q: What’s your take on athletes carrying guns?A: I wouldn’t have one in my car. But I have one in my house. I don’t ever take it out or anything, it’s in a safe. The thing about having a gun – would you be willing to pull the trigger on somebody? It’s crazy just thinking about it.

Q: Lastly, Tony Romo. He’s a ladies man. What’s it like rolling out with Romo?
A: He’s a ladies man? No he’s not. [Serious pause. Laughter.] If you go out with him, it’s crazy. People will swarm. I don’t want to say it’s like hanging out with Madonna, but … it’s crazy. At first people try to be calm, but after about half an hour, they’ll swarm. Usually when I’m out with him there are a few other people around and they’ll keep people away.
 

Boyzmamacita

CowBabe Up!!!
Messages
29,047
Reaction score
64,100
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
Austin is on top of the world. I hope he remains humble and down to earth.
 

Eskimo

Well-Known Member
Messages
12,821
Reaction score
496
Your personality and values are usually pretty hard-wired by this time in your life. I doubt he fundamentally changes much.
 

Eskimo

Well-Known Member
Messages
12,821
Reaction score
496
Boyzmamacita;3267857 said:
Austin is on top of the world. I hope he remains humble and down to earth.

The thing is some people are (see Miles Austin, Romo, Witten, Ware) and some people like to be perceived in that manner even though they really aren't (see Roy Williams).
 
Top