The Day

Keion Crossen, a cornerback drafted in the seventh round, makes Patriots

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Keion Crossen spent most of Saturday doing what all NFL bubble players do: wondering, worrying — and, most importantl­y, refreshing his phone.

"All day. Every second hitting refresh, refresh the Twitter page or whatever you got to do," Crossen said Sunday after making the New England Patriots' final roster as a seventh-round draft pick.

Then came 4 p.m. Saturday — and the phone did not ring. "It didn't ring. That's a good sign," said Crossen, who spent the day with some teammates, two of whom didn't make it.

The cornerback from Western Carolina, once a 147-pound high school quarterbac­k, had made it to the opening roster of a team seeking its sixth Super Bowl win this century.

"I enjoyed it at 4:01 and I'm ready right now," he said. "I was focused at 4:02 to get started for Houston week."

He added he had trouble sleeping both Friday and Saturday nights, the first night worrying and then looking ahead.

"As the business goes, you gotta move on, you gotta prepare, you can't let your mind stay in yesterday," he said. "Moving forward for me is a big deal, especially for me coming in Week 1 as a rookie, I want to make sure I know as much as I need to know going into Game 1.

"(Saturday night) I was just more focused on getting to know my opponent. That's the reason I couldn't sleep, because I wanted to know my opponent as much as I could before I get with the coaches and everything."

The opponent for Week 1 is Deshaun Watson, the mobile Texans quarterbac­k who can drive a defense crazy. That's enough for even a veteran to worry about.

In a strange twist to the story, Crossen said he didn't tell his parents, Winnie and Thomas, until Sunday morning that he made the cut — and added they didn't know until he told them.

"They're happy parents," he said. "They enjoyed that I get to enjoy my dream. They just hoped the best for me. They did not know ... my mom cried, my dad's a little tough, so he played a little hardball. But they're happy, they're definitely happy.

"I didn't call anyone. The last 24 hours I've just been waiting. So I kinda knew, I guess, when you all knew, and I'm very happy to be here and I'm ready to get started."

Crossen dressed in a corner of the locker room with three other young players. Their names, including A.J. Moore and John Atkins, who didn't make the squad, were gone when he came in Sunday morning. Asked if that was different, he said, "It is. It is, very different. But I'm ready to play.”

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