New York Post

Kenny GOLLADAY

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Post columnist Steve Serby catches up with Giants receiver Kenny Golladay for some Q&A.

Q: If you could pick the brain of any receiver in NFL history, who would it be?

A: I’ve worked out with Randy Moss, picked his brain a little bit. I’ve talked to Calvin Johnson, picked his brain a little bit.

Q: What advice did Moss give you?

A: (Smile) I’m gonna keep that between me [and him] . ... I want to say I worked out with Moss going into my second or third year, I don’t remember. Just trying to teach me how to be a pro ... check your body, even money-wise. I really probably did like a week with him. He did every workout with me. It was pretty cool, just him to go out there really doing the exact same workout he put me through. Just little stuff like that.

Q: So maybe down the road when you’re on TV like him, people will be saying, “He got Golladayed!”

A: (Laugh) You know what? I hope that is something down the road people are saying, that’d be a great achievemen­t. I remember growing up, and people around my age, we used to say, and people still nowadays say, “You got Mossed!” If people would say, “You got Golladayed,” that would be pretty crazy.

Q: You were called “Babytron” in Detroit?

A: (Laugh) Some fans called me that. I never went by that though.

Q: You didn’t like it?

A: I’m my own man, and that’s Megatron’s [Calvin Johnson’s] thing. I want to leave my own mark some way, it’s not like I was trying to fill his shoes. Those are big shoes to fill, and I have my own.

Q: Describe your on-field mentality.

A: Just killer instinct ... physical ... every ball that’s in the air, I need it to be mine, I want it to be mine . ... Aggressive ... I just want to go out there and play as physical as I can, not doing more than I’m asked to, and just playing my game.

Q: Describe the tattoo on your back.

A: It’s actually like the skyline of Chicago, and then a lion with a crown with my initials in the middle.

Q: What’s the significan­ce of the lion?

A: You always hear about Chicago is so rough and all that. I look at it like any city is, but at the end of the day, Chicago can swallow you up and you can get lost with the wrong crowd or whatever. It’s like a jungle, and I feel like I’m the king of that jungle, me just coming from Chicago.

Q: You’re into visualizat­ion?

A: Before the games all week, I’ll just visualize myself going out there making a play, so I’m not even surprised when it happened. All week and the night before the game, I’m literally visualizin­g making big plays. If people are not doing that, they should start. I’ve been doing it since college. It don’t take much, you can just look out the window and kind of just imagine yourself just making a diving catch it for instance like a one-handed catch, so when it happens, you don’t even think like, “Dang, I visualized that.” It’s not even that, it’s more so just like, “I’ve seen myself make this play. I’m not surprised at myself, it might come as a surprise to you but not me.”

Q: Describe Daniel Jones.

A: He just has a very competitiv­e edge. He wants to be the best.

Q: Eli Manning had Plaxico Burress. Can you do for him what Plaxico did for Eli?

A: I’m not even gonna say I could do for him what Plaxico did for Eli. More so is I want it to be a KG and DJ thing. I want us to make our own thing around here. That was those guys’ thing, and I want it to be me and DJ thing.

Q: What kind of ball does he throw compared to Matthew Stafford?

A: Two different players, two different arms . ... At the end of the day, it really doesn’t matter what type of ball it is. If it’s accurate, if it’s in the right place at the right time, and both of ’em got that.

Q: From your Instagram: “Success hit differentl­y when nobody believed in you.”

A: Me coming out of high school,

I had no offers, really . ... When I finally got my recognitio­n, I made sure that I never forgot where I came from ... and I feel like that’s just battling through adversity.

Q: Does that still motivate you?

A: For sure. For sure. Even though I signed a contract here, I always gotta kind of go back to that never get complacent. That’s something I’m huge on, I just want to always keep getting better.

Q: “I play the hand I was dealt like it’s the hand I wanted.”

A: That can be anything pretty much. Me being in high school, didn’t get the offers. I never walked around with my head down. Always looked at it like this happened for a reason. When I was in Detroit, just battling through a couple of injuries, always tried to work hard, and just tried to continue to get better on and off the field.

Q: Describe Joe Judge.

A: Joe’s great, for sure. Has welcomed me here. I love the competitiv­e edge that he has. Even as the coach, he’s very competitiv­e. He’s gonna always shoot you straight, and that’s what I like mostly, you know, don’t blow smoke up my ass. If I need to tighten up on something, I for sure want you to be the one to tell me that, and not just let it go under the radar. And that’s what type of person Judge is, he’s gonna always tell you if you’re doing good, and he’s gonna tell you when you’re not doing so good, and I feel like that’s the type of coach you gotta have.

Q: You talked with Saquon Barkley before you signed.

A: Saquon pretty much just shot me straight, too. As far as just like the structure of everything. I’ve been a part of that Patriot-type structure of the schedule and everything, so I wasn’t too worried about that, and I never shy away from hard work. But Saquon, he told me that it is gonna be hard work, but at the same time, he’s his own man, he’s not trying to be like anyone else but himself and that’s very noticeable. And Saquon said, “You’re gonna have a lot of fun here, the mindset here is good, and you’ll help us do big things if you’d come here.”

Q: Kadarius Toney.

A: The kid, when he gets the ball in his hand, can do great things. He’s starting to get it more, starting to have a lot of fun with it. And I told him, even myself, rookie year’s the hardest . ... I think he’s starting to get the hang of it, starting to find his rhythm, and getting into his own little routine. He could do huge things for us.

Q: The criticism about you that you think has been the most unfair.

A: To be honest, I’m my biggest critic, so I don’t really listen to all the criticism. Everyone has their own opinion, I go out there and just play my game.

Q: What drives you?

A: Family, of course. Me going out there each and every Sunday ... of course my main thing’s going out here and doing whatever it takes for this team. But at the end of the day, when you’re going out there making plays, your name’s on TV and you got your little cousins, even like my mom and dad, my aunties and uncles, that puts a smile on their face, so that makes me happy knowing that their son, brother, nephew is doing big things for the family.

 ?? ?? Bill Kostroun
Bill Kostroun

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