I could've left these in the Lions News thread, but I tend to clutter it up too much sometimes, so I've created a thread where all the paywall articles for this week's game can be read here, or ignored, if you like.
Enjoy!!
5 questions with Tim Patrick: Detroit Lions WR talks signing babies and body parts
Article from yesterday's Freep.
Dave Birkett
Detroit Free Press
Tim Patrick has settled in as the Detroit Lions' No. 3 receiver after joining the team in late August. He has 12 catches for 177 yards this season following his release from the Denver Broncos. Patrick talked with the Free Press for this week's five questions.
Some questions and answers have been edited for clarity and brevity.
When you were a young receiver, who were the players that took you under their wing and what did they teach you?
Bennie Fowler and Demaryius Thomas. They just bred confidence in me, honestly. They saw I had the tools but lacked the confidence to know that I could do it in the league and they bred that confidence in me and told me just to focus on the basics, cause that’s what people forget later on down the line are the basics. They said if you just focus on the basics and think and know that you're the best receiver on the field, you'll play like it. And I kind of just stuck with that my whole career. Just stick to the basics, confidence and just work."
As a veteran receiver now, do you try to do the same for young receivers?
Here, kind of, not as much because I got here late and it's more of a, they built something together so they have something that I don't have and that's true team success in this league and I'm more trying to fit in with them. And I haven't played in two years, so I got other issues that I'm already dealing with right there. So right now, I'm being a sponge on more of them and then if there's a situation where I feel like I can help, I will. But as of right now, I'm just following their lead 'cause this is their team and I'm just trying to fit in.
I wasn't going to ask about injuries, but since you mentioned them, how did missing the past two seasons wear on you mentally and how do you make sure you’re in the right space now?
I feel like the injuries didn't really weigh on me, it was more the situation I was getting put in before the injuries is what really hurt just because at that time I was getting moved into, you would say the No. 1 receiver role and I got hurt. And then we got a new coaching staff and they felt the same way about it, then get hurt again and then you're like, ‘Sheez. Finally I guess I cracked the safe and I don't get the opportunity.'
But honestly the injuries, it made my body get healthy. I found out some things about my body. I feel great. I feel great for my age. I feel young, now it's just about getting the reps 'cause like you said, I did all that extra work and I felt like I had the lead and now I feel like people caught up and passed me, now I got to put in extra work to catch back up. That's the hardest part right now is just literally understanding that I can't just go to practice and do normal things. I have to do more because I'm so far back and I need to catch up.
Even as a veteran?
"Like at the end of the day, I know how to be successful in the league, but to feel a certain way, that only comes with reps. And I know how, I guess, to get open in certain routes and stuff like that, but it's a whole new scheme, it's a whole new position. So I got to figure out how to get open in those. So I just need reps, literally.
OK, what's the weirdest autograph you've been asked to sign?
"I signed a newborn before. I signed some areas I probably shouldn't have signed before. In Denver, they're a little bit psycho, I'm not going to lie. They got too much, I don't even know how to say it 'cause like here when we go to games, you don't see nobody. You go through a cut, valet and all that. In Denver, you're always around the fans, so you're always around some (stuff) and you never know who you're going to see that day. So I signed some weird things, I’m not going to lie.
Where'd you sign the baby at?
"I tried to be nice. I signed it right on the arm, but they were like (sign it on the forehead). I'm like, ‘Bro, you’re not about to go viral with me (where) people try to come at me for signing a newborn with a sharpie on the forehead.’"
How about the body parts?
"We’re just going to leave that. We’re going to leave that out of it. It was a fun experience."
Sunday night game this week. How will you pass time before going to the stadium?
"I try to stay off my phone as much as I can. It's a night game, so I’ll probably try to take a nap. Honestly, I'm a little bit everywhere, like sometimes I love watching football, but like I said, being a part of success, you kind of want to stay away from it. Usually you could find little clickbait things to watch. If your team isn't as good, they're like, ‘Oh, they're not going to win.’ But every time I turn on TV they’re like, ‘Oh, Super Bowl.' I'm like, 'Bro, I can't watch this.'"
Bulletin-board material is tough to come by these days.
"Yeah, you can't find it when you’re successful so it's like you got to find ways to get yourself going. And I have one of the biggest ways to get myself going, I haven't played in two years, man. And it's like just be thankful for every opportunity and just be blessed."
How about eating. Do you have a cut-off time?
"I'm telling you right now, all the routine I had it’s been completely different this year. It’s been different. Like things I did back then worked for me back then, but now it's just like it doesn't work. I was getting too hyped way before the game — way before the game. And now I just try to stay as calm as I possibly can so then I could be a psycho on the field once the game starts.
Last one: Who's the best player you played against, maybe in high school or little league, that disappeared off the map. Someone who didn't make the NFL or maybe even college, who you think was just a dog.
Patrick: Dillon Baxter. I think he was the No. 1 player in the country at one point, but he's from San Diego. He's a running back. No. 1 player in the country, went to USC. I think he got in trouble by USC, went somewhere else. I don't know where he went after. He was literally like — watch his highlights. His (stuff) was amazing.
How bad a man was he?
"Like, you’re going to watch it and you’re going to hit me up and be like, 'You're (expletive) right. That's the best high school player I've ever seen.' Everything. That’ll be your homework to do after this. Dillon Baxter, San Diego. He was a running back, but he played quarterback and it was — he wasn't like an undersized guy. He was built like a running back. He was the prototypical everything."
Dave Birkett will sign copies of his new book, "Detroit Lions: An Illustrated Timeline" at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Our Lady of Victory in Northville. Order your copy here. Contact him at dbirkett@freepress.com. Follow him on X and Instagram at @davebirkett.
Enjoy!!
5 questions with Tim Patrick: Detroit Lions WR talks signing babies and body parts
Article from yesterday's Freep.
Dave Birkett
Detroit Free Press
Tim Patrick has settled in as the Detroit Lions' No. 3 receiver after joining the team in late August. He has 12 catches for 177 yards this season following his release from the Denver Broncos. Patrick talked with the Free Press for this week's five questions.
Some questions and answers have been edited for clarity and brevity.
When you were a young receiver, who were the players that took you under their wing and what did they teach you?
Bennie Fowler and Demaryius Thomas. They just bred confidence in me, honestly. They saw I had the tools but lacked the confidence to know that I could do it in the league and they bred that confidence in me and told me just to focus on the basics, cause that’s what people forget later on down the line are the basics. They said if you just focus on the basics and think and know that you're the best receiver on the field, you'll play like it. And I kind of just stuck with that my whole career. Just stick to the basics, confidence and just work."
As a veteran receiver now, do you try to do the same for young receivers?
Here, kind of, not as much because I got here late and it's more of a, they built something together so they have something that I don't have and that's true team success in this league and I'm more trying to fit in with them. And I haven't played in two years, so I got other issues that I'm already dealing with right there. So right now, I'm being a sponge on more of them and then if there's a situation where I feel like I can help, I will. But as of right now, I'm just following their lead 'cause this is their team and I'm just trying to fit in.
I wasn't going to ask about injuries, but since you mentioned them, how did missing the past two seasons wear on you mentally and how do you make sure you’re in the right space now?
I feel like the injuries didn't really weigh on me, it was more the situation I was getting put in before the injuries is what really hurt just because at that time I was getting moved into, you would say the No. 1 receiver role and I got hurt. And then we got a new coaching staff and they felt the same way about it, then get hurt again and then you're like, ‘Sheez. Finally I guess I cracked the safe and I don't get the opportunity.'
But honestly the injuries, it made my body get healthy. I found out some things about my body. I feel great. I feel great for my age. I feel young, now it's just about getting the reps 'cause like you said, I did all that extra work and I felt like I had the lead and now I feel like people caught up and passed me, now I got to put in extra work to catch back up. That's the hardest part right now is just literally understanding that I can't just go to practice and do normal things. I have to do more because I'm so far back and I need to catch up.
Even as a veteran?
"Like at the end of the day, I know how to be successful in the league, but to feel a certain way, that only comes with reps. And I know how, I guess, to get open in certain routes and stuff like that, but it's a whole new scheme, it's a whole new position. So I got to figure out how to get open in those. So I just need reps, literally.
OK, what's the weirdest autograph you've been asked to sign?
"I signed a newborn before. I signed some areas I probably shouldn't have signed before. In Denver, they're a little bit psycho, I'm not going to lie. They got too much, I don't even know how to say it 'cause like here when we go to games, you don't see nobody. You go through a cut, valet and all that. In Denver, you're always around the fans, so you're always around some (stuff) and you never know who you're going to see that day. So I signed some weird things, I’m not going to lie.
Where'd you sign the baby at?
"I tried to be nice. I signed it right on the arm, but they were like (sign it on the forehead). I'm like, ‘Bro, you’re not about to go viral with me (where) people try to come at me for signing a newborn with a sharpie on the forehead.’"
How about the body parts?
"We’re just going to leave that. We’re going to leave that out of it. It was a fun experience."
Sunday night game this week. How will you pass time before going to the stadium?
"I try to stay off my phone as much as I can. It's a night game, so I’ll probably try to take a nap. Honestly, I'm a little bit everywhere, like sometimes I love watching football, but like I said, being a part of success, you kind of want to stay away from it. Usually you could find little clickbait things to watch. If your team isn't as good, they're like, ‘Oh, they're not going to win.’ But every time I turn on TV they’re like, ‘Oh, Super Bowl.' I'm like, 'Bro, I can't watch this.'"
Bulletin-board material is tough to come by these days.
"Yeah, you can't find it when you’re successful so it's like you got to find ways to get yourself going. And I have one of the biggest ways to get myself going, I haven't played in two years, man. And it's like just be thankful for every opportunity and just be blessed."
How about eating. Do you have a cut-off time?
"I'm telling you right now, all the routine I had it’s been completely different this year. It’s been different. Like things I did back then worked for me back then, but now it's just like it doesn't work. I was getting too hyped way before the game — way before the game. And now I just try to stay as calm as I possibly can so then I could be a psycho on the field once the game starts.
Last one: Who's the best player you played against, maybe in high school or little league, that disappeared off the map. Someone who didn't make the NFL or maybe even college, who you think was just a dog.
Patrick: Dillon Baxter. I think he was the No. 1 player in the country at one point, but he's from San Diego. He's a running back. No. 1 player in the country, went to USC. I think he got in trouble by USC, went somewhere else. I don't know where he went after. He was literally like — watch his highlights. His (stuff) was amazing.
How bad a man was he?
"Like, you’re going to watch it and you’re going to hit me up and be like, 'You're (expletive) right. That's the best high school player I've ever seen.' Everything. That’ll be your homework to do after this. Dillon Baxter, San Diego. He was a running back, but he played quarterback and it was — he wasn't like an undersized guy. He was built like a running back. He was the prototypical everything."
Dave Birkett will sign copies of his new book, "Detroit Lions: An Illustrated Timeline" at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Our Lady of Victory in Northville. Order your copy here. Contact him at dbirkett@freepress.com. Follow him on X and Instagram at @davebirkett.
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