"Ok, smaller is a relative term. When I graduated high school, I was 6'4", 250 pounds, like Mike Evans' size. By no means small, just compared to where I'm at now, it's pretty small. So, I never had those [sleep] issues. Going into my second year, going through training camp and all that, my body was just deteriorating. I went from like 315 to 290 in like two and a half weeks. I had constant bruises because my body wasn't healing. I went in and the tests nowadays are so easy, it's literally an at-home test. They give you an oxygen sensor that you put on your finger, a sensor that goes around your chest and there's an oxygen tube for when you stop breathing and that's really it. Obviously if they need more info, they'll have to do the in-house, very in-depth test but with me, they didn't have to because it was severe enough that they could tell I had it. I remember doing it and taking it back that next morning and they called me within two hours like, 'hey, come back as soon as you can this afternoon, this is serious, you could have some major issues.' Reggie White died from sleep apnea. He knew he had it, had his machine but never put his machine on. What happens with sleep apnea is you stop breathing and your body shocks yourself awake, your brain shocks you awake and when you start getting older, that's bad for your heart they think that he gave himself a heart attack and he died. It's a serious thing, it's not just, 'oh, I'm not getting a lot of sleep,' it's serious. There are a lot more health risks to it than just not getting a good night's sleep."