Larry Fitzgerald is out of this world.

He makes the most impossible catches, often in double coverage, and is simply great. 

So gracefully he plays the game, when he catches the ball, when he leaps over defenders to make the catch, and when he runs past cornerbacks. The only thing they can see is his dreadlocks as he gallops into the end zone.

Most impressive of all is how humble he is after all of his accomplishments. He is possibly the best receiver in the game. He broke Jerry Rice's record for yards in a single postseason and this was only his first true statement to his dominance.

He single-handedly led the Cardinals inches away from hoisting the Lombardi trophy. 

Larry has had a life of ups and downs, going to military school and having his mom die while he was in college, but he has been surrounded by great people.

His father covered the Super Bowl Larry played in. He got emotional when our 44th president, Barack Obama, said his son was a great man.

In the NFL today, the wide receiver position has become filled with egotistical, selfish, cocky, arrogant people.

Not Fitzgerald.

Many receivers will refuse to go across the middle.

Not Fitzgerald.

Many will drop the easy pass.

Not Fitzgerald.

This is a true testament to his character, which makes him simply great.