WATCH: New York Jets DC Gregg Williams issues bold challenge to rising star Jamal Adams

For better or worse, Gregg Williams definitely isn't one to hold his tongue. That's bound to make the latest New York Jets defensive coordinator a popular guy with the media.
Williams held his introductory press on Thursday after the Jets' final day of practice until training camp.
Here's a sampling of some of the colorful commentary from Williams' first time meeting with the New York media:
On his approach to motivating Pro Bowl safety Jamal Adams:
"Some of the guys I've coached before, he's watched those films. Some of those [guys] are his idols too. One of the things that he was very motivated by directly was when I said: 'You know I've coached a lot better people than you before."
On his relationship with Jets outside linebackers coach Joe Vitti (who testified against Williams in the New Orleans Saints' Bountygate scandal):
"Not a question. Next question...He's a great friend of mine and he'll always be a great friend of mine. I don't care what you've written."
On what's going to make the Jets special on defense:
"The multiplicity of what we do, not very many people do as much as we do."
On what the Jets' defensive scheme will be:
“I have 42 packages of defense. What does that mean? Forty-two ways to get these 11 guys out there. I’m not going to do all of those here. Right now, we only have 14 or 15 of them, how to package guys to get out there, who’s going out there. After going through the OTAs and the minicamp, I have a better feel for these guys. I thought I knew them, now I think I have a good feel for them and you really don’t have it until you get into the big-time games. Not the preseason, it takes a few seasonal games to see how you respond under pressure. We’re going to package as many as we can to get guys ready to go. People talk about starters. Everybody who makes the team is a starter in the National Football League.”
On how unity will translate to success on the field:
“The reason I keep getting hired is culture. Culture beats strategy any day of the week. It’s about how you find ways yourself to be tougher, how you find ways to play harder, play smarter for longer than any opponent you go against. All the scheme is, is a way to surround the ball, surround the formation. Then it’s find ball, see ball, get ball. But it comes from an attitude. It comes from a personal understanding of what it takes to play this game at this level at the highest level.”
