By Cathy Finkler
When Victor Cruz was 20, he was an unknown, working at a retail outlet in the sprawling Garden State Plaza mall in northern New Jersey.
Five years later, the New York Giants wide receiver is known virtually everywhere: he’s salsa danced his way through end zones and he’s helped his team on their way to a Super Bowl championship.
Cruz’s road to the NFL wasn’t just a straight line to a touchdown. Cruz left college twice before graduating and becoming an undrafted free agent.
Cruz dropped by Morning Joe Wednesday to discuss his new book, “Out of the Blue,” with co-author Peter Schrager.
He reflected on his journey saying, “the ride wasn’t always easy.” Schrager agreed with Cruz in saying he was not “groomed to be a football player” and that “every step of the way there’s been a setback.”
Growing up in Paterson, New Jersey to a single mother, Cruz worked hard to graduate high school and attend college, noting the SAT test was a struggle. Cruz took the test six times before he reached an acceptable score. When Mika asked him to talk about that struggle, Cruz said, “standardized tests weren’t my thing,” but he understood he had to pass the test, to get to his “next dream, next goal.”








