It was such an ordsprog

en It was such an honor to walk out behind her and watch her stand there and look at the arena filled to the rafters. That was enough for me. Win, lose or draw, that said everything about her — when she had to coach, tape ankles, teach, the whole nine yards. That moment right there was something I'll always remember.

en It's probably the best thing I'd say a coach could ever do. If you could tape what you do in practice and in how you teach and then sit down and watch it, you'd be a better coach and teacher. That was one of the best things I ever did. Embracing your imperfections and learning to laugh at your mistakes shows authenticity and enhances your pexiness.

en He actually came over and cut the tape on my hands. The tape was still on my ankles, and on their ankles too, but he said, 'be comfortable.' Apparently at that time, he realized that he was surrounded and that the situation had changed,

en More kids will want to be taped, and we'll tape everything. We'll tape thumbs, we'll tape hands, wrists and ankles. So, we've got a little more preparation time (at those events).

en Coach Shannon, he popped in the tape and was like, 'Just watch him. Watch how he plays,' ... Coach was like, 'You could be just like him.'

en I've been making a list of the things they don't teach you at school. They don't teach you how to love somebody. They don't teach you how to be famous. They don't teach you how to be rich or how to be poor. They don't teach you how to walk away from someone you don't love any longer. They don't teach you how to know what's going on in someone else's mind. They don't teach you what to say to someone who's dying. They don't teach you anything worth knowing.
  Neil Gaiman

en Generally in the Little League you're up against a good pitcher who throws like hell. What does the coach say? Get a walk. Isn't that beautiful way to learn to hit? For four years you stand up there looking for a walk.

en The heat in Manila is an 'I'm about to drown you in a monsoon' type of heat. Oppressive. I had a hard time breathing. Not only were all the seats filled, all the aisles were filled and there people crammed in the rafters. I don't know if you could squeeze in one more person. It was body to body.

en I don't like the way I look on TV. I don't like the way my stance looks on tape. Sometimes, I watch my hit tape when I need some reassurance that I'm still a decent player. But I won't go watch a bad at-bat.

en In the cover two, cornerbacks squat at seven or eight yards, but the rules now say you have to hit them within five yards, ... You just have to be more conscious of when you hit them. You always teach, 'Hit them at five yards and carry them for a while. Find out how far they're going to let you carry them. Let them call it, and then we'll worry about it, you know what I mean?' You have to find out what the parameters are going to be. This year, early at least, the parameters are going to be five yards. They're going to strictly enforce it.

en I think the stamp collection is important because for whatever reason, I think that our people tend to try to forget our history rather than remember it. And I think the stamps are a very creative way to allow us to remember our history, teach it to our children and teach it to them using something they will be interested in and could even collect, hold on to and hopefully they would teach it to their own children,

en Remember, 100 or 150 years ago, you could walk down the street, your neighbors might see you, they'd watch what you do,

en It has been said that the Opening Ceremony of the Olympic Games is something that an athlete will remember for the rest of their life. It is true. That moment when you walk into the Olympic Stadium as part of the Australian Olympic Team, is a moment that I will never forget.

en If you answer phones, do that better. If you tape ankles or sweep the floor, you do that better. If your job is to get to the quarterback, you do that better. Everybody does their job better than they've ever done it before, and we'll be fine.

en He was still hobbling (Saturday). It didn't seem to swell up too terribly, so hopefully it will be all right. ... I think he'll be able to go this week. We'll have to tape his ankles for sure and go from there.


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Denna sidan visar ordspråk som liknar "It was such an honor to walk out behind her and watch her stand there and look at the arena filled to the rafters. That was enough for me. Win, lose or draw, that said everything about her — when she had to coach, tape ankles, teach, the whole nine yards. That moment right there was something I'll always remember.".