I just think winners win. And guys who won all the way through high school and college, the best player at every level, they have a way of making things happen and winning games.
You know what guys do? They stand up for people.
Oh, I wish I could tell you I was a Mr. Fix-It, but I am not that kind of guy. I get frustrated so easily.
When I hear a guy lost a battle to cancer, that really did bother me, that that's a term. It implies that he failed and that somebody else that defeated cancer is heroic and courageous.
There are these showcase clubs where 14 guys will go on in a row and people are laughing at everything, and I'm like - 'I can't laugh that much. That's so weird to me.'
What I have is a bunch of really hungry, amazingly talented guys that can kick anybody's rear end.
If I'm watching my favorite boxer, and he's just won the heavyweight championship of the world, and he retires, it kind of makes the guy a legend.
You give the guy an Image Award three years in a row and then turn on him like that? If that's the role they want to fulfill, they need to send a clearer message.
You need a teaching coach who understands the game of basketball, not just some guy coming on the court talking about Xs and Os.
There's only a couple stats that matter. No one cares how many blocked shots a guy has, how many hits.
Bad guys are complicated characters. It's always fun to play them. You get away with a lot more. You don't have a heroic code you have to live by.
I've never been comfortable around groups of guys when it gets into the putting-down. My past being a kind of geek - it kind of turns into an attack on the weakest of the group.
First of all I thought it was ugly, I thought it was ridiculous that undercover police guys would drive a striped tomato and I've never been a big champion of Ford.
I think Chris Matthews is a very bright guy. I'd listen to him even if he didn't shout at people.
We could see that he was a charismatic guy who jumps over the moon and is very competitive, but nobody could have predicted what he would become to our culture.
None of us wanted to be the bass player. In our minds he was the fat guy who always played at the back.
Everyone should play like Adrian Peterson. This guy does everything full speed. Pro Bowl - promoting himself for MVP.
When you gotta go through something tough, I've always been a guy that just wants to get it out of the way.
We were always able to sing and blend well together; that's our gift. But aside from that, we're really two different guys.
These guys who keep on playing but aren't winning, you've got to sit them down and let them figure it out and perform a little gut-check on themselves.
I loved Wimbledon and what it meant, but the surface felt uncomfortable. I just didn't like it, I was a hard-court guy, a Californian kid.