I wish no teams had cheerleaders. I find it more distracting than anything else.
On this team, we're all united in a common goal: to keep my job.
And historically the owners have used loyalty to a team or a city to hold players as opposed to always paying their worth.
The whole Miami Heat team is my least my favorite athlete. Why? Because they keep beating my Pacers.
Soccer isn't very social. Plus, if you don't like someone on the other team, you can do something about it.
I have scored against every team, every country, every defender in the world.
I know about two things: 'Rocky III' and Clubber Lang, and 'A-Team' and B.A. Baracus. That's who I am!
Everyone in my high school was a bit nerdy. We didn't even have a football team.
I don't know if we are the best team in the world. I am lucky to be playing alongside some of the best players around. It's a dream.
A family member of mine was diagnosed with lymphoma, and the treatment they're getting wouldn't exist if it weren't for the work that Team in Training does. I want to support them.
A chance, as a coach, to take a team to the World Cup finals is probably as high up the tree as it gets, certainly with one-day cricket.
I'm competitive. I'd love another chance to be part of a Stanley Cup championship team. That'd be awesome.
I have no intention of letting this decision change the way that I approach my training and preparation for games, but the time has come for me to realise that I have gone as far as I can go with this England team.
I'm reverent toward my sources. History is a team sport, and references are how you support your teammates.
Many players want to make as much money as they can and change teams for ten grand. How is that going to make much difference to their lives?
No matter how good a driver you are, you have to have the right car and the right team behind you in order to succeed.
I was first to break the news about the death of Lady Diana. The CNN team couldn't get into makeup fast enough.
Of course, there will be few people who are sympathetic but you don't become a great team overnight, no matter how much money you have at your disposal.
While working as a team, you push yourself forward and move outside the boundaries. It's a great thing.
I think the preponderant opinion clearly was that St. Louis could be a great football city if it had a team of its own that they could really root for.
All great pitches have a few things in common: the founder/team is wicked smart, the idea is big and a breakthrough, and the market is potentially enormous.