Every footballer knows the Premier League is a great league. It's very competitive, and it's among the best leagues in the world.

In football, you can't always play well, and sometimes there will be criticism. Sometimes when I get a lot, it helps me. It makes me work even harder to improve and make the critics a little more positive.

Naples has given me so much, and that is why I am so happy here. The warmth and affection of the fans have given me extra confidence. I have a great deal of love for them and for this city.

Nobody has the right to negatively judge a player like Balotelli, as people can make mistakes.

Some players like to go out partying, but I like the quiet life.

A striker scores goals, but the goalkeepers saves them, the defenders close chances down, and all the credit is shared out.

In every team I have played with, and of all of the attackers I have played with, each one was different.

Football is a sport where you never know what is going to happen between one match and the next.

Football is a team sport, and each person plays a role - this is what counts.

I am aware that I am not extraordinarily gifted in terms of technique.

You feel many things during a match. There are things that annoy you. During important games, I do not always touch the ball a lot.

In football, sometimes things happen that are outside of your control, leading the club to make decisions.

To me, every match is important.

I want to win something important with PSG.

When we are little, we always dream, and the first teams that come into your head are those on the world stage for their marketing, their image, their publicity. That makes you dream about how nice it would be to play for Real Madrid, to play for Barcelona.

Coaching changes are a part of football; they arrive ready to meet the goals they have been set, so you respect them and work with them like any other.

It is normal for the press to create certain comparisons, but they are wrong to do that because each player is different, and they have their own ways of dealing with situations.

Everyone is committed to giving their best and to putting in 100 percent in every match to win.

When, as a player, you have dreamed of playing at the highest level, it's normal that it gets your attention to be linked as a target as a possible addition to important clubs in the world.

I've always said that wherever I have played, I've always respected that jersey, and I've always defended it as though I had been a supporter of the team all my life.

The English teams are very difficult to face.

I'll always thank all of the teams I played for from the bottom of my heart because they all helped me grow as a person and a footballer, but the three years I spent in Naples were fantastic. That city gave me everything - my name, maturity, and international recognition. I get very emotional when Naples is mentioned.

There's a lot of politics in football, and sometimes the real values of the sport, those human values, get lost.

You always hope new players complete the team with their qualities.

I always have the hunger to score, to be on the pitch and finish the team's moves.

I want to help my teammates, even if I'm a striker, because it's important to win back possession. But scoring is something incomparable.

It's always good to get back to your teammates.

At the end of the day, it is football, and we are all important on the pitch. We must play as a team and not listen to what others are saying.

I would move back to Italy, but only to Napoli. I speak with respect for all of the clubs I played for, but all of my family and those who know me already know that this is where I left part of my heart.

Some people say I run too much, and by the time I arrive in front of goal, when I have to provide the finish, I am tired. But this is just my way of playing. I need to do this to score goals.

I have never made a secret that I prefer to play centrally, it is where I feel I can get most goals from. At the same time, though, I also understand that you need to make sacrifices for the team.

I am an athlete for Christ. That's why I play for Him, to give Him glory, to thank Him for giving me the ability to play football.

Football puts everything at your fingertips. And I was raised in a way that focused everything on looking after your family. Faith really helped me realise that the temptations that you have on hand will give you joy, enjoyment, whatever, but only for a short while. And after that, it is all gloom.

I was born a footballer. Before I could walk, I was chasing balls.

My objective is not to play for money, as I just want to leave good memories. That is the most important thing!

It is the entire team that has to work together. Football is a team game. We all have to give our all.

I have to work hard, just like any other player.

A footballer must be prepared to be welcomed when all is well and to receive criticism when things are not working out. Of course, it is not easy nor pleasant to hear negative things about you.

For Brazil or any other national team in the world, to play Uruguay is a commitment and a very tough match.

Disciples of Keynes, who focus on aggregate demand, view any increase in household wealth as raising employment because they say it adds to consumer demand.

I'm old enough to remember in the 1930s and the 1940s when thrift, frugality, was considered an important virtue.

Statistical studies are all over the lot about the pluses and minuses of raising the minimum wage.

Unemployment determination in a modern economy was the main subject area of my research from the mid-1960s to the end of the 1970s and again from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s.

The level of dynamism is a matter of how fertile the country is in coming up with innovative ideas having prospects of profitability, how adept it is at identifying and nourishing the ideas with the best prospects, and how prepared it is in evaluating and trying out the new products and methods that are launched onto the market.

I started to think about what drives innovation and what its social significance might be. The next step was to think innovators are taking a leap into the unknown. That led me to the thought that it is also a source of fun and employee engagement.

After a major loss of dynamism in the 1960s, productivity growth rates began dropping in most countries, falling by half in the U.S. in the 1970s and more or less ceasing altogether in France, Germany and Britain in the late 1990s.

A nation's economy is more than its markets, tastes, technologies and property rights.

Well into the 20th century, scholars viewed economic advances as resulting from commercial innovations enabled by the discoveries of scientists - discoveries that come from outside the economy and out of the blue.

In the 1960s, and stretching back to the 1930s, it was felt by many economists that easy money is a reliable way to increase employment.

Those of us born into vitalist and expressionist cultures must hope that governments will draw back from shutting down the modernist project of exploring, experimenting, and imagining - of voyaging into the unknown - that has been essential for rewarding lives.