When people think Arsenal had a bad season and we've had a good one, yet they still finish above us, it hurts.

I love this club, and to be wearing number 10 for Tottenham is amazing for me. I could not resist.

It's the worst feeling in the world - losing, and losing in a final on the big stage is even worse.

Whenever a new manager comes in you want to impress him.

I can't remember the last time I went to a club.

I love going to the Algarve and playing golf.

I remember the European Championships in 2004. Wayne Rooney was a special player in that tournament, and I definitely cried when we got knocked out then.

I'm in the team to score goals. I try and score as many as I can in the season to help the team out.

I think I had set-backs, but I still always had that belief that I was going to play for Tottenham Hotspur. Even when I went out on loan to clubs, it was always to come back and be a Spurs player.

In football, you have to grow up quickly, and you're generally more mature than other people your age.

The more players who come through the academy and make it into the first team, that's what we want. Not just for the club but for the country. If they're young English players coming through, that's fantastic. I'm happy to be part of that.

I've always wanted to be a footballer, and I've always believed that's the path I was going to go down.

I think to progress in major tournaments and to be at your best, you need a big squad, and you need to rotate it.

Anything I can do that will help me and the team, I'm happy to do it.

Tom Brady is a big inspiration and a big idol of mine.

You can run in behind someone - one v. one, you're better - so I'm always trying to work on my speed. That's probably one aspect I've worked on the hardest as a player. I want to always improve on everything in my game, but that's one area I really work on.

All we can do is win our games.

There's no point playing up front just because you want to be the one who scores the goals. Make sure you have a knack for it.

Getting respect from the opposition is a nice thing.

It depends on how my football career goes, but when I am finished, I would love to go the NFL and be a kicker. Even if I got to play just one game, it is something I would like to do.

I was a fan once, and I remember what it was like approaching footballers for their autographs. I used to get starstruck a lot of the time.

I want to keep working hard and looking to progress.

I take it season by season. I don't like looking too far ahead, because you never know what can happen.

If I can be a role model, or if I can maybe make another manager play a young player coming through rather than buy a player, that's incredible.

I'd love to be captain of Tottenham and hopefully England as well.

I want to play every game, as does every player. But sometimes, you just have to listen to the manager.

I want to go and get more goals, create my chances for the team, and do my best for Tottenham Hotspur.

Maybe defenders don't always get the recognition like the other players get.

Watching all the football over the weekend - and having to wait until Monday night to play - gets you ready, gets you firing.

To go out at Wembley and score is what you dream about as a kid.

I'm always disappointed when I don't score.

You want the best players to be on form come the Euros.

Personally, I love training, and getting paid to play football is incredible. Playing the game and working hard is what I have always dreamed of doing.

The double sessions are tough. The manager wants us to get fit, wants us to work hard. And that's because the Premier League is so tough. We need it. Something we have to do.

You have to choose whether to take the money or follow your own ambitions, playing in the best league in the world and winning titles.

Vincent Janssen has come in and done very well. He's a great player and different type of player to me.

Nine or ten, I like playing both. I like to score goals, and I feel in both positions I can score goals.

Some people are motivated by money - I'm not one of them.

I am motivated by trying to win trophies.

I am happy at Tottenham. I go into work every day with a smile on my face, and that is important.

Money is a bonus of the job, but it doesn't always make you happy.

I'd say Dele Alli has got good style.

I've always been working hard on my speed for the last few years. Obviously I'm not slow, but as a striker, the more speed you have, the better you are.

It doesn't always click for a new player in a new team: you don't always go in and hit the ground running and score all the time.

Whenever I'm on the pitch, I feel confident.

The manager and the fitness staff condition every training session. They plan it out week by week on what players need. If players need a rest, they will do that; if players need to work hard, they will do that as well.

It is down to the manager what he wants to do in the transfer window. Us as players, we just have to focus on each game that comes along and try and do our best.

Beckham was a great inspiration to me growing up.

At Norwich, I was injured, and then I went to Leicester, and I found myself on the bench. But I still used that to my advantage as an experience - I had to do that here at Spurs for a while, be on the bench and wait for my chance. It's definitely something that's helped me with my game.

I think self-belief is a massive thing in football. If you don't believe in yourself, not many others will. Work hard and believe in yourself, and I think you'll go as far as your body will take you.