It's important to have the opportunity to learn.

For me, Jose Mourinho is one of the best managers in the world. I don't think he needs to show anyone that he is one of the best.

To win games, we need to be focused for 95 minutes. If not, you always pay in football.

Always, you miss all the players when they are injured.

Obviously, if you win a trophy, like I won when I was a player, it's a moment to celebrate. For me - this is my mentality, and I don't want to say it's right or wrong - I love to celebrate in private and not make it public. I love to celebrate the things with your team-mates.

I love it when the people celebrate when they beat you.

I always remember being competitive. From the beginning, with my brothers, with my friends, playing at school, everything - in everything I was involved in.

After games, my wife gives me a lot of advice and criticism. Sometimes, I am upset. I say, 'Why do you advise me this?' But I like it, because to listen to a different point of view is always important. You can find a different position or point of view that can help you to be more creative.

We have short memories in football.

I work with young people, and I know that we must be careful. Newspaper headlines, sudden notoriety, and important comparisons can lead to confusion.

We have seen that many teams, both in La Liga and the Premier League, have the economic capacity to steal a star from an important team.

When you play for Barcelona, there is always pressure to win - you play for something special. It's the same when you player for Tottenham; the names are not important.

What puts you in a different level is if you win the Premier League, and you're capable of challenging every season for the Premier League, and if you play Champions League, and you really believe, and you're a real contender one day to win the Champions League. That's my objective in Tottenham.

My ambition is to win the Champions League one day with Tottenham, or the Premier League.

When the club offers you the job, they say what the club expects from you. If the club says to you, 'I want you to win the Champions League, the Premier League, the Carabao Cup,' you say, 'OK, you want to win this and this and this? Can you give me this and this and this?'

Rather than complain about a thing you cannot change, I try to find a solution to help the performance in the best way.

I love to work and feel part of the project: to share and create something special.

I feel very important at Tottenham, very comfortable, and I enjoy the journey a lot.

To be a player is so difficult.

I live in the present; there is nothing more important than that.

It is always in our dream to win, and you need to dream of bigger things.

It is always in my nature to work like you are going to be at the club forever, for your life.

I think all the players need coaching; if you do not push the player, they are going to be too comfortable. Always, you need to push.

If you are 25, 30, 35, you need to think you can learn every day. If not, you are going to go backwards, and of course you are going to fail, and you begin to see the end of your career.

I'm someone who likes new things, likes change. But I also like challenges. I was a little bit of a prisoner to my challenge each time.

The fact is I have an interpreter because he gives me the security that, when I have to answer complex questions, and with my complex answers, it's much better I have an interpreter to make sure nothing is misconstrued.

Juventus are specialists because they have the habit to win and the habit to put pressure on the referee. It's a club with a culture to try to do everything to help the team.

It's difficult to compete if you are not consistent.

I believe the biggest stigma right now, with mental health, is that a lot of men are not talking about it.

One thing that I've learned is that you don't have to be a prima donna or think you are better than other people in order to succeed.

I've never been ashamed of being the ham or the provocateur, as it were, in my style of commentary or my style of showmanship.

I actually think I suck. I think I'm one of the worst announcers, one of the worst performers there is. It blows my mind that I keep getting hired. But when I'm doing it, yeah, I'll admit: No one can do it like I can.

UFC is UFC, and God bless them, they have the largest roster and some amazing fighters, but there's amazing fighters everywhere. That's why I am impressed with what Bellator has attempted to do with the tournament or with Aaron Pico and some of the younger talent.

When I'm talking or performing, I'm alive. That's why I work so much.

As much as I love to watch movies, nothing beats being ringside for a championship fight in boxing.

I've called all sports. I was a radio DJ, club DJ, talk show host, hockey, basketball, football; you name it, I've done it.

In New Japan, it is kept very simple. It's about proving to the other man or woman that you are the better person. And guess what? It's about championships.

I would say Chael Sonnen would be a natural for professional wrestling.

All combat sports are connected.

I'm trying to show people that you can have any kind of life you want.

I was as much at first probably against Conor McGregor and Floyd Mayweather as anyone else but... as soon as I turned off the purity of the combat sports thing, this is a business. Guys, we're all trying to make a living, we're all trying to entertain people and guess what, it's the second-biggest PPV in history regardless of how you feel about it.

I need to stay busy. Otherwise, I am like so many people, alone with my thoughts, and I can be my own worst enemy.

I'm a huge sports fan, and I'm a huge entertainment fan.

I was willing to walk away from my dream job, let's leave it at that. In order for me to do that, I had to be true to my convictions and what makes you a human being.

I grew up on camera. I started at 16.

I love to consume information of all kinds, and I think that also hopefully helps with my broadcasting, that I always try to bring up a fact that maybe will connect to a person who's not a big fan, or maybe a pop culture reference.

I will always be thankful to WWE for letting me be the voice of SmackDown Live and bring it to the USA Network.

I'm not a fan of my own work. People ask why I do it, but it's because I actually love what I'm doing in the moment. I live for it. It's a release.

Pride was a date night - the cool thing to do at the time - so people were dressed to the nines, and they got quite an experience, visually and otherwise. It was Cirque du Soleil meets the Super Bowl meets WrestleMania meets your favorite rock n' roll concert.

Not talking about mental illness is killing people. We need that to stop.