I don't think City play a Brazilian style - it is more Spanish the way we play here.

You need to be ready for all situations.

To be able to battle is very important.

It is always tough to play against Norwich.

The Premier League is always like that - you never know what can happen! Even at the top of the table and bottom of the table.

I spent eight years in Ukraine, and I played against Kiev many times.

Having trust in your manager is the most important thing for a footballer.

It is impossible to do it for the whole game, but when you have the ball for most of the game and have players like Samir Nasri, David Silva, Yaya Toure, and Raheem Sterling, they keep the ball so well.

Every player at a high level faces pressure and must respond, and I am ready for that, too.

I know a lot about City.

My first aim is to play well for my club, Manchester City. If I do, I am sure that will come to the attention of the national manager.

In Ukraine as well as in Brazil, Manchester City is now considered one of the best teams in the world, and after I signed, people back home in Brazil congratulated me for signing for one of the top teams in the world.

It is not easy to play two games, travel, and keep the same performance in 48 hours.

The first time was in Brazil, and the second time was when I was playing for Shakhtar against Inter in Milan. Fans were banned from the stadium on both occasions, and it is different. You have to keep your concentration on the pitch and try to win the game.

Champions League matches are not always played on good pitches.

There are a lot of people in England with good football knowledge.

I believe my chances of making the World Cup squad will improve if I join City. My exposure would be better because Brazil is biased towards the Ukrainian league.

I was so happy to finish my first season in England with two trophies.

The first season in a new country like England is very difficult.

If someone was ever racist towards me, I would go wild.

You can be a big fish in a small pond, but you're only going to be competing against people at that level.

I'm not going to throw in the towel a moment earlier than I think I have to.

It's a very simple answer, how to get my abs so defined. I have a very healthy diet of a lot of laughter. If you laugh all the time, you're consistently flexing your abdominals all the time.

I don't really pay attention to the news or stuff like that or what's going on in politics.

I think Finn Balor is more about confidence, a smarter version of Prince Devitt. Otherwise, they have the same core values, same techniques, and the same heart.

I really believe in the power of positive thinking and the collective power of people's thoughts spawning something into becoming reality.

I try and look at the positives in every situation.

I was big into hip-hop as a kid, and when I was eighteen, I got into dance and rave music, which was popular in Ireland at the time.

A lot of people are under the impression that Finn Balor relies on the Demon King, but that is certainly not the case.

I'm the sort of person with a very short attention span, and I lose interest in things very quickly.

When I first broke in, I wanted to be the best technical wrestler on the planet.

When kids tune in and see Jordan Devlin, Trent Seven, Pete Dunne, Wolfgang on the WWE Network, and then they see a poster at the town hall for their local wrestling show, they're gonna say, 'Oh my God, that's Pete Dunne. I wanna go see him.'

2010 was an incredible year for me. I won the Best of the Super Juniors, and went on to win the IWGP Junior Heavyweight title. That was an unbelievable achievement.

I came up in the U.K., which is a very catch-as-catch-can style, and then I somehow ended up in Japan and spent eight years there learning strong style. I got to spend some time in Mexico learning the lucha libre style, and the WWE is a hybrid style of everything mixed together.

If I'm going to draw something, I don't know the day before what I'm going to draw. It's just very much an interpretation of how I'm feeling that day and what I think is the coolest thing in my brain at that very moment.

It was a big gamble to come to WWE, and it was a big gamble to come to NXT. Honestly, the gamble paid off.

My parents have supported me everywhere I've went: U.K. to Japan, NXT.

To go from a small wrestling dojo to the Performance Center was just mind-blowing. The sheer scale - I didn't think anything like that could possibly exist.

We're all humans living on this tiny little rock, floating through space at, like, thousands of miles an hour. We should all just get along.

Just remember that when I went to New Japan, nobody knew who I was. And I've done okay.

I do enjoy a level of intensity that I bring when I'm the Demon, but it's a mindset that takes a couple of days to get into; it's not something I can do every day.

With regards to the paint, I'm normally quite introverted and shy. I keep myself to myself, and I find that when I hide behind the paint, so to speak, I'm able to let myself go more and move more freely than I can without it.

I don't really like to think too far into the future.

I started playing soccer when I was 6 years old and started lifting weights when I was 16, so it's not like I never exercised.

Everyone that watches wrestling as a kid dreams of being a wrestler for WWE.

Balor Club is for everyone.

I'm going to look forward to the future as opposed to looking back at the past.

It's almost like putting on a mask protects you from people's judgments and lets you completely flow freely, like, with all your aggression and our animosity against anything.

I worry too much about the present to worry about the future.

When you go out there, and you're in the ring, honestly, half the time you forget what city you're even in because you're so focused on what you're doing and the task at hand.