If you look at all the top shooters in the NBA, guys that might be specialists like how I see myself, they're always 40 percent and above. So, that's a personal goal for me to get into that elite three-point shooting percentage.

Personally, I already get paid way too much to play a game.

There have been lots of times in my career where you go four or five games and feel like you can't hit anything. And you also have the exact opposite.

I know I have a lot of areas and room to improve.

You've got to be able to guard hard and then work yourself offensively to get shots.

Cleveland, although I didn't play a lot I really learned a ton in my year and a half of being there. I was really fortunate to be around some of the game's best players.

Obviously any time you play home in front of your own fans, you definitely get a distinct advantage that way.

Obviously, you hope to make shots. But you can't put too much pressure on yourself to make it, because whether or not they go in, you're creating space everybody else.

If you've got one guy that can create just a little bit of space for somebody that can get downhill, it opens up everything offensively.

I'm one of the best shooters in the League.

You never want to see anybody get hurt... but if you've ever played basketball before you've probably sprained your ankle so that stuff happens. It's part of the game.

Obviously, back-to-backs are tough... but everyone goes through it in this league.

Even over the course of the NBA's schedule, you're gonna have games where you're gonna take your lumps.

You're gonna have pretty bad defeats. But you've gotta be able to respond and come back in and compete the next night.

I think I've gotten more comfortable and more confident on the defensive end. I've just been able to anticipate things a little bit better instead of reacting to how guys play offensively.

I think Brooklyn is easily one of the best NBA cities out there.

It's hard to compete with everything that Brooklyn has to offer as a city.

The teams that have got good continuity, good chemistry typically have more success.

I know what my game is and what I do well and I'm just going to keep trying to I,prove and make sure I'm consistent as possible in those areas.

Over the course of the game you're probably going to have 10 turnovers or so just because you're playing hard, you're competing, that's the way the game goes. But it's the other 10 that you have to limit. You can't have the careless ones, the ones where guys are cutting backdoor and you throw it, or you try the hail mary pass.

It's hard to please everyone, and I learnt quite early that that's never going to happen.

Football is a game of opinions, and some people have a great opinion of me, and some people probably think I'm absolutely useless.

You can be humbled as a goalkeeper. You have to accept that.

Playing to a decent standard sometimes isn't enough.

You look at some of the top teams in the world that have got the best strikers, and they are looking to buy another top striker. But if you have got a top goalkeeper, you are not often looking to buy another goalkeeper.

It's difficult to make predictions in the Premier League, as unpredictable things can happen, and I know that well: I won the title in a crazy way and lost one unexpectedly.

I was a bowler - left arm, smash it down as fast as I could. I did a lot of work with Damian D'Oliveira, and I probably had a chance of doing that for a living. But when I reached 16, I knew I couldn't carry on playing both football and cricket, and I was already in the Shrewsbury squad.

If crowds give you abuse, there's no point standing there and giving it them back; you just move on.

There are too many haters.

I always assess what's my fault, but I don't dwell on mistakes, I never have; it's not part of my make up. I know what I am and know what I can do. You just move on.

You can't live in fear of preventing mistakes.

I will never go into a game aggressive because I will cost my team the victory if I am reckless. If I have got a personal vendetta with someone, or I don't like the way someone has done something to me in the game, I am just going to have to get over it.

I've got a lot of energy and a lot of passion.

I will try to give it everything for my country. I would love to get to 23, then 25 and 30 caps. They are things I love to do every time I line up. It's a great feeling.

It's a great honour that someone like Sir Alex Ferguson goes out of his way to mention my name.

You can say what you want about Carlos Tevez, but when he plays, he plays to win, and he plays for his team-mates.

International football's not always about playing the top three in the world - it's about going to some of the tougher places around Europe and playing real tough games.

Whatever I'm capable of, I need to be the best I can.

I love football, and if I could, I would play every day, even if it is my job.

I know how quickly things can change in football, and I am only where I am because someone else lost their place.

Growing up, David Seaman was a massive role model for me. Peter Schmeichel and him were the ones I looked up to.

I'm grateful to Torino because they offered me a true, solid opportunity.

I'm going to continue being me through the good times and the bad.

It's a strange world, the goalkeeping world.

There are plenty of downsides in life for anyone, including me. Everyone has their own personal worries. Everyone has normal families, with normal arguments. But in football, things are going really well, and that's what I want to maintain. That's one thing I can keep on top of.

You have got to let the ball come to you as a keeper.

Torino is a city that breathes football.

I'm very grateful for what Mr Capello did for my career. I was really honoured that he put me in as his number one.

It's tough to be at your best all season, and you need to be there for each other.

I hate letting goals in, and some of them have come in a bit of an awkward manner.