I'm pretty positive, optimistic, so I always expect the best.

Bayern want a decade of success like Barca. That's OK if you have the money because it increases the possibility of success. But it's not guaranteed.

I love football and the intensity of football in Liverpool, this is what is very good for me.

What is Champions League level? I saw a lot of rubbish games at Champions League level.

I've met some Evertonians in the street, and they've been friendly. I've had taxi drivers who have been Everton fans. They've been really nice.

He is really something. I love him. He is Sir Arsene Wenger.

The wind can be quite extreme in England. We are not familiar with that in Germany, and you have to keep things simple.

Yes, it is one of my ultimate aims - it is the ultimate sense of football: to make the people happy, to let them live some emotions that you usually can't get.

You'd be waiting 30 or 40 years for me to build a table. I have more than two left hands.

Shinji Kagawa is one of the best players in the world, and he now plays 20 minutes at Manchester United - on the left wing! My heart breaks. Really, I have tears in my eyes. Central midfield is Shinji's best role.

Winning the title in England is the biggest challenge of them all.

In Dortmund, they say the derby is more important than the championship. You can feel it around the game.

My father gave me some advice when I was very young - whatever someone tells you in the future, don't forget Pele is the best.

I always thought about working in England because of the kind of football, the intensity of football. Liverpool was first choice.

I am not saying I am the best manager in the world. But I'm quite good.

If you watch me during the game, I celebrate when we press the ball and it goes out.

Players who are not from the U.K. have to get used to the winds. I have to adapt my style as a result as well. Often, you are forced to keep things simple.

Each doctor makes a much, much more important job than I do, but at the end, nobody talks about him. We all know about it, but we don't really think about it.

I know I'm more on television, and I'm more recognisable than maybe even the players because they run and train, but I just stand there, and my face does all these funny things that everyone can see all the time.

In Germany, they all thought I was a bit mental, very emotional.

In England, you have stadiums in the middle of the city.

In London, you'll be walking around and, 'Oh, there's the ground.' Every area of the city has a Premier League club. They all survive; they all exist with enough money, and that's good.

I think a father is important for everyone. If you don't have, then maybe not so much. In the world today, it's possible that you grow up with only one parent in the family.

I was a fighting machine with a will of iron.

There is something special which rides on a game between Liverpool and United.

Louis van Gaal is one of the most successful managers in the world.

I had no bad moment in my relationship with Dortmund. Not one second.

I left Mainz after 18 years and thought, 'Next time, I will work with a little less of my heart.' I said that because we all cried for a week. The city gave us a goodbye party, and it lasted a week.

My problem is I am Christian, so I think other people must have success, too; it's not about me.

Coaches will say that it's not important for their team to run more, and they prefer to make games the right way. I want to make games only the right way and run 10 km more.

The more players I have, the more difficult choices there are for me, but the better it is for LFC.

Derbies are always difficult to play because you have to handle the pressure. There's no advantage or disadvantage for either side.

I was a very average player and became a trainer in Germany with a special club.

As Dortmund manager, I lived in a street, and my two neighbours were Schalke fans. They showed it every day, flying flags!

It is my job to help the players react better.

The English game is not faster than the German game. Perhaps there are a few more sprints. But there is a different style of football here, partially due to the weather.

I'm really a normal football manager.

For me, it's enough that I have the first and last word.

I walk in a space of gratitude. I'm so grateful to God for blessing me with an amazing family and the opportunity to do what I love.

I come from a family of four brothers, so I like sports.

Little Richard played my uncle on 'Full House.' He's fabulous. I remember him being incredibly kind to me. I just remember him being super, super nice.

Part of an ensemble show is realizing it's a collaboration. It's like a symphony. Everybody takes their turn, but it's really the collective group that matters.

My mom is African-American, Native-American, Irish, and Creole, and my father is of Jewish, Russian, and Polish descent. It's made me who I am. Because of my diverse background, I think I can relate to many different people, different stories, and different communities.

I have a complex heritage: my mom is African American, and my dad is Jewish. Both were activists, and they met during the movement in the '70s.

Everyone has a past, but I try not to let that affect the way I see them; I want to get to know who they are today.

Marriage is a work in progress, but it's beautiful.

People look at you, and they think they know you. They think they can place you in a certain category by what they think they know about you. But there's so much more to all of us than what we know and what we see at face value.

I love to get in the library and just spend days researching characters.

I have respect for therapists in general, because they hear so many stories. It's a lot to hold and take in.

With 'Underground,' we see that the wounds that we all, as a nation, inflicted upon our brothers and sisters during slavery have not been healed.