Sports Related Quotes

Quotes tagged as "sports-related" Showing 1-14 of 14
“When we played softball, I'd steal second base, feel guilty and go back.”
Woody Allen

Hunter S. Thompson
“I have explained many times that I am, by Profession, a Gambler -- not some jock-sniffing nerd or a hired human squawk-box with the brain of a one-cell animal. No. That would be your average career sportswriter -- and, more specifically, a full-time Baseball writer.”
Hunter S. Thompson

“Chances are good that if you walked away from your house after the real estate market collapsed, the Cavs now own it.”
Michael Rosenberg

Ken Gleed
“Nothing else will show your true character than how you lose”
Ken Gleed, Life...Intercepted!: Life Changing Lessons Learned From Moments of Failure

“Some days you're the windscreen, some the bug.”
Michael Hussey

Luke Fetkovich
“Some things are more important than football. You're going to find that out sooner or later.”
Luke Fetkovich, Fifteen Minutes

“Sport should be in your Blood/Veins, Not in the Joints or Bones”
Binoy Boban

George Orwell
“Gambling, beer and football filled the horizons of their minds.”
George Orwell

“I love the suffering that goes into the sport, to become the best.”
Tj Eisenhart

Ken Gleed
“Breaking out of your comfort zone to do the things that are not only difficult but even seemingly impossible, can bring incredible results.”
Ken Gleed, Life...Intercepted!: Life Changing Lessons Learned from Moments of Failure

Ken Gleed
“If you never play the game, you will never know what you missed.”
Ken Gleed, Life...Intercepted!: Life Changing Lessons Learned From Moments of Failure

Ken Gleed
“The only cure for regret is patience.”
Ken Gleed, Life...Intercepted!: Life Changing Lessons Learned From Moments of Failure

“There is something magical about the ocean. Its color, its smell, its feeling, its depth, its wildness... You can always start at the shore, taking one step at a time to go deeper and deeper. Some become afraid of its vast nature and decide to stay near the shore, enjoying the shallow, but comforting character. But there are some that are willing to go deeper, discovering its extensive and enigmatic parts. It makes us feel small, but not in a bad way. We feel small because we realize we are part of something bigger. And it does not matter how deep we go, there are new options to be discovered. Once you hit the bottom you can always choose whether to go deeper or stay within your boundaries. However, the deeper we go the more possibilities there are. ​

That is the characteristic of the ocean. And THAT is the characteristic of SPORT.'​”
Alexandrite Matis