That's what you work all season for, to get into the playoff games, and you don't want to blow it.
“That's what you work all season for, to get into the playoff games, and you don't want to blow it.”
— Ray Nitschke · Blow
The World Motivation
That's what you work all season for, to get into the playoff games, and you don't want to blow it.
“That's what you work all season for, to get into the playoff games, and you don't want to blow it.”
— Ray Nitschke · Blow
That's what you work all season for, to get into the playoff games, and you don't want to blow it.
It was another day to go to work, and try to play and play well.
I think it was the preparation and every thing Lombardi represented, you know, about hard work and that every game was important. So when you get to the real important games, you were ready to go.
I lust love to play football.
It was the character of the Packers, man. We played for sixty minutes. We let it all hang out. There was no tomorrow for us. We got the adrenaline flowing, and we just let it go, man.
When I was 16, it was 1988, and my style was a mess. Fur-lined brown suede jacket, paisley shirt, chinos, and Doc Martens. My hair was blow dried into a large quiff. That might sound vaguely cool. It wasn't.
Everybody knows when you've got a role in a Spike Lee movie, you're gonna blow up. But I happen to be the only person who's had the lead in the two Spike Lee movies nobody saw.
I'm not trying to blow out a camera lens or make the audience's hair go straight back from my sheer volume, sheer energy level.
You don't want the fight to stop on a cut or something like that. You want to finish the fight. You always have the idea that you have the chance to stay in a fight, because one blow can end it all.
Sometimes you blow a lead and then you lose a game. It happens.