You have got to dream big.

I tend not to listen to pundits.

I can only have admiration for the Irish as a nation.

The loan spells were great, I always pushed for them.

The important statistic is the number of games you win.

At the end of the day it's 11 men versus 11 on the pitch.

I'm happy to talk to anybody but do it in the right manner.

You can never replicate the pressure you're under in a game.

There was a point in my life where I had enough of football.

A clean sheet is always nice but I'd rather win 2-1 than get a 0-0.

You come across very few people in your life that really impact you.

One of my biggest goals is to not be remembered as just a footballer.

I think my level over the years has shown I am improving all the time.

Winning anything is always the goal but the FA Cup is something special.

I hated getting to a Saturday and not having a game. For me it was about playing.

Any day of the week you'd rather your team win rather than have personal achievements.

The family are the people who see you day in day out through all the bad times as well.

When you win a Premier League title it still feels a bit surreal after a couple of weeks.

Captaining Leicester is one of the greatest honours in my career so I feel very privileged.

My dad had a great career and if I could win a tenth of what he did in football, I'd be happy.

For me the important thing is I have four honest lads in front of me who give their everything.

A lot of goalkeepers are naturally very vocal and outgoing so it's a natural thing for a keeper.

I think I am a bit different to how my Dad was. He had very set routines, I take it as it comes.

I am happy with how my career has gone. What other people want to make of it is irrelevant to me.

I first heard about Common Goal through Juan Mata and knew it was something I'd be interested in.

I did not play for Manchester City and I had no prospects to play, so there was no reason to stay.

One in 10 women will get breast cancer at some stage in their life and that's quite a scary thought.

You are responsible for your own career, if you ain't preparing right, you are not going to get picked.

As a player you appreciate a manager who can maybe compromise a bit in his own ways for the good of the team.

That is something a lot of managers want to do - they bring their own people and do everything their own way.

The FA Cup has a special place in our family's hearts because my dad won it three times with Manchester United.

To win four games in a row at any point in the season for any team in the Premier League is a great achievement.

Alisson is a top-class goalkeeper, from what I've seen. He performed brilliantly for Roma, and for Brazil as well.

We have the utmost respect for any team we play, football is a game where there is no right or wrong way of playing.

Two years of uncertainty is tough for anyone and having everyone call your ability into question is bound to be tough.

I came to Notts County and I loved being there. It was great to play a full season and win the League Two championship.

Clean sheets is a misleading statistic. It gives you the platform to win a game but you can lead 5-0 and concede a goal.

I have no bad feelings towards Leeds. The fans were amazing and I hope, for their sake especially, that they get what they deserve.

I feel just an overwhelming sense of pride of being part of the family that Vichai built and the extended family of Leicester City.

The grass is not always greener on the other side. It is about recognising what you do have and being grateful for what you do have.

It's a lonely position and those are the margins you play in as a goalkeeper - you simply cannot make mistakes because you will be punished.

I'd love to make the switch over to NFL. I'd love to try it but I'm not really sure what position I'd play. I'd probably have to be a kicker.

You'll make mistakes, but if you make mistakes by trying to do the right things, then they're mistakes that most coaches and most teammates can accept.

You can train all you want but when the pressure's on it's a tough situation and anyone who has the nerve to step up and take one has my utmost respect.

I was doing, in my eyes, nothing at Manchester City. You can train all day but it comes down to match situations when you go out on loan to lower league clubs.

Ryan Giggs is an idol - I don't think there's any other words for him. What he achieved at Manchester United, and what he achieved in football, is unparalleled.

You look at situations like Thibaut Courtois and Petr Cech at Chelsea, two of the best goalkeepers in the world at the same club, one of them's going to be unhappy.

From the beginning of my time in football, the common thread has always been teamwork and togetherness. That's what's going to help you achieve your goals in the end.

English football's history is so rich and the size of the clubs around, the so-called big six, are so big that it is difficult to break into that for a club like Leicester.

If you want to surround yourself with a lot of people and be pampered then that is a decision you make yourself. Personally I don't do it and I don't feel the need to do it.

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