Allyson Smith reminds me of a younger, prettier, funnier me. Now if you'll excuse me, the ladies from my bridge club have arrived.

On Hollywood turning its back on him: I wasn't in the club. You see, I'm not going to be a stroker. I never have been all my life.

I was the youngest kid on my street, the youngest comic in the clubs. I always felt like I was playing catch-up. I was very angry.

When I was five, 10, 15 years old, I always dreamed of being in the best league in the world, playing with some of the best clubs.

Sometimes clubs take their ownership of a young player for granted and do not necessarily do the best thing for their development.

I've seen tennis clubs close in Manhattan and garages put up in their place, and I'd sure like to be part of reversing that trend.

Most of my players have come through academies with clubs. That's not a bad thing, but it's very different to what I grew up with.

I came to Vegas because I wanted to, not because I thought it could help my career. I didn't even know they had comedy clubs here.

In England, there are five, six, seven big clubs, and you can never be sure who will win the title in the end. It's very exciting.

It is a privilege to be part of this Chelsea squad and the Chelsea family, at one of the most historic clubs in the Premier League.

As a manager, you know you're going to take the brickbats from other clubs and their fans. But I do enjoy making my own fans happy.

I consider myself gay because at the end of the night, that's who I want to cuddle with. But when I go out, I go to straight clubs.

Ultimately, playing at international level, at all age groups, is good for a player's development, and that is good for clubs, too.

I live in New York and I love hanging out in gay clubs, and a lot of my friends are gay. But, for better or for worse, I'm not gay.

History does not always repeat itself. Sometimes it just yells, 'Can't you remember anything I told you?' and lets fly with a club.

I'm sick of '60s nostalgia. I've been to clubs in New York where it's just like the Fillmore East. And I thought I hated that then.

I have a great deal of respect for other clubs and admire the good football they play, but ultimately, Real Madrid are Real Madrid.

The difference between the more traditional sports clubs and Congress is that Congress doesn't really compete against another team.

People make relegation out to be a fate worse than death but that's nonsense. If the infrastructure is right, clubs can bounce back.

I would like football clubs to be more aware of what their philosophy is, then recruit managers who fit the profile that suits them.

With shorter clubs, your ball position should be just back of middle, to really promote hitting the ball first on a downward strike.

I don't want to go into the situation of the other teams, other clubs, other managers. Every single club decides their own strategy.

It's more difficult to achieve something with the national team because players from several clubs get together and less frequently.

It's difficult to innovate, but you must try to create a project under your ideas and philosophies to take you ahead of other clubs.

Getting out of the hospital is a lot like resigning from a book club. You're not out of it until the computer says you're out of it.

I started working at clubs when I was sixteen, which is young. I would not want my kid doing that, but I did, and that's how it went.

I have to make a lot of decisions that aren't in the best interests of individuals, whether they be owners, club executives, players.

Everybody that you could name would join in our audiences from, Laguardia on down. Everybody came. Everybody came to the Cotton Club.

I played a lot of tough clubs in my time. Once a guy in one of those clubs wanted to bet me $10 that I was dead. I was afraid to bet.

I do love live performing, but I'm not a stand-up naturally, and I don't like the lifestyle of working just in the evenings at clubs.

Going out is such a hassle. The singles club scene where you sit down, talk, get to know each other, hang out-it's such a big ordeal.

It doesn't matter who you are, football's a business. At some stage you're going to have to leave a football club, that's just normal.

The best managers out there at the moment are Pep Guardiola and Jose Mourinho but they are at other clubs - Real Madrid and Barcelona.

When I joined Lille, they had a new stadium at Marseille. It was the same, so I know how important it is to clubs when they move home.

I came to London with a girl. We lived together and split up very quickly. I was on my own in London so started going to comedy clubs.

I don't have any interest in going out to clubs. I love people, and I love socializing, I just don't have any interest in being drunk.

I was the first person from my family to enter films. So, everything connected with films was new to me, including fans and fan clubs.

You couldnt get a job playing in a club unless you played so much Top 40 and so many Beatles songs. I just went into a sort of revolt.

I've always said I'd rather see a club that's won 10 or 12 in a row than a club that's lost 10 or 12 in a row because they're tougher.

Clubs are so lame. Nobody even dances at these clubs. They stand around and get drunk and they schmooze. There is no enjoyment factor.

I thought, If I'm gonna run a jazz club, if I've got Miles Davis' posters in my bar, I should at least know what his horn sounds like.

Ryan [Gosling] has a history with the Mickey Mouse Club. He was a child performer himself. And he took the time to get to know people.

I'll answer as many questions as I can, but when people have a contract at other football clubs, I think it's wrong to talk about them.

It's not an easy challenge picking up players in January, I've always found it tough. Clubs don't want to release their better players.

Sometimes innocence is a good thing but I think life, experiencing different situations, different clubs, gives you a lot of knowledge.

Before I came to Italy to play for Milan in 2007, I saw in the papers that my name was mentioned in connection with some English clubs.

Many clubs wanted to know when I was leaving Inter, and Liverpool was one of those clubs, so people were surprised I chose Galatasaray.

Most clubs say they will not tolerate any forms of discrimination - that cannot be something that is just said. It needs to be acted on.

At other clubs I have been, at Juventus, at Barca, we had two 'ships': one for the domestic league and another for the Champions League.

Buy a steak for a player on another club after the game, but don't even speak to him on the field. Get out there and beat them to death.

Share This Page