If there's competition in training, then the training is intense, and then you have the pressure of a weekend that if you don't put in good performances, then your place is maybe up for grabs.
— Andrew Robertson
We all need to chip in with goals and assists. It's not just the front three. It's not just the defence that keeps clean sheets, either. It's a team game.
I don't like sitting on the bench even when it was very rare at Hull to rest during cup games.
Queens Park was amateur, so you do not get paid. You need to make a living, and for the first few years, when I was in the youth side, it was fine because I was still at school.
A lot of players try to buy penalties, and sometimes defenders can't do a lot about it.
I know when people say I'm some sort of Cinderella Man that it's meant as a compliment. I appreciate that, but to be totally honest, it doesn't feel like one, because it isn't true.
I like pressure. I put in on myself, and I think I get the best out of myself by doing that.
Sometimes my passes don't find people, but I do try and create.
I don't like it if I'm not part of the starting 11.
I set myself high standards, and when I drop below them, I'm not happy about it.
Football is full of highs and lows, but when people retire, they often say, 'I wish I'd enjoyed it more.'
Not many things bug me, but if there's one thing that does, it's the idea that my story is a football fairytale.
Relegation - that's pressure.
You want the world-class players playing at the World Cup, and you want them to do themselves justice.
I'm not a good spectator; I'm a nightmare when I'm injured and I'm not playing.
There's not much point breaking records if, in the end, it doesn't mean anything.
No magic wands have been waved in my direction; I didn't win some kind of lottery to land a spot at one of the biggest clubs in the world.