What young men nowadays don't realise is that ballroom dancing can be such a source of enjoyment.
— Brian Clough
I was never, ever physically afraid. My terms of reference were basic and simple: put the ball in the net. That was my job, that's the way I saw it, and I allowed nothing and nobody to distract me from that purpose.
Academically, I was thick. School wasn't bad, but I was.
My values stemmed from the family. Anything I have achieved in life has been rooted in my upbringing.
When I go, God's going to have to give up his favourite chair.
We used to go to the pictures every Saturday night but we had to leave a little bit early and get home and watch Match of the Day - and my wife still complains she missed the last five minutes of every film we saw.
I've decided to pick my moment to retire very carefully - in about 200 years time.
On occasions I have been big-headed. I think most people are when they get in the limelight. I call myself Big Head just to remind myself not to be.
That Seaman is a handsome young man but he spends too much time looking in his mirror rather than at the ball. You can't keep goal with hair like that.
I wouldn't say I was the best manager in the business. But I was in the top one.
To me, scoring goals was just like other boys might regard delivering papers. I just did it - every day.
What joy and adventure the youngsters of today are missing as they sit indoors mucking about with computer games and videos!
My early memories are full of football talk around the house, of Dad standing on the terraces at Ayresome Park, of the occasional precious new pair of boots.
Beckham? His wife can't sing and his barber can't cut hair.
Don't send me flowers when I'm dead. If you like me, send them while I'm alive.
They say Rome wasn't built in a day, but I wasn't on that particular job.
When you get to a certain age, there is no coming back.
I want no epitaphs of profound history and all that type of thing. I contributed. I would hope they would say that, and I would hope somebody liked me.
I like my women to be feminine, not sliding into tackles and covered in mud.
The RAF allowed me to play a lot of football, but like England later, they failed to recognise real talent when it was under their noses.
Believe it or not, cricket was my first love. I would genuinely have swapped the dream of a winning goal at Wembley for a century against the Australians at Lord's.
Women who choose to stay home and raise their families make one of the most valuable contributions to society. as far as I am concerned.
Telling the entire world and his dog how good a manager I was. I knew I was the best but I should have said nowt and kept the pressure off 'cos they'd have worked it out for themselves.
The river Trent is lovely, I know because I have walked on it for 18 years.
Who the hell wants fourteen pairs of shoes when they go on holiday? I haven't had fourteen pairs in my life.
Walk on water? I know most people out there will be saying that instead of walking on it, I should have taken more of it with my drinks. They are absolutely right.
If a chairman sacks the manager he initially appointed, he should go as well.
Players lose you games, not tactics. There's so much crap talked about tactics by people who barely know how to win at dominoes.