Winston Churchill would be great to have around the table.
— Ian Botham
I think I'd struggle to get excited by synchronised swimming.
Soccer and cricket were my main sports growing up. I had trials as a soccer player with a few clubs interested, Crystal Palace being one, but it was cricket which became my chosen profession.
If you can change three lives in 10, three lives in a hundred, that's got to be good, hasn't it?
I half knew what to expect when I saw the cricket ground in the morning. It was when I started to talk to people working out there, I began to find what I was looking for.
The resilience of these people is amazing. I am a great believer that the sooner we get things up and running in terms of sport in this area, the better.
To me, it doesn't matter how good you are. Sport is all about playing and competing. Whatever you do in cricket and in sport, enjoy it, be positive and try to win.
Genghis Khan was a fascinating man and way ahead of his time.
To win in Australia, for me, has to be the ultimate success because the Aussies live for sport.
I can remember running around at the age of 3, wanting to play golf, cricket and football. I was always active, one way or another, driving my parents mad.
Sport can bring communities together and can release a lot of pent-up emotions.
There will be no politics, no ifs and buts; if we see something and feel that work needs to be done, we will get people here we can rely on and ensure it is done in the same thorough way as our other projects.
What's happened has happened, so what can we do to make it better for tomorrow and the day after? That's why we're here.
I watched children dying. That will be the image that will stay with me.
There is nothing more exciting in sport when the top two countries in the world are battling for the Ashes.
Retiring for good wasn't difficult. I knew at the time it was right. I was no longer capable of achieving the standards I'd set myself and there was no light at the end of the tunnel.
I think we are going to see exciting cricket all the way. We are watching the two best teams in the world-and I think England will eventually go on to pip Australia by a single Test.
The people in the villages had turned in on themselves. You can understand it. When you have a bad day on the field, what do you do? Talk to your teammates.
You will attract the younger generation and they might well prove tougher than the older generation. What we are trying to do is to look at the future and see what we can do to bring some stability back to people's lives.
I'm not a great one for looking back.