I like playing in the later stages of games because there is more space when everybody's legs are tired.
— James Maddison
I have always been comfortable in possession, but it is tracking and tackling that I have been working on.
I was an 18-year-old lad playing in a Scottish League Cup final at Hampden in front of 60,000 against Celtic. That's an experience I will never forget.
I can only speak highly of my time at Norwich. It was brilliant for me. I loved it there, and I think the fans loved me as well. We had a great relationship.
I don't get nervous, because I have confidence in my ability.
All the moves I've made have come after I sat down with my family and my agent and thought what was the best move. I've never rushed into something, never gone anywhere where I wasn't sure 100%.
I am a player who likes to play in between the lines and try to break that midfield line, whether it's when I receive a pass or can go and show everyone what I am about.
Me being at Coventry, instead of a big Premier League club, probably helped me develop. You don't get put in the academy system, playing Under-18s and Under-23s.
The ball is just whipped off you in the Premier League. You have to maintain focus.
Players judge their careers based on medals and trophies, don't they, and they look back on what they have achieved.
I've dreamed of playing in the Premier League since I was a young boy.
Every footballer wants to play in big games, in front of full houses, live on the telly.
Set pieces are something I work hard at after training, and I hit quite a lot every day.
There is no bigger stage than Old Trafford on the opening day of the season.
The No.10 position is my favourite role.
In the Premier League, you don't have one second to breathe - you have to be on it from the first minute. If you lose focus - just for a few seconds - the game will pass you by. It's 100 miles an hour.
I thoroughly enjoyed my time at Aberdeen.
Norwich gave me the platform to perform in the Championship, and between Daniel Farke and Stuart Webber, the manager and director of football, they gave me the opportunity to go out, express myself, and play. That's what led to my England call-up, which was something I'd always dreamed of, so it's something I'll always be grateful to them for.
Coming on as a sub, it's always different - you never know what the game is going to be like.
In the academies, people develop differently, and going into that No 10 role helped me because central midfield was always packed with big, strong boys.
I was always smaller than the rest coming up at Coventry, and I developed physically more in the later stages.
I got to play first-team men's football from a young age.