Big games are usually about doing the simple things well - not trying to pull a rabbit out of a hat.
— Owen Farrell
People can say what they want. It is the people inside the camp who count to me. The people around me.
Being really competitive, you're hard on yourself when you make a mistake, but then you've got to push on.
You always look at a game and see what you can take out of it to help you go to the next level.
I think I'm more of a saver than a spender - more because I just like being at home.
I am very cautious, and there are not too many decisions I've not discussed with my parents, whether that be about my career or away from the field.
You have to be a voice; you have to be able to speak up.
It's always a balance... being clear-headed but being aggressive and as combative as you need to be.
I've just been trying to improve - it's a not a deliberate thing to focus on one thing.
Communicating and being loud is a big part of my game.
Other players do not rib me for being the coach's son. They rib me more for living at home with my mum and dad.
You can never be too skilful.
I've always been comfortable speaking, especially on the field. Probably not as much off the field.
I'm no good at sitting on a beach and doing nothing.
I'd say I am a fly half. As regards being 12 for England, I've not tried to play any different. I guess I've been like another 10. Obviously, you do some things differently, and you might not have your hands on the ball as much - but you're still in the game and constantly communicating.
You don't go into a game thinking, 'I'm not confident.' You always think you're going to win.
I've got a lot better at dropping emotions if something goes wrong, or right.
I don't think anybody goes onto the pitch and wants to go backwards.
I guess I've never really wanted to be anything else. I've never even thought about having another job.
It's irrelevant whether it's a big match or not. It's about focusing on your job at the time. You're still trying to do things as well as you can.
If you're not striving to improve, you'll end up going backwards.
I would never think of myself as a celebrity.
Rugby is a game that's constant. If you are not growing with it, you get left behind.
You can become obsessive, but you enjoy it - that's what you like doing. It is just how I am. I don't try my hardest to be like this.
Everyone has changed, haven't they? Everyone tries to get better; everyone tries to grow.
Not everyone plays their best game every week.
I love playing at Twickenham.
It doesn't bother me whether I am or I'm not compared to my dad. I do not feel any pressure at all from being his son.
I'm not trying to be anyone else.
It's obviously a massive honour to captain your country.
You cannot focus on things that are so far in the future when you've got things that you can't take your eye off now.
Obviously every team is different, and you don't want to try and be them.
Confidence can be elusive because you don't know you've lost it. It's not something you can put your finger on.
You don't really get fly-halves battering each other.
You can't be asking people to do things you're not willing to do yourself.
Obviously, international rugby is a different level, but there are some really good players around.
I've proved what I can do in bits, but I need to get better at everything.
I like watching any good players.
I don't have too many gadgets in the house. I do like playing computer games every now and again, though.
If I was to sit there and think about anything, it would be, 'What can you look forward to, what can you put your time into, and what can help you grow up?'
One-on-one, you have to be able to put your head down and get stuck in.
I'm competitive, I'll look to do my job on the field, and that's all that matters.
When I was a bit younger, I made too much of trying to stick up for myself. But I don't need to prove that I'm not soft or too young any more.
Your focus has to switch to being as good as you can be for your club.
There's always things to get better at, and there's always stuff to learn when you come into training.
You can either let the pressure get to you or let it help it make you better.
The main thing about being captain is keeping your own performance good, and then everything else should fall into place off the back of that.
The main thing is I've tried to get better at everything - that includes the attacking side, being a threat, and taking people on.
It's not just that the lows make the highs more meaningful. They actually help you figure stuff out. You have to work out where you went wrong and what you need to do to get better.
When you're relaxed, you are more decisive.