The sports page records people's accomplishments, the front page usually records nothing, but man's failures.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I always turn to the sports pages first, which records people's accomplishments. The front page has nothing but man's failures.
Not winning a title gives fuel to sportswriters and talking heads who question an athlete's true value.
I'm interested in all kinds of sports. I'll glance at the front page and then go straight to sports and then I'll come back to the rest of the paper.
Breaking records is not something you expect to be doing. That's like a sports thing, it's not usually a comedy and writing thing.
You don't base records on success; you base it on creativity.
When we make a mistake, it becomes front-page news. We don't need any reporter telling us how badly we played.
As athletes, we're defined by what we've accomplished. Those are what most people remember and what you get paid for. But I learned more from my failures than from all of my successes put together - failures as an athlete and as a person.
I think nowadays it's so easy as an athlete to become a statistic whether or not you lose everything or having trouble or whatever it may be.
Nobody sets out to make a bad record.
For every athlete, the roar of the crowd goes away, and we have to learn how to turn the page.