It's not just fleet of foot or speed. It's about who gets caught and gets knocked out.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
You have to be fast on your feet and adaptive or else a strategy is useless.
As more speed afoot was constantly demanded for big league ball, I noticed the many infield bounders which the runner beat to first only by the thinnest fractions of a second.
I think people relate to the person who gets knocked down or maybe has to come from behind and get that victory.
Let me explain my job very simply: My job is to line up five, seven, 10 yards in front of a man and run into him at full speed.
So when you put the kick in and the other runners go past you, it's game over!
Certainties are arrived at only on foot.
English football is so physical and fast that when you see a space, you have to go into it with all your speed.
When somebody grabs a movement, you're kind of locked into it. It's all par for the course.
The speed of the boss is the speed of the team.
Power and speed be hands and feet.