That Seaman is a handsome young man but he spends too much time looking in his mirror rather than at the ball. You can't keep goal with hair like that.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Some of football's gaudiest displays of manliness are purely aesthetic. It's not what players do, it's how they look doing it.
When I was 16, I wanted to look like Lord Byron. It's not really a haircut so much as a hair-not-cut, but I've never changed it. It's a bit Byron, a bit Don Juan DeMarco and other things that I aspire to be.
My video game character is a bit better looking than me, actually. I don't think he has to worry about his hair getting messed up.
When you set a goal, it's a personal thing, and that goal should be very big, hairy and audacious.
I can't bear looking in the mirror - I guess that's why my hair looks like this.
I look at Messi, and he makes me laugh. A beautiful footballer who is still like a kid. A world superstar, but still a kid. Innocent, you know. He just plays.
I had a really tragic cut at the beginning of Season 2 of 'Ally McBeal.' Someone convinced me that it would be good to layer my hair. I basically looked like Ronald McDonald.
This stupid celebrity thing is just a consequence of being good at what you do. I mean, no one would photograph David Beckham if he wasn't the best attacking midfielder in the country - much as I hate Man. U!
When I walked into the room to meet Michael Landon, it was clear he was a big-time star. To be around him was as far from Charles Ingalls as you could get. The hair was the same - no one touched his hair.
Beckham? His wife can't sing and his barber can't cut hair.