Top 28 Quotes & Sayings by Oliver Kahn

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a German athlete Oliver Kahn.
Last updated on December 23, 2024.
Oliver Kahn

Oliver Rolf Kahn is a German football executive and former professional player who played as a goalkeeper. He started his career in the Karlsruher SC Junior team in 1975. Twelve years later, Kahn made his debut match in the professional squad. In 1994, he was transferred to Bayern Munich for the fee of DM 4.6 million, where he played until the end of his career in 2008. He is regarded as one of the greatest and most successful goalkeepers of all-time. His commanding presence in goal and aggressive style earned him nicknames such as Der Titan from the press and Vol-kahn-o ("volcano") from fans.

We are Bayern Munich and English teams always have trouble as soon as they leave the island.
When you look at our programme for the next few weeks, you do not fancy a trip to the Oktoberfest.
If we perform as a unit and if every single player gives it his very best, everything can happen. — © Oliver Kahn
If we perform as a unit and if every single player gives it his very best, everything can happen.
A Germany team should not be afraid going into a tournament. History shows that we can raise the level of our game when it matters.
I have a feeling we are going to be world champions, I can't really explain why. Brazil are probably the best team in the world in terms of individual players. But the team with the most gifted players do not always win.
If I play, I try to concentrate on producing my best.
This match is about sport and I separate that completely from politics.
Complaining and arguing will not help. We are fully concentrating on the game against the Czechs.
There is no reason to change this system. I don't think we'll abandon it. For us the most important thing is to be compact in the back. That's the kind of game we have to play here and it will be very difficult to beat us.
Of course, success is a relative term. It can be something completely different from winning the German championship eight times or making millions.
The goalkeeper plays in a psychological position, and he's dealing with mental things. I wanted to describe the things I've done wrong and, most of all, what I've done right, so that other people, including those in other professions, could learn from my experiences.
After a decade in a club it's quite normal and necessary that you seek and take a new challenge.
Big matches on the big stage are often decided at the back.
I think Neuer changed the game of goalkeeping in the World Cup.
I have always seen myself as an athlete. Of course, I made the mistake of unintentionally opening the door to my private life by just a crack. I wouldn't do the same thing again. It has to be accepted that my private life is private, and if that isn't the case, I have to do something about it.
Goalkeepers need an element of insanity.
It's part of my game to occasionally send a message, one that may be unpopular to the outside world, but can be important for the team.
It looked pretty wild, but I was actually in control of myself. I've never really injured anyone throughout my career.
I would never have thought I was capable of sitting on the bench as the number two man. And it showed me that you can really achieve everything in life, even the unthinkable, as long as you're willing to work on yourself a little bit.
The realization that you're not always standing down there on the field merely to win, to be successful, was very liberating. One can be successful by helping the team, the other players. All of a sudden I felt the kind of empathy for people that I hadn't felt before.
I was so obsessed with football that you could say I was taking the goal home with me at night. And then one day the system fell apart.
I'm not the type who spends his free time in training camp playing with his Playstation or playing cards on trips. The other players thought it was odd: There he is, reading again.
I am firmly convinced that you shouldn't necessarily emphasize hedonism, especially at the beginning of a career, but should instead focus entirely on performance.
Messi is undoubtedly a gifted footballer, like Maradona and Pele, and he's playing for the best club side in the world at the moment. He's successful and he's winning trophies, so it's only logical that he'll be voted the best player in the world.
I want to successfully make the transition from a life in professional sports to another life, without running into major upheavals. — © Oliver Kahn
I want to successfully make the transition from a life in professional sports to another life, without running into major upheavals.
It took me a long time to realize that football isn't martyrdom, but a game that's enjoyable, and one in which getting better at it is supposed to be fun. Perhaps it would have been better if I had understood this as a young man.
After the 2006 World Cup, I knew that you don't always need success, success, success on the pitch.
I've never really seen myself in the role of the victim.
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