A Quote by Brian O'Driscoll

I've been a professional rugby player all my life; I don't really know anything different. — © Brian O'Driscoll
I've been a professional rugby player all my life; I don't really know anything different.
My parents are huge influences on me. My mother was an English teacher. My father played professional rugby and coached rugby for the Irish rugby team.
In my youth I thought I was going to be a professional rugby player.
I had dreams of being a professional rugby player.
My loves in life are food, history and rugby. I'd love to be a history professor or a rugby player but I prefer rugby and my career would end by the time I was 30, leaving me enough time to go and study history.
I thought I'd be a professional rugby player or go to university and get some degree in construction.
For me, skateboarding is a lifestyle. I really don't know anything different. My life revolves around skating. If I wasn't a professional skateboarder, I'd still be skating every day.
Ultimately, we are professional rugby people, and we focus on the rugby. That's the easy bit. We are not politicians, so we don't have to delve too much into that.
I was playing like a rugby league player with 14 rugby players.
I was a rugby player, I was a hockey player. You know, I just love to challenge myself, and I love to compete.
The time I've spent in professional Premiership club rugby has been invaluable.
Boxing is the more dangerous activity from the rugby player's and the general public's point of view, but to me rugby is far more dangerous so I would prefer my sons to box. I love my children too much and do not want to watch them getting hurt. This is in no way intended as a criticism of rugby, which I consider to be a fantastic sport.
I loved playing rugby so much. I would have played rugby every day if I could have. I loved being a player so much, I don't know if I could sit on the side, with the passion I have and try and influence without being on there.
As a rugby player, you strive to be an All Black, win a World Cup, and win a Super Rugby title.
He was a professional rugby player in the area that I played as a youngster. So a lot of people who I went to school with knew who he was and knew that he was black. So I would get racist taunts in school.
Every rugby player in Australia and New Zealand or wherever they are from wants to play in the World Cup, and I am no different.
I am a professional squash player, and I recently played badly - but as well as I could - in a professional squash tournament. A professional squash player might sound like someone who is in a food-tasting group, but it is a racquet sport.
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