A Quote by Ciro Immobile

The Lazio striker always has great responsibilities. — © Ciro Immobile
The Lazio striker always has great responsibilities.
In the 1990s, we had seven great teams - Milan, Inter, Juventus, Parma, Lazio, Roma, Fiorentina. If you look at the players, they were great players, but there was some crazy investment, and some teams went bankrupt, like Parma and Lazio.
I still believe I can be a striker but, if you want to be a striker, you have to think more about yourself and that's why you are a striker.
I'm showing the boss what I can do. I was bought as a striker and I always believe I am a striker.
In this system, I've always played in the position behind the striker. I also don't enjoy being classed as a striker - I don't see myself as one.
I think Rory MacDonald is a great striker, I think Jorge Masvidal is an excellent striker.
When one is small, one always looks up at someone. To me, it was my father, Antonio, a former amateur football player. He was a striker of great talent. He has always been a role-model.
A great nation cannot abandon its responsibilities. Responsibilities abandoned today return as more acute crises tomorrow.
I've always been a good ball-striker, but if you're not a great putter, you're not going to win a lot.
I have always said that a striker scores a goal but not every goal is scored by a striker. A goalkeeper can make a mistake which is a goal, but every goal still goes past him and you have to accept that.
I am a striker, and people expect strikers to score goals. But I don't see myself as a striker.
Everyone gets in a bad mood at some point - a striker because there is allegedly a new striker on the way, the same for a midfielder.
Style-wise, dos Santos is going to be an excellent fight for me - striker against striker. With my experience, I should have the upper hand.
Niang is very good in front of the goal, and he's also a quick learner. He is a versatile striker who can play both as a centre forward and as a second striker.
I like to play as a striker or secondary striker.
As for academics, I do not see why their responsibilities as moral agents should differ in principle from the responsibilities of others; in particular, others who also enjoy a degree of privilege and power, and therefore have the responsibilities that are conferred by those advantages.
People reared in workhouses, as you are aware, are no great acquisition to the community and they have no ideas whatsoever of civic responsibilities. As a rule their highest aim is to live at the expense of the ratepayers. Consequently, it would be a decided gain if they all took it into their heads to emigrate. When they go abroad they are thrown on their own responsibilities and have to work whether they like it or not.
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