A Quote by Danny Garcia

At the end of the day, we fight for the legacy, but you don't want to be just a fighter with legacy with no money. — © Danny Garcia
At the end of the day, we fight for the legacy, but you don't want to be just a fighter with legacy with no money.
I don't ever think about, 'Aw, man, my legacy. My legacy this.' No, I just want to fight the best fights out there to fight just to prove to the world that I'm the best fighter in the world.
It's a legacy thing, and when it's all said and done, I want to leave a legacy in whatever way. If not, if it's helping the division, if it's fighting big names, I just want to be remembered as one of the greatest all-time to ever do this in the sport. That's just what I want to do.
When I leave the NBA, I don't want my legacy to be, 'He won a championship ring.' I want my legacy to say, 'He played for the people. He gave everybody in the world hope that they can be just like him.'
When I leave the NBA, I don't want my legacy to be, 'He won a championship ring.' I want my legacy to say: 'He played for the people. He gave everybody in the world hope that they can be just like him.'
If I have a chance to make a larger amount of money in a legacy fight against the No. 1 welterweight in history, it makes sense for me to want that fight. You have a lot of pay-per-view money coming to this company. Why shouldn't the champion partake in a piece of that pie?
Certainly it is important to work hard for your children, but if the only legacy you can give them is money it is a poor legacy indeed.
The greatest legacy one can pass on to one's children and grandchildren is not money or other material things accumulated in one's life, but rather a legacy of character and faith.
Everyone leaves a legacy, whether they want to or not. The question is, “What kind of legacy will you leave?
I don't fight for the money. I fight for my legacy. I fight for history. I fight for my people.
Take away all the emotional baggage of any band's fight, be it The Beatles or The Stones, but in the end, you just enjoy the creativity. That's what the legacy is.
I think about legacy a lot, hopefully at the end of the day they say I was a good bluesman. That's all I want.
Legacy is a stupid thing! I don't want a legacy.
When the media defines something, you have to question: Is it the definition that you want applied to your culture? I'm trying to determine who's leaving the legacy, and if the legacy that is being left is a positive one.
I recorded songs with a great deal of meaning, songs of lasting material. That's the legacy I want to leave behind - a legacy of love.
Instead of a legacy as a fighter, I want to leave a mark in the sport about the good news of Jesus Christ.
I just look at what's ahead of me. I don't think about, 'For my legacy, I need to do this, this, and this.' I just focus on every fight and how to win that fight.
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