A Quote by Fred Shero

At the 1974 Stanley Cup Finals: Win today and we walk together forever. — © Fred Shero
At the 1974 Stanley Cup Finals: Win today and we walk together forever.
I won three FA Cup finals, two League Cup finals, and played in one of United's two Champions League-winning finals. But I lost in a lot of finals, too: the FA Cup in 1995, 2005 and 2007, the League Cup in 2003, and the Champions League in 2009 and 2011.
Anyone who plays in the NHL dreams to win the Stanley Cup and I dreamed as well to be one of them and raise the cup in Washington and bring it home to Moscow and celebrate with my friends and my parents.
My only goal is to win the Stanley Cup and do what I have to to win that.
I have captained India in two World Cup finals. I definitely want to win the World Cup before I retire.
Stanley Cup winners don’t hand back the Stanley Cup.
Win now, and we'll walk together forever.
I've been fortunate enough to have a lot of neat experiences, Olympics and everything, getting to the Stanley Cup Finals was really cool, but to actually make the NHL was just something I don't think I or my family will ever forget.
To win the Stanley Cup is such a process and it takes everybody on board.
I'd love to feature for the Barbarians. I'd love to win a Champions Cup, and I'd love to get to another World Cup and make a fist of it: get to a World Cup final at least and see what could have been, particularly after 2011 when Wales reached the semi-finals.
What I've learned so far from researching is that to win the Stanley Cup, you have to make the playoffs.
It's obviously disappointing and surreal when you see someone else win the Stanley Cup.
The most important thing for us is winning the Stanley Cup and I want to win.
Individual honors and scoring championships are great, but my No. 1 goal is to win the Stanley Cup.
In New Jersey, we won in '95, but after that for four years we never had a sniff at it. The next thing you know we went on a run of three Stanley Cup Finals in four years in 2000, 2001 and 2003.
That's what they hired me to do in Washington, change a little bit of the culture, try to win a Stanley Cup.
I think to compare any time you win a Stanley Cup would be unfair to all the players from all the teams.
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