A Quote by Gareth Barry

It's nice hearing your team-mates wanting you to stay. — © Gareth Barry
It's nice hearing your team-mates wanting you to stay.
Of course, I enjoy assisting my team-mates because playing no.10 is the position you have to serve your team-mates.
It's always nice to feel the support of your manager, club, and team-mates.
You have to think for your team-mates and give them positive response. Whatever happens as a captain you have to take the responsibility. Backing my team-mates and supporting them was the biggest learning.
I stay in the middle and my team-mates can go to attack.
When you are not playing, you need to train harder. You need to keep faith. And when you come into the team, you have to do exactly what your team-mates are doing to help the team achieve something.
I know if I stay in Arsenal, the club is happy and my team-mates as well. This is the most important thing.
In every team, you have to win the respect of your team-mates, working a lot and really sweat blood.
When you're playing in a good team where you're confident in yourself and your team-mates, when you've done the business before, it makes it so much easier.
You cannot compare the way someone plays for a club and for a national team. At a club, you spend every day with the same players. In a national team, you are with your team-mates for only a few days.
It's always nice to be getting personal recognition, but I wouldn't be getting it if it wasn't for the help of my team-mates and the backroom staff.
Different strikers are happy when they score but you have to think about the team - the assist and movements which can give space for your team mates. You can never quit. It's teamwork.
Obviously, I don't go into a game not wanting to do well. I go into every game to try to do my best for my team-mates and the club.
When you don't play, you need to support the team and your team-mates need to feel that you are behind them fully.
I'm always a big advocate for adapting to your new team, your new country and your new team-mates.
The second season is always easier than the first one. When you change, it's always more difficult. You have to adapt to the way your team plays; you have to adapt to your team-mates, to the league, to the referees.
You will make a mistake in a game, fair enough, but you want your team-mates to help you out because it is a team game.
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