A Quote by Geraldine Ferraro

If you don't run, you can't win. — © Geraldine Ferraro
If you don't run, you can't win.
I want to try to prove the world wrong - that you can run and win in the NBA, and you can win big if you keep running. The problem is, can you run for 82 games every minute, every possession of every game?
Don't play for one run unless you know that run will win a ballgame.
I come out to do what everyone else is trying to do, which is run, run fast and win.
I'm as much of a human being as the rest of the world. But if I don't train, I don't win. If I don't focus, I don't win. So I don't have a choice: I just have to run.
It is vital to maintain possession and to win it back as soon as possible, because if we win it high up, then the opposition has to run 70 metres.
When I run - you can see my record - I run to win.
When I run - as you see from my record - I run to win.
In Newark, we see a problem and want to seize it, but we run up against the wall of state government, the wall of federal government that does not have the flexibility or doesn't see problems, even. At the federal level, it's often a zero-sum game: If you win, I lose. At the local level, it's just not local that. It's win-win-win.
First rule of politics: you can't win unless you're on the ballot. Second rule: If you run, you may lose. And, if you tie, you do not win.
I'd rather run a gutsy race, pushing all the way and lose, than run a conservative race only for a win.
When candidates run on conservative principles, they win. But when we legislate conservative policies, the American people win.
You can't ever make the perfect run, but you can make the best run, and then you clock the fastest time, and that's a win.
You could have the best run of your life and lose a race because somebody has a better day. Or you could have the worst run and win.
Teams that can run the football, stop the run and take care of the football will win in the playoffs.
Many runners worry about who is in the race, or they think about the time they must run to win. I only try to run as fast as I am capable - nothing less.
One day the factory sports coach, who was very strict, pointed at four boys, including me, and ordered us to run in a race. I protested that I was weak and not fit to run, but the coach sent me for a physical examination and the doctor said that I was perfectly well. So I had to run, and when I got started I felt I wanted to win. But I only came in second. That was the way it started.
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