At the end of the day, the wins are the wins and the losses are the losses. But the relationships are everything.
Wins and losses right now are important, but in reality it's the least of my concerns. My concern is to make sure than we give hope to anyone watching us. I am not going to judge this season on wins and losses.
You have to be okay with wins and losses. You can't just be looking for the wins and, when the losses happen, you can't buy more and more because you're sure it's going to bounce. We call that revenge trading.
You control your own wins and losses.
No matter the wins and losses, you can control your attitude. You can control you coming into work each and every day with the right attitude and wanting to get better and trying to get better.
We don't sell wins or losses. The one thing you can't control in sports is which games you are going to win or which games you are going to lose. But what I could control was the experience the fans have.
We can't promise wins or losses and things like that but we can promise that we can play hard night in and night out and impact the community and that's the biggest thing.
Everybody goes through ups and downs and wins and losses, bumps in the road, and I don't let anything like that slow me down.
It's hard dealing with wins and losses.
I want my team to be more detached from the wins and losses and be more focused on doing the little things well. When you focus on getting the win, it can suffocate you, especially during the playoffs when the pressure gets thick.
If you can, always be appreciative of the ebb and flow of the losses and the wins.
In diplomacy, clear-cut wins and losses are rare.
In the NBA, it's wins and losses. You don't have to deal with some of the hypocrisy of college athletics.
Look, it's all about wins and losses to the fans. They want to believe in their team.
A point guard is judged by wins and losses. I think I'm doing a good job.
Wins and losses just blur into one as you move around the world playing matches.