A Quote by John Dorsey

Everybody has different cultures in the National Football League. — © John Dorsey
Everybody has different cultures in the National Football League.
I liked to play against all the teams in the National Football League or the American Football League, because they were always a challenge.
I'm a football fan first and foremost, but I've been given an incredible opportunity to be a football coach in the National Football League.
Really, I learned a long time ago that in the National Football League, paper doesn't mean anything. Football teams are created on the football field.
These kids are the future of the National Football League. They're the next generation that will be playing high school football, NCAA football, and some even to the pros.
You know what we should do? We should just put flags on everybody. Let's make it the NFFL - the National Flag Football League. It's unbelievable.
Wouldn't it be great if our national news media had standards as high as the National Football League's?
And as a football coach in the National Football League, I know for sure that it's going to end someday.
It brought Pittsburgh into the picture of football teams in the National Football League that, ‘OK, you have to deal with us now.’
Women's football will always be different from men's football, but that doesn't mean you cannot still appreciate it. OK, so it might be a bit slower than the men's game, but then League Two football is slower than the Champions League, and it doesn't stop people turning out to see their local teams.
English football, especially Premier League football, is different to most football on the continent.
It's not like I had to throw the football and deal with that as well. It was more disheartening, to be honest with you, just to kind of see how the National Football League really is.
The Football Association have always acted more as a referee than a governor. And the FA, aware the Premier League provide players for the England team, have always had too gentle a hand on the tiller. The result is that the Premier League are the tigers in the English football jungle everybody's scared of.
I love the National Football League.
We need to start from a presupposition: namely, that there is no 'better' football and no 'worse' kind of football, just different styles and cultures that belong to each country.
The sport [football] is simply more and more identified with violence, both in its inherent nature and in its savage personnel... [The National Football League] now needs a guardian, not a CEO.
I can do my job with the best of my peers in the National Football League.
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