A Quote by Mo Farah

Whenever I race in the U.K., the crowd just makes such a massive difference, often between winning and losing. — © Mo Farah
Whenever I race in the U.K., the crowd just makes such a massive difference, often between winning and losing.
Often in football a game is really balanced and one small detail will make the difference between winning and losing. We try to find the detail that makes the difference for us.
Everybody loves winning, but we should not linger on the difference between winning and losing... But Is losing failing?
Whoever said "It's not whether you win or lose but how you play the game" is full of it! Winning makes all the difference in the world. Winning is fun. Losing is not. Losing sucks.
There's no difference between winning and losing. They are the same type of experience. Winning and losing are sensorial, affixed to an ego, blocked in time and space and none of them ultimately make you happy very long
Picking up a tell - a hint that a player unknowingly gives that reveals the strength of his hand - often means the difference between winning and losing a big pot.
Just like football, business is a game of inches, where the smallest advancement or advantage can mean the difference between winning and losing.
There's a difference between winning and losing and not trying at all.
The difference in winning & losing is most often, not quitting.
The difference between winning and losing is always a mental one.
One of the biggest gaps in sports is the difference between the winning and losing teams of the Super Bowl. They don't invite the losing team to the White House. They don't have parades for them. They don't throw confetti on them.
I think that sometimes the difference between winning and losing, success and failure, is this gray line between will, passion and self-belief that says, 'I'm going to do this'.
I try to do the right thing at the right time. They may just be little things, but usually they make the difference between winning and losing.
Neither winning nor losing means as much to me as knowing the crowd has enjoyed my match. Some players feel that winning is everything and that losing is a disaster. Not me. I want the spectators to take home a good memory.
Knowing where a team will usually place a penalty can be the difference between winning or losing.
My job is to call attention to the things that I think are the difference between winning and losing. If I can't do that then I have failed as a coach.
It is just the little difference between the good and the best that makes the difference between the artist and the artisan. It is just the little touches after the average man would quit that makes the master's fame.
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