A Quote by Neil Warnock

Working at Palace was one of the happiest episodes of my football career, even though the ending was one of the most upsetting and traumatic. — © Neil Warnock
Working at Palace was one of the happiest episodes of my football career, even though the ending was one of the most upsetting and traumatic.
Even though the third season of Necessary Roughness was only ten episodes, they were an extremely intense bunch of episodes, especially toward the finale.
Even though the third season of 'Necessary Roughness' was only ten episodes, they were an extremely intense bunch of episodes, especially toward the finale.
Football is brutality. Football is career-ending, life-threatening injury just by stepping on the field.
While most episodes have a beginning, middle, and an ending, finales on 'Game of Thrones' are just one ending after another after another, as each of the storylines needs to wrapped up or at least attended to in some way.
I watch episodes of 'Rosanne' now where I don't even know what the ending's going to be.
By reason of his elegance, he resembles an image painted in a palace, though he is as majestic as the palace itself.
I've played so many games of football now, and even though it is at a higher level, at the end of the day, football is football. You are just playing with better players.
It's pretty traumatic knowing that your instrument that's your career isn't working, and you've got to have an operation.
Oftentimes, even myself as I've come through my entire career from high school all the way up here, everything has been football, football, football. And then you realize that life is much bigger than this game, especially when you start thinking about life after football and what you want to leave behind.
I will fight to the last breath, even though my family cowers in terror in the palace.
Apart from actually playing football, I am at my most happiest with either my dogs, or planting in the garden.
Simplicity of life, even the barest, is not a misery, but the very foundation of refinement; a sanded floor and whitewashed walls and the green trees, and flowery meads, and living waters outside; or a grimy palace amid the same with a regiment of housemaids always working to smear the dirt together so that it may be unnoticed; which, think you, is the most refined, the most fit for a gentleman of those two dwellings?
It would be ill-advised to compare war and a sport, but I don't think the brain knows the difference. With post-traumatic stress and traumatic brain injuries in blasts with veterans, we see a very similar and somewhat unique issue with repetitive brain injuries in football.
I made it to the NFL and I had an injury, a really bad injury, actually, where I was out for 18 months in football. And the doctor said it was career-ending.
Working people are working even longer hours, even though we won the eight-hour workday at the Haymarket General Strike in Chicago.
In my experience, writing a novel tends to create its own structure, its own demands, its own language, its own ending. So for much of the period in which I'm writing, I'm waiting to understand what's going to happen next, and how and where it's going to happen. In some cases, fairly early in the process, I do know how a book will end. But most of the time, not at all, and in this particular case, many questions are still unanswered, even though I've been working for months.
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