A Quote by Paul Scholes

Saturday afternoon is the hardest thing. I can go out and watch games, but I'm constantly on my phone looking at results: what score is this, what score is that. You have no real involvement, but you're obsessed with it.
I don't go out and just try to score. I score because there is an opportunity to score.
When you have the chance to go against a brother of yours on the court, you're always looking at each other like, If you score, we're looking at each other. If I score, I'm looking at him.
When I'm writing a score, I'm constantly looking for ways to improve on it, even when I think it's working well. I don't give up on things, and am always trying to make incremental improvements, which means I never finish writing a score early!
To me, score is really important. I would rather not have any score if it's something that's going to detract from the film. So often when I watch films, the score is what really bothers me.
I shared a dressing room with Alan Shearer. I used to watch the opposition looking at him, and they'd be thinking they need to score more than one because Shearer is going to score, and he scores every game. That psychological advantage is fantastic.
I was in L.A. in '08. It was a cold Saturday night. I had spread my phone number out to a score of women and was just indulging this sweet, sad, elegiac, bale loneliness - don't tell me you haven't been there.
After I joined Alkmaar, I didn't score for seven League games, but soon afterwards, I started to score goals.
I got to have more of those type of games where I'm just engaged. It doesn't matter the score or how many points I score.
There's been a lot of talk of me being a one-man show but that's simply not the case. We win games when I score 40 points and we've won when I score 10.
I don't pick tournaments to score or rivals or other teams to score against. I'm a striker: every game I play, I want to score.
You don't score 64 goals in 86 games at the highest level without being able to score goals.
I go out to every match to do my job and my teammates help me score and to be honest I score so much because they make it so easy for me.
As a point guard, you don't really have to score. The only time you have to score is when you have to score.
If it's a real bad score, then it can ruin a movie for me, or, at least, it will draw a lot of my attention to the score.
The Bell curve is a fact of life. The blacks on average score 85 per cent on IQ and it is accurate, nothing to do with culture. The whites score on average 100. Asians score more. The Bell curve authors put it at least 10 points higher. These are realities that, if you do not accept, will lead to frustration because you will be spending money on wrong assumptions and the results cannot follow.
My wife never went to many Liverpool games but if she was out on a Saturday, she would always ask someone for the score. If we had won, she'd simply be relieved that I would be coming home in a good mood.
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