A Quote by Todd Blackledge

You don't need to manage the clock when you score in one play. — © Todd Blackledge
You don't need to manage the clock when you score in one play.
I lose all track of time on that level. I used to have a really good sense of time. I didn't need a clock to play, and I had a sense of when five, ten, twenty minutes had passed. Now I can only play with a clock.
I'm satisfied with the way I play, but I don't evaluate my performances. I worry about what I can contribute defensively. I don't need to score. As long as we win, I don't care how many points I score.
The thing I expect from myself, when I play, is to score, in every game. If I don't, then it happens. But when you start a game, if you are a striker, you need to score.
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.
I can't play any more. I can't hit the ball when I need to. I can't steal second when I need to. I can't go from first to third when I need to. I can't score from second when I need to. I have to quit.
The late W. Edwards Deming, guru of Quality management, once declared, 'The most important things we need to manage can't be measured.' If that’s true of what we need to manage, it should be even more obvious that it’s true of what we need to teach.
The clock is just as much a part of the game as the board and pieces, and losing because of time-trouble is no different to losing because of weak play -- it's still a zero on the score-sheet.
Penalties are part of the game, you know. You need to score. You have the chance but you need to score.
The bottom line is we need to score points, and we need to score a lot of them.
I need to be the best player I can, score and play defense.
I'm a forward, and I need to score goals, but I want to play at a higher level.
Father and son games - that was the best day. We'd be dressed at 6 o'clock in the morning. The game would be at 7 o'clock at night... And we'd play at, like, 5.
Obviously when you're a striker you need to score. The manager's not going to just play you if you're not scoring.
For any Geordie, if you can't manage to play for Newcastle, then to get back and manage them it's something special.
The script is the musical score, and everyone has to play off that score. Even I have to interpret it. The producers are there to eliminate obstacles to that interpretation.
When you go to a World Cup, in midfield you need to have players who can score from distance, who can get in the box and obviously play-make.
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