A Quote by Unai Emery

To become a good coach, you need to win a lot. — © Unai Emery
To become a good coach, you need to win a lot.

Quote Topics

When you become the coach, you need to give at least 200 to 250 days a year to the team and that's a lot of work.
To become a good coach, it is important to be equipped with tactics and strategy. But first of all, you need to have strong leadership.
I like to be with Aubam. He's a good boy, a good man, and a good player, and every day, we laugh a lot, so I like to hang out with him. I hope we will score a lot of goals together, can win a lot of games and win some trophies.
Obviously I need a coach, but it's not the main thing in my team. I can play good even without a coach.
The president is just the coach of a football team. You need the right support, the right stadium, the right players, the right staff. An excellent coach is not going to win games.
You just need a good coach. A coach that you respect.
It's a lot of hard work to be a manager or a coach. But as players, we had to have a good work ethic to be good, and we can use that trait in management or as a coach.
I don't feel I'm qualified to be a coach outside the high school level. I think I would need to do more education to really be a good coach.
We need the fans to win games. We need the energy from them to win a lot of games and we need that every night, not just certain nights.
I'm optimistic about our future as a party. It's about winning. The Democratic Party, if I had to do one word: winning. We need to win elections, because one thing I've learned is that when Democrats win good things happen to a lot of folks, and when we don't do so hot, we see a lot of chaos and carnage.
When you're at the lower levels in the organization, you need to win and be right. But as you move up, you need to let other people win and be right, and become a manager and delegate responsibility.
You need a long-term coach to be able to win.
You've got to have great athletes to win, I don't care who the coach is. You can't win without good athletes but you can lose with them. This is where coaching makes the difference.
When you become the coach, you need to give at least 200 to 250 days a year to the team and that's a lot of work. I don't think I can manage so much work away from Pakistan, from my family.
A coach these days is more of a manager than a coach. At this level, you shouldn't really need a coach. You need someone to organise, to come up with gameplans and tactics, rather than someone who is going to do much actual coaching.
Hopefully my time in Nashville has helped me. We've had a lot of different things happen to our hockey club, seen a lot of different situations and different types of clubs from an expansion team to a Stanley Cup playoff threat. I think any coach that's gone through those things, you become a better coach.
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