A Quote by Woody Hayes

Perfect preparation prevents piss-poor performance. — © Woody Hayes
Perfect preparation prevents piss-poor performance.
Remember your six P's - Perfect Practice Prevents Piss Poor Performance.
Proper preparation prevents poor performance.
The seven Ps: Proper Planning and Preparation Prevent Piss-Poor Performance
Proper prior planning prevents pitiful poor performance.
The best piece of advice my father gave me was to always work hard. One thing he instilled: Proper preparation prevents poor performances.
It's always about wanting to one-up myself from the day before. There's never an absolute 100% perfect performance, but going out and striving for that perfect performance is what keeps me going.
There'll be no more big powers and oppressed poor - only fairness and justice for all, and eternal happiness. So if you're looking for the perfect city and the perfect government in the perfect country with perfect people, just wait a little while longer - it's coming
It amazes me that organs that piss Can give human beings such perfect bliss.
Greatness is in the preparation, not in the performance.
You can fix things with digital technology and there's a temptation to fix everything or make it perfect and what you're losing there is the human performance that may not be perfect but there may be magic in it. You can make it perfect but music doesn't sound good perfect for some reason.
Effective performance is preceded by painstaking preparation
I believe you have to learn how to win. And that just doesn't come from going out on the basketball court and playing. That comes from hours and hours of preparation, preparation before that game, preparation for the other team you are playing, mental preparation.
Whoever coined the phrase 'a man's got to play the hand that was dealt him' was most certainly one piss-poor bluffer.
You read a lot about movies with budgets of $25 to 30 million. Hell, if a studio can piss away that kind of money, why not let 'em piss on me?
The state of my poor boy's health prevents me from leaving home for a night.
The problem is that every study I'm aware of, which is probably not that many, has indicated that a dollar spent in preparation and avoidance of natural disasters is worth $15 that is spent in relief. But there's no political payoff for preparation. So, who benefits? I mean, the governor or senator or the president? Bill Clinton at Oklahoma City, his performance there helped him enormously. And there really hasn't been any regulation that would, in fact, interfere with environmental disaster.
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