A Quote by Oliver Burke

There are things you can do in training like learn from the manager and talk with team-mates, but it's the game that tests you. — © Oliver Burke
There are things you can do in training like learn from the manager and talk with team-mates, but it's the game that tests you.
It's not easy when you have a new manager because you have to try and adapt yourself to him, the team, training sessions, and the game.
You will make a mistake in a game, fair enough, but you want your team-mates to help you out because it is a team game.
I have my way of doing things, because I am that way, I try to raise my voice to motivate team-mates and make them aware that if they lose a ball it is not a problem, so I try to motivate my team-mates and to speak to them and, because I see the game from the back I see everything in front of me; communication on the field can help a lot.
I like to talk to my team-mates. Communication is key.
I can talk with my team-mates, understand them and it's better for understanding the coaching staff and the game itself. If someone's making a run and they shout for the ball, I know now.
I want to make the crowd, my team mates and my manager happy.
It's always nice to feel the support of your manager, club, and team-mates.
I don't like to talk about myself. I don't want to talk about what I do, what I think I do. The position I play on the pitch, I am expected - and I expect - to create chances for my team-mates and score goals.
If I go on to the pitch, do things well and the fans love me and my team-mates, too, we take on that energy which can change a game.
The best training is to learn to accept everything as it comes, as from Him whom our soul loves. The tests are always unexpected things, not great things that can be written up, but the common little rubs of life, silly little nothings, things you are ashamed of minding one scrap
But I just try to do my best. I don't know if my game can influence the game of the team and how we play, but I just try to help with my football, for my team-mates and the club.
I would like to be a manager, to organize everything in training, see if my philosophy could work, and give it to the team.
Of course, I enjoy assisting my team-mates because playing no.10 is the position you have to serve your team-mates.
No, I didn't expect Mancini to become a manager, because of the type of player he was - he was an intelligent player, of course, but I didn't think he had the desire to become a manager. But I guess if you speak to some of my team-mates they'd probably say they didn't expect me to either. I certainly didn't expect it.
I like what I am doing. I enjoy all parts of the game - the team building, training camp, game days, the excitement of Sunday... it beats working.
I talk a lot with my team-mates.
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