A Quote by Frank Lampard

I don't want to be a passenger sitting on the bench not doing much, even in my older years. — © Frank Lampard
I don't want to be a passenger sitting on the bench not doing much, even in my older years.
I'm desperate to enjoy my football again and play until I retire. Obviously I'm 34 so I don't want to be sitting on the bench, I don't want to be remembering my last few years of my career like that.
I can't keep sitting on the bench and letting my life go on, smoking a cigar and not doing anything. It's not me. I want to be playing football.
There are “bus bench” workouts and “park bench” workouts. A bus bench and a park bench look exactly the same, but your expectations sitting in them are radically different.
When I was 21, I did not have that much pressure. I was sitting down on the bench... you know... cleaning Sir Vivian Richards's boots or doing something... getting ready to play international cricket.
Sitting on the bench, scoring a goal, and then being back on the bench is quite difficult to deal with for an attacker.
I do not want to be sitting on the bench.
I'm mentally drained even when I'm just sitting on the bench and not playing.
Regardless of whether I'm sitting on the bench or out there participating, I'm going to give my all whatever I'm doing.
I don't want to be a guy who's just sitting on the bench stealing money.
I feel as long as I'm playing productive minutes, I'll play. But if I'm sitting on the bench and not doing anything, then I'll retire.
I don't like sitting on the bench even when it was very rare at Hull to rest during cup games.
I know my first years sitting on the bench, largely behind Rickey Green, was a great learning tool for me.
what's the matter?" he asked "nothing" "what do you want me to do for you?" "i want you to be old. ten years older. twenty years older" what she meant was: i want you to be weak. as weak as i am.
I was a goalkeeper, but through my career, I spent almost as much time sitting on the bench as I did playing.
It's easy to motivate a client when they are sitting on a bench right in front of you, but the real challenge for a trainer is to have that motivation exist even when you are not around.
Pretty much every weekend, my wife and I have the shall-we-live-in-the-country conversation. I suppose it's something to do with getting older and feeling I want to shed some of the things I've been doing for the last 20 years and go back to my roots.
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