Men of thoughts should have nothing to do with action.
I like it when every pitch counts. There are a lot of people who see it as a negative, but I try to feed off it.
I'm me on the mound. I like to show my emotion, be real aggressive and give everything I've got for one half inning. I don't have to act. What you see on the mound is what I am in real life.
Sometimes, with two strikes and two outs, I step off the mound. People are yelling, they're yelling really loud. I step off because I want to feel it. You've got all that adrenaline going, you've got that rush. People think I'm thinking about something, but I'm just trying to listen to everyone and feed off it.
It's the best feeling in the world. The game's on the line, and you're the guy in the spotlight.
I don't think about delivery. I don't think about mechanics. I just think about throwing hard.
[In hockey] I was a goon, just protecting the better players. I've always been a better baseball player.
Any ideal system is its own worst enemy, and as soon as you start to implement these visions of grandeur, they just fall apart and turn into a complete tyranny.
Whatever may be the distribution of uncertainty among economists, the public only gets to hear from those who have certain opinions.
Any technique, however worthy and desirable, becomes a disease when the mind is obsessed with it.
I'm spending more time at this library in four days than I did at the Eureka College Library in four years.