Training is what you are doing while your opponent is sleeping in.
I can't overlook any opponent because all fighters are dangerous. Every fighter is dangerous.
Talking to a golf ball won't do you any good, unless you do it while your opponent is teeing off.
I don't worry about my opponent or their game, I worry about my game.
Assessing existence while failing to embrace the insights of modern physics would be like wrestling in the dark with an unknown opponent.
I prepare for my fights to well that I don't wanna give a chance to my opponent to crash my 'glass chin' as they say, so I'm knocking them in the way that I like.
Being a great fighter is having a perfect balance of having that toughness, skill, as well as that mental capability to be able to out-think you opponent.
You really are never playing an opponent. You are playing yourself.
As long as my opponent has not yet castled, on each move I seek a pretext for an offensive. Even when I realize that the king is not in danger.
I believe if my opponent [Hillary Clinton] should win this race, which I truly don't think will happen, we will have a Second Amendment which will be a very, very small replica of what it is right now. But I feel that it's absolutely important that we uphold, because of the fact that it is under such trauma.
You may knock your opponent down with the chessboard, but that does not prove that you are the better player.
Always assume your opponent to be smarter than you.
The deeper you get into the playoffs, obviously the better the opponent is. Which means they'll be better defensively, they'll rebound better, they don't turn the ball over.
The beauty about boxing fights is that they offer lots of opportunity to really learn something about yourself and your opponent.
I guess there hasn't been a tough enough opponent for me to fight. But fighting a southpaw is OK. It's something different and maybe I need something different. I look at a right-handed fighter then I look at a left-handed fighter, and it's even better.
A sight game is that I am hurt, but I aim to make you believe I am not even hurt, and with this confidence appearing on my face, I don't panic, otherwise your opponent will know that you are hurt. That's the whole art game in boxing.
If you are strong and fighting the weak, then if you kill your opponent then you are a scoundrel. . . if you let him kill you, then you are an idiot.
You never lose a game if the opponent doesn't score.
Play against the Game, not your opponent.
Propaganda must not serve the truth, especially as it might bring out something favorable for the opponent.