Words matter. These are the best Scoreboard Quotes from famous people such as Adam Vinatieri, Randy Pausch, Gail Devers, LZ Granderson, Nadia Comaneci, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
The only number I care about is the scoreboard.
I played in football games where you walk off the field and the scoreboard didn’t end up the way you wanted. But you knew that you really did give it all. And the other team was too strong.
A lot of times when I ran, to be honest, I didn’t know where I was in the race. So I always was looking up at the scoreboard to say, ‘Just call my name to see where I am,’ because I tried to have such tunnel vision not to distract myself.
I don’t begrudge a coach for trying to get all that he or she can. I don’t resent a school feeling it needs to pay to keep top talent. I’m just afraid to think where all of this will end up because the overall impact seems to be stretching far beyond the scoreboard.
The fans had become used to looking toward the scoreboard whenever a gymnast stuck a landing. You could tell they were thinking, ‘Was that good enough? Would the numbers read 10.00?’ The athlete was looking, too.
I’m 0 for 3 with marriage – the scoreboard doesn’t lie, never has. So what we all have is a marriage of the heart. To sully or contaminate or radically disrespect this union with a shameful contract is something that I will leave to the amateurs and the Bible grippers.
Whenever I go out to bat, my only responsibility is to look at the scoreboard and think what India needs from me at this moment.
It doesn’t matter what the scoreboard says. I’m always having fun, talking to other guys. They even come to first base and ask me about hitting. I try to help them out as much as I can in the 30 seconds before the pitcher throws the next pitch. That’s me. I don’t think I will ever change that.
I think the great part about what I do is that there’s a scoreboard. At the end of every week, you know how you did. You know how well you prepared. You know whether you executed your game plan. There’s a tangible score.
Scoring the first 10 in history was a big deal, but the fact that even an electronic scoreboard could not figure out how to put out a score, it made the story more historic.
You might get fouled and have a no-call, but let’s still go out and hoop. Just beat them up the other way, and that’s with the scoreboard.
I don’t ever leave my garage stall during practice. I don’t want to know what other people are doing. I don’t look at the scoreboard.
What makes me a selfish player? Because I shoot the ball? I’m supposed to shoot the ball. That’s how you score points. Those points go on the scoreboard for the whole team.
I guess I could be happy in anything where you feel like there’s a scoreboard.
I remember the 2015 World Cup looking up at the scoreboard and seeing that big Hublot sign and that clock and I just think it’s a real compliment to the game of cricket.
You want to be busy and try and get the scoreboard moving, and showing that intent when you go out there is important.
I try to make runs, keep the scoreboard moving. That keeps my confidence up.
I’ve always craved winning. It’s just easier in sports because there’s a scoreboard.
Money is a scoreboard where you can rank how you’re doing against other people.
The game is never over. No matter what the scoreboard reads or what the referee says, it doesn’t end when you come off the court.
I always look at the positive side of things. Wicketkeeping is all about the feel. And I got a good feel about my wicketkeeping in England. So I didn’t look too much at the scoreboard.
I mean, sometimes if you’re not always going to win on the scoreboard, you want to make sure that you’re there physically.
I think it’s pretty important that you learn how to keep your own scoreboard and how to be focused on what truly matters over the long term.
Then after I saw the scoreboard that we were tied, I was really happy, because I really wanted to win.
I did not even look at the scoreboard when my routine was done in 1976.