Words matter. These are the best Andrew Robertson Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
Look at the English league. Everyone down there backs it. That’s why it’s so highly spoken of. If Scottish football can do that, it will make it a lot more appealing to some fans who are maybe not coming.
You can get lucky in the cups, but you don’t get lucky over a 38-game season.
A point at Old Trafford is never a bad result.
I don’t like sitting on the bench even when it was very rare at Hull to rest during cup games.
I’ve never thought that being Scottish should mean there was any kind of barrier to me getting where I wanted to go, and I still feel like I can keep improving.
With or without the armband, I would love to pull on the country’s colours. That doesn’t change.
Once you get a feeling for trophies and going far in European tournaments with your club, then you want to replicate that with your country.
I’ll never praise myself, because I think there’s always improvement to be made.
I don’t like it if I’m not part of the starting 11.
No magic wands have been waved in my direction; I didn’t win some kind of lottery to land a spot at one of the biggest clubs in the world.
I don’t make any secret of it – I hate not playing.
Everything I get praised for, I can still work on and get better.
When I got the chance to play in the Premier League with Hull City in 2014, I had lived a lot of real life.
I like pressure. I put in on myself, and I think I get the best out of myself by doing that.
I’m not a good spectator; I’m a nightmare when I’m injured and I’m not playing.
I was brought up in Glasgow, and I was a big Celtic follower.
I know when people say I’m some sort of Cinderella Man that it’s meant as a compliment. I appreciate that, but to be totally honest, it doesn’t feel like one, because it isn’t true.
It’s great being a dad. It’s like anyone, if things aren’t going well at work, and you go home and see your missus and kid, then it cheers you up straight away.
I just try to take everything in my stride.
Even when I have a good game, you can still do things better.
I’m never going to question the fans.
Football is full of highs and lows, but when people retire, they often say, ‘I wish I’d enjoyed it more.’
It seems to be a big thing to people that a Scottish player is going to play in the Champions League final, but hopefully that will become a more regular thing.
Nobody wants the left-back’s shirt.
A lot of players try to buy penalties, and sometimes defenders can’t do a lot about it.
My first year at Queen’s Park, I just wasn’t good enough, but that tough period shaped me.
In the long run of the league, the best team always wins.
My ambitions were always to be a solid SPL player.
It always helps when the nation is behind you.
I’m not a person who wants to be the centre of attention or anything like that.
Everyone knows what toothache’s like: it’s one of those dull pains that just won’t go away.
There is no point in getting nervous. I get a few butterflies in my stomach, but it isn’t really nerves but things that will help your game.
At the top end of the Premier League, you have to be ruthless. Even just to get in the top four is hard.
When I moved to Hull and I was playing against players in the Premier League, maybe I pinched myself then.
I’ve been very fortunate that I’ve played under a lot of very good captains.
Not many things bug me, but if there’s one thing that does, it’s the idea that my story is a football fairytale.
When you hear Liverpool want you, you call your agent back in about five seconds.
I had grown up going to Celtic Park with Mum, Dad, and my brother. We had four season tickets.
There’s not much point breaking records if, in the end, it doesn’t mean anything.
I have always said that I am one to look forward rather than back; what has happened in the past I can’t change now. What is forward, I can.
When you get the armband, everyone looks to you to lead, and when things go wrong, then you get criticised the most, and I need to take that on the chin.
I’ve never wanted to be a poster boy, but if I’m going to be a poster boy for anything, it should be this. If you don’t give up, and if you carry on believing in yourself when others are doubting you, you can make it.
I always believed in my ability. I just had to work hard and be patient and, yeah, at times it didn’t look likely. You need a wee stroke of luck but every chance I’ve been given, I’ve taken.
The food bank is something I’ve always supported because there’s no excuse for anyone to go without food.
A team like Liverpool you are not going to turn down.
Relegation – that’s pressure.
We all need to chip in with goals and assists. It’s not just the front three. It’s not just the defence that keeps clean sheets, either. It’s a team game.
I don’t get emotional.
Just before I left Dundee United, I captained them for one game, although I think that was maybe to keep me there!
If there’s competition in training, then the training is intense, and then you have the pressure of a weekend that if you don’t put in good performances, then your place is maybe up for grabs.