I don't like cheaters.

I don't like talking about cheaters.

I'm telling you, I don't like cheaters.

I'd be champ already if it wasn't for the cheaters.

The cheaters are going to find way to cheat over and over again.

There should be no tolerance for cheaters, especially in fighting.

Make no mistake, tax cheaters cheat us all, and the IRS should enforce our laws to the letter.

There will always be cheaters. It is human nature. It will never be 100 percent clean, in any sport.

And it would be fair. Everyone will pay the same tax and it will eliminate tax cheaters and corporate shenanigans.

We have to make some radical move to get the attention of everyone. Cheaters can't win and steroids has put us in the position that it's OK to cheat.

When I went to the starting line of the 1976 Olympic marathon in Montreal, it was with the unsettling conviction that some of my competitors were cheaters.

I'm not gonna waste my money watching two cheaters fight. Why would I? They're cheaters, in the end. That's basically all they are. They should get nothing.

But human nature dictates that there will always be cheaters. That's inevitable. Where there's money involved and glory, there are going to be people that cheat, and there will always be ways to cheat.

We knew what was going on with Spygate. We were in football mode, and it didn't impact our day-to-day. There's so much noise on the outside - 'You're cheaters, you're this, you're that' - but the easiest way to settle that is to go 18-0 and go to the Super Bowl.

When an athlete has relegated the persistent rumors of cheating to the back room of the mind, he hasn't really forgotten them. And when he glances back to where rumors hunker in the darkness, he hopes with a savage heart that somehow, some day, those cheaters will be brought to justice.

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