I like to work out with the young guys.

Too many young guys on one team isn't good.

Bayern offers the young guys a huge opportunity.

There are not too many coaches who trust in young guys.

It's cool for young guys to see what their idols are doing.

I feel like I've been mentoring young guys for a long time.

This is really a new NHL and it's built on speed and young guys.

The young guys keep me motivated. Youngsters coming up behind me.

These young guys are playing checkers. I'm out there playing chess.

That's my job as a veteran in the league - to help make the young guys better.

I want the young guys to say, 'How old is this guy that's blocking me every play?'

For me, I'm always willing to help young guys, because veterans have helped me out.

It's amazing to see these young guys come into the league and want to wear my shoes.

Hopefully I'll be a GM one day, or even a coach, teaching the game to the young guys.

If I could leave a tip for the young guys, it would be don't hit yourselves every day.

I tell young guys, you need to build accountability into your life to avoid the pitfalls.

You need young guys to come in and play like older guys, really help the team and produce.

I have seen incredible bravery from very young guys, the young generation that people write off.

I played for so long with the national team. It was great but it's time for the young guys to play.

People are going to get older and young guys are going to come in and race and get more competitive.

When I do retire, you won't see me in the ring, but I will be working in the back with the young guys.

I see a lot of young guys going back to the suit, but they're doing it in a way that's less of a uniform.

If I can go compete with the young guys during training in the offseason, I should be fine during football.

It's the youth movement we have. A lot of young guys with a lot of passion. It brings the fun back to the game.

I try to not to step on any coach's toes as far as what I'm telling the young guys or what I'm trying to give them.

Any time you criticize these young guys, they call you a hater. They never ask you if the criticism is fair or not.

The only advice I would give young guys is to keep your ears and eyes open. Never see yourself as a finished product.

A lot of guys, especially the young guys, I try to do anything I can for them - on the field, off the field, anything.

You can have old guys who aren't willing to be coached just like you can have young guys who aren't willing to be coached.

I want to… help the young guys, help my teammates, help everybody be confident and make everybody feel like they're special.

I see the young guys coming out of college. They are bombing it past me. They hit it so far, they are leaving me in the dust.

I tell all the young guys, don't make choices because somebody else is telling you it's good from a career-maintenance perspective.

I train with young guys in the offseason just to be honest and keep myself sure, to let myself know if I'm ready or will I be ready.

I'm a football coach. It seems the league is cyclical and hiring young guys... but experience in the NFL still means a heck of a lot.

I hope the young guys who are playing today realize what they have been given and will take it upon themselves to give back in return.

I can't get carried away with having a good time because everyone, especially the young guys, have to know there's a time and place for everything.

I've put in 63 years now in the big leagues as a player, coach, manager. And now just being around these young guys, it keeps you going pretty good.

I like some of the young guys like Senator Thune. He's a guy that looks good. He's very articulate, he's very smart, and he truly is a public servant.

I would not advise a young player to even listen to Byron Scott, because he is the worst coach at communicating with young guys, and I'm living proof.

I'm always going to be a leader and always try and set up a positive example day in and day out, so I can - so the young guys hopefully pick up on it.

Not many young guys in the league are getting to play valuable minutes for a really good team, so I'm trying to take advantage of it as much as I can.

You always want to make sure that your work can touch as many people as possible. Whether it's young guys, young girls, you never know where it's going.

When you've lived as long I've lived, you see things from a bigger lens, and you try to share that with the young guys coming up, including being patient.

P90X and Insanity are awesome workouts for young guys who aren't beat up. DDPYoga is for guys who are beat up. It's the fountain of youth for beat-up guys.

I have young guys come up to me after games and say they want to train with me and they don't know how I do it. It's God, it's training and it's love for the game.

I've seen young guys break down in those situations. They're cruising along, playing great, then their minutes get funky and they fall apart. Some of them never recover.

I haven't been in tennis for that long, but what I can say is that we have a lot of young guys at the top who are willing to do a lot of good things for tennis in general.

People want to see how we get teams to come together so quickly. They want to see how we get young guys to play so hard and so unselfish. I'm fine with that. I have no problem sharing that.

I'd love to open up sessions at a Boys and Girls Club or something where kids can learn nutrition and how to exercise in a fun way. Especially for young guys. I'd love to be an inspiration.

I saw footage of Johnny Cash and Elvis Presley just hanging out together in Memphis when they were young guys getting started at Sun, listening to records together. That was beautiful to me.

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