The experience of travelling, getting familiar with other languages, other cultures definitely helps. It makes you a better person.
Brendan Rodgers
What you have in Scotland is an unpredictability with surfaces - and I've already said you don't get good games on artificial turf - and that can affect performances and results.
When you're so young, it's important to understand exactly what your role is. Not just look good - you have to be efficient and effective.
When you have a son in football like Anton, it will always be deemed as if he got the prop up and given the contract, no matter how hard he works. So much so that when he was offered a deal at Chelsea, I advised him not to take a professional contract.
I'm not arrogant enough to think that I will be in a job through anything. Any manager will tell you that you have to win games, and you have to get results. You have to perform.
Liverpool is one of the superpowers of world football.
Criticism comes with the territory when you don't win games.
He's a big player, and the big players score the big goals and make the big contributions in the big games. That's what determines a great player. That's what Steven Gerrard is.
Whatever country you're in, you have to want to be in with a chance of winning.
I had a wonderful time at Liverpool. My three and a half years there was a great experience.
My biggest mentor is myself, I've always felt.
I think all you can worry is that you make the team the very best they can be.
Believe it or not, the sky is blue here in Glasgow. I absolutely love it here.
It's very difficult to say that a player is irreplaceable because the nature of football means that someone always steps in to take the shirt and provides different elements to your team.
If you are going to be successful, there is no point in having three or four top individual players, because those players will win you games, but they will never win you titles.
It turns out I share a birthday with Jose Mourinho. He is exactly 10 years older than me.
How you succeed is how you deal with failure. Whatever way you dress it up, something hasn't worked.
Celtic are the club I supported as a boy, and I loved every moment I was there. For me to leave there, I knew I was going to have to not just come to a club, but I had to come to a special club that was going to allow me to connect with the players and hopefully the supporters, too.
I went in to Reading with the full backing of the chairman, who was great to me, and I got 20 games. Even though it was a three-year project, and I was the guy who knew the club more than anyone, I got the sack after 20 games. Funnily enough, it had just started to pick up, but they lost their patience.
I'm very proud of my work at Watford in what has been a short period.
The word you sometimes get is 'deluded,' they use, but for me, I've always been very positive.
If I was making the decision normally, with my heart, I'd never leave Celtic. My life was great. I loved the city. I loved the people. I loved the club. I had a wonderful life. If you think of all those things, you'd never move.
I always say to the players, 'You can either create or wait.' If you're waiting, you're relying on someone else, as simple as that. But if you create it, you've got to do it.
I suppose that fear of failure is what drives me on.
I like teams to control and dominate the ball so the players are hungry for the ball.
If you give a good player time, he can kill you.
Wherever you go, you have to go win.
I will only ever do my best.
What I learned was it does not matter how much support you have in the boardroom, from the directors, the executives: you have to get results, and you have to win.
Simon Mignolet has been first class.
Young players will run through a barbed wire fence for you.
A winning model would mean trying to get the best possible players that you can, at whatever age they are; it doesn't matter.
I think sometimes you can want to win too much, and the focus comes away from what allows you to win.
When you manage Liverpool, you know the Manchester United job is gone.
Coutinho is a joy to watch.
I've always been a great lover of Barcelona and the structure of the club.
The key for scouting is trying to predict when the player is peaking.
When I was at Liverpool, I asked about Van Dijk when he was at Groningen and then at Celtic. But I was told he wouldn't be for us at the time. Van Dijk could have jumped from Celtic to a Liverpool.
Would I work in Scotland again? Of course I would. I loved every single second of being there.
I try to implement my own ways of making teams successful.
One of my strengths is I learn, and I like to learn from all sorts of people in all walks of life.
The team is the most important thing.
Racism - whether it's in football or society, there's absolutely no place for it.
I always like the players to be within 10 to 15 metres of each other. When the attacking players try what I am asking them to do, and it breaks down, there are players close enough to then go and win the ball back and counter press the game.
My teams have always been dominant about having the ball but having the ball to create opportunities. That's always been the clear way of my work.
I've got huge respect for Arsenal as a club.
Liverpool give young players a good opportunity.
You make mistakes in your life, especially when you're young.
If you're happy, ultimately, that's all that matters.
You can have X amount of pounds in your bank every month, but if you're not happy, and you're not finding peace in what you're doing, it doesn't really matter.