The more mistakes you make, the more you learn.
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer
Playing games is the best time of your life, and the more games you get, the better it is.
Manchester United have always stood up again and bounced back; it's just in the DNA.
The only way I know to get out of disappointment is to work hard, keep doing the right things, and don't make any rash decisions.
I was always the 'boring' type. I was into the stats and spending hours and hours and hours studying them. I was always more a manager than a player.
Norway is a small environment. There are only three to four agents to deal with, just 15 other clubs, and that's it!
You will always miss chances, but you can't do anything about them once they've gone. It's always about the next chance.
When your kids disappoint you, you tell them off; you don't give them some chocolate, do you? You treat players similar to how you treat your kids, really.
I am not a city guy; I like peaceful surroundings and maybe a walk around a lake.
Throughout my life, ever since I played for Clausenengen back home, instead of listening to the teacher at school, I was writing down all the chances I missed in a book thinking 'I should have done this.' Scoring goals was all I thought about.
Every single player needs that eye-to-eye connection, I'm sure. They want to know what is expected of them, but it's not just me telling them what to do. It's about asking, 'What are your strengths? What do you feel? What can you give to the team?'
I realised when I was a striker that when I ended up wide on the left or right, it can be so much easier to get space and face defenders up.
I thought I could go into Cardiff, but different clubs have different cultures, different playing styles and philosophies. I'm more suited to the other jobs I've had.
It's not my job to rate managers. My focus is on me and my team.
When people doubt me, I love it.
Clubs don't change managers unless there is something wrong.
Finishing is different to shooting. If you work at in in training sessions then you will just do it naturally during the game.
I'm the manager of Cardiff City Football Club, and I'm not to lay down and feel sorry for myself.
When you are in a football club, you stick together. That's the key.
Confidence is not something you store in the fridge and pick out. You earn it by your performances, by your training, how you feel.
You can never set the bar too high.
In football, you never know what can happen.
It's down to the players, but when you're at Man United, there isn't a lot of greener grass on the other side. You are at the best place.
I'm very confident in my own ability as a manager.
The one way of getting better is by practising - both on and off the pitch.
I will show emotion with my players and fans when we do well. I am a professional man, and that is what I have to do.
One of my favourite players is, of course, Marcus Rashford.
It's not my job to rate myself and judge myself. That's up to someone else.
You have got to be one step ahead, as a striker, to create that space you need. Apart from the ball, when you're a striker, it is space that's your best friend. You need space.
When you are a professional, you go into the next game wanting to win.
I understand there are so many managers who would love to be manager of Manchester United, and I am one of them.
When you win the title, you have a great few days, and then it's gone; you're already looking forward to the next season.
I had the best teacher there can be in man management or managing a football club.
Every manager dreams of managing Manchester United.
When you get disappointments, you bounce back.
A Man United team should never be outworked.
The FA Cup final is such a fantastic final to play in. I played in the 1999 one at Wembley, and after having watched so many finals as a kid, to be able to make that long walk up from the dressing room to the pitch was fantastic.
I am not an emotional person, really.
When you're at Manchester United there are a set of demands, and one is to be a team player, and I don't think anyone has been on the bench more than me!
Everybody wants the Hollywood glamour of the Premier League.
If you are a regular at Manchester United, I think you should grasp the opportunity to stay here and become part of the history.
Molde fits me very well; Man United fits me very well because it's in me. It's in your personality. It's ingrained in you. I understand the club.
My dad used to be a Greco-Roman wrestler, and he was Norwegian champion six years on the bounce from 1966 to 1971. But I never saw him wrestle. I've only read the clippings.
I had a fantastic time at United. I have been back to watch games. It was over 14 years of my life. It is a third of my life I spent at Old Trafford. That's a lot of time, and it feels like home.
When you turn round games, that's the best feeling you have in games.
I am a realistic person.
If I had been at any other club but United, then I think I would have gone to the manager and asked to leave. But I want to stay here and win things.
You want all the money inside football. We do not have a bottomless pit of money. There are constraints. That's why some deals I have said no to because of the finances of them.
If you want to stay at Manchester United and win trophies and be successful, then you have to work through the reserve games, and that is what I am doing.
That comes when you sign for Man United - you know you're going to play in front of the best fans in the world.