
Ricky Hatton on his fight with Colombian Carlos Maussa. http://www.tamesideadvertiser.co.uk/sport/s/206/206746_a_stitch_in_time.html
Ricky on other boxers (Sourced)
Ricky Hatton on his fight with Colombian Carlos Maussa. http://www.tamesideadvertiser.co.uk/sport/s/206/206746_a_stitch_in_time.html
Ricky on other boxers (Sourced)
“It was epic. It was awkward. It was epically awkward.”
Source: United We Spy
“We are exiting from communism in a most unfortunate and awkward way.”
Interview with Joseph Pearce, Sr. (2003)
Context: We are exiting from communism in a most unfortunate and awkward way. It would have been difficult to design a path out of communism worse than the one that has been followed. Our government declared that it is conducting some kind of great reforms. In reality, no real reforms were begun and no one at any point has declared a coherent programme. The name of "reform" simply covers what is latently a process of the theft of the national heritage.
“I can scarcely bid you good-bye, even in a letter. I always made an awkward bow. God bless you!”
Letter to Charles Armitage Brown (November 30, 1820)
Letters (1817–1820)
The Paris Review interview (1958)
Context: I'm an American, and always will be. I happen to love that big, awkward, sprawling country very much — and its big, awkward, sprawling people. Anyway, I don't like politics; and I don't make "political gestures," as you call it. I don't even believe in politics. To me, politics is like one of those annoying, and potentially dangerous (but generally just painful) chronic diseases that you just have to put up with in your life if you happen to have contracted it. Politics is like having diabetes. It's a science, a catch-as-catch-can science, which has grown up out of simple animal necessity more than anything else. If I were twice as big as I am, and twice as physically strong, I think I'd be a total anarchist. As it is, since I'm physically a pretty little guy... no, in fact, one reason I left was because I believe it is good for an American writer to get outside his country — outside his continent — and see it from a vantage point outside its pervading emotional climate.