It would be pretty special if I could win two Olympic gold medals, one at the Summer Games and one from the Winters, so I'm going to give it a real go.
The same people who recognize I came out with no medals should recognize I could have won three.
The feeling of accomplishment welled up inside of me, three Olympic gold medals. I knew that was something nobody could ever take away from me, ever.
It was never about winning medals or being famous.
Heck, gold medals, what can you do with them?
We can't all win Olympic medals. Even I never won one.
For six years, I kept my five Olympic medals wrapped in a plastic bread bag beneath my bed.
Put me there on the pitch if you want to see how much it means to me or how hungry I am to win more medals.
Two gold medals and two silver, I don't think is that bad... I think I still did a pretty good job.
God will not look you over for medals degrees or diplomas, but for scars.
If I'd gone into taekwondo, I'd probably have won several Olympic medals.
I wouldn't swap the era I competed in for anything, not a day of it. I started out as an amateur, and people like myself, Seb Coe, Steve Ovett, Steve Cram, Tessa Sanderson and the rest did it for the glory of winning medals for our country.
My biggest motivation is knowing what it feels like to win medals and thinking that I want that feeling again. It was incredible to succeed in Beijing and come home to your whole country behind you but, importantly, all your family and friends.
I want to win medals for myself.
The number of medals on an officer's breast varies in inverse proportion to the square of the distance of his duties from the front line.
Gold medals aren't really made of gold. They're made of sweat, determination, and a hard-to-find alloy called guts.
It took me time to realize that the men who won Olympic gold medals in the decathlon are just men, just like me.
I won player of the year and players' player, two cups and two championship medals, had a great time.
Trophies and medals have never meant much to me. I've had amazing experiences, which let you feel like you've accomplished something.
I was at the Olympic Games winning medals and I still doubted my image. I doubted what I looked like. That's sad.
I follow the teachings of Major General Smedley Darlington Butler, United States Marine Corps. He won two Congressional Medals of Honor, and he wrote the highly controversial antiwar book 'War is a Racket.'
But probably this is helps to win, to win, to gold, more gold medals, and to win most my important medal, heart of people. This is most important for me.
I knew many Marines had done brave deeds that no one saw and for which they got no medals at all. I was having a very hard time carrying those medals and didn't have the insight or maturity to know what to do with my combination of guilt and pride.
The dynamic has really changed in the U.S. Americans believe they can be competitive, that they can win medals.
Much of the demand for women in combat comes from female officers who are eager for medals and promotions.
I've been training super hard at the Lopez Taekwondo Academy in Houston, which belongs to my brother Jean. For me, I think confidence is the biggest thing; it's all mental. I train with the best of the best, including my brother Steven, a five-time world champion who won Olympic gold medals.
The working mothers of America deserve medals.
I have got lots of silver medals, from Delhi in 2010 and London in 2012, so it would be nice to pick up some golds, and the Commonwealth Games is a great place to start.
Gold medals are made out of your sweat, blood and tears, and effort in the gym every day, and sacrificing a lot.
When you do what I do, there are a lot of institutions that give you awards. I've gotten maybe 20 medals. They're glorious, and there's a spirit behind them. But sometimes they give you this dreadful modern glass thing. I wish everyone could afford a loving cup.
Without wishing to sound arrogant, when I was younger, I used to win every single martial arts tournament I ever entered. I used to enter the under 14s and under 16s, win both gold medals in those, and then go in the men's tournament just for experience, and end up getting a silver medal.
I wear my lines like a soldier wears his medals. They've been earned. They've been fought for - so there's no reason to be ashamed of them. In your 50s, you just care less about that sort of thing. I think it's to do with what's inside you. You can't obsess about the outside.
During my time, squash was not even part of Asian or Commonwealth Games. Considering the dominance of Jansher Khan and I in the '80s and '90s, it goes without saying that Pakistan would have bagged a plethora of medals through us at these games. And yes, the ultimate prize would have been an Olympic gold.
We all know that we Africans just win medals in middle and long distance, and walking in their footsteps makes me feel proud, you know.
To be one of the first British females to get three gold medals, to join Laura Trott in doing that, is a huge privilege.
I want to tell all the youngsters in Nagpur and in the rest of India that sports is not merely about winning medals; it is about being fit and healthy. It is not about six-packs and going to gym, but exercising right and eating intelligently.