Top of my wishlist is to play for a club that wants me to be their goalkeeper.

To go into a game wondering, 'What if I do this wrong?' is a terrible way to think. You just have to believe in what you can do.

Letting goals in doesn't look great to myself.

When you become a professional footballer, there's no written contract that says you have to strive to play first-team football.

I'll keep supporting. I'll be an England fan no matter what, and I'll stay true to my word.

It's a big moment, a heart-rate moment. It's all in the preparation for me. Watching the various takers, I can prepare as best I can. I can prepare, too, with my own team-mates - they practise, which, in turn, helps me practise trying to save penalties. I want as much confidence as I can in the preparation and then take it from that.

I need to feel part of something.

There are a lot of reasons why people quit international football. Some struggle off the field. Some struggle with injuries.

There are places you should be and places you shouldn't, and situations you should not be getting yourself into. If you're turning up to games and not feeling right, that's when you've got to address the situation.

You have to control your anger - you can't be a baby when you lose.

On the pitch, I need to stay focused, alert, and be ready to face my heart-racing moment with confidence.

I am constantly evolving, constantly trying to be the best I can be, and learning from things that didn't go too well is definitely a way of doing that.

I love Manchester City. I love playing for them.

I'm going to keep loving football. That's one thing I'm most proud of: my hunger and desire for the game has not stopped.

It doesn't change the way I am, but I do totally understand how you're looked at as a footballer, especially by children. I don't claim I can shape their lives, but there's no harm in having good manners and being seen to play the game properly.

I need to improve and improve all the time because I'm still learning the game, and the game is changing all the time.

Removing myself as a footballer, I watch the Premier League. It's a great league. Fantastic football is played in it.

I don't see too many differences between Serie A and the Premier League. Both are unpredictable leagues, where anything can happen.

You have teams on and off the field. You have your team off the field in terms of your family, friends, and people that you work with, and then you have your team on the field. You have to give to receive and be there for people and hope that they do the same for you.

I love football, and I love to play, and I want to play until I physically can't - whatever age that is.

Playing at Birmingham helped me grow as a goalkeeper: it made me better all round, being a regular part of a team.

I have always pushed myself. I have never settled for anything less than the best that I could give.

I keep my focus on the stuff that matters to me, and that is pretty much how I live my life.

Some of my closest friends, the England lads, have played in the Champions League, so it's a big thing to be there as well.