"We've all had meetings with the referees. We're all clear with how VAR works, and ultimately, you want the rules to be fair."
"We've had to pay to play. We've had to borrow kit. We've had to train on a Friday night. Maybe a lot of boys, given that opportunity, would slip away, whereas we've had the mentality to go, 'I really want this. I'm going to show that I can do this.'"
"At the end of the day, you've got a job to do, and that's playing football."
"We'd love to be playing to five or six thousand."
"It is a bit surreal when I'm out and people are having a look or staring or wanting selfies."
"I want to be the best professional and the greatest role model I can be."
"I'm very privileged to be a professional footballer, and I want to encourage more young girls to play."
"Anything can happen in a cup final; that's what everybody likes about them."
"It's going to be a massive honour to represent your country, if selected, for the World Cup."
"The amount of TV exposure we have had and the attention women's football has got has been brilliant."
"We want to be role models."
"It's difficult because the men's game is so big and attracts so much money and sponsorship, and so it's always going to take priority."
"We're doing a lot of work in schools getting girls to play football, breaking down any taboos there might be, and we're seeing them get interested and bring their families along, where they have such a good match day experience that they're coming back."
"I think that what's happening is that girls are enjoying playing. It's a lot more acceptable, and now we have a Women's Super League with hugely dedicated female role models - really committed players who people can see are dedicated and training as hard if not harder than any male players - that's all progressing the sport."
"We hope girls are inspired to start playing at a younger age and try to get to a World Cup themselves."
"We always want to play and be dominant with the ball, but we respect the opposition."
"Opinion of the sport is constantly getting better. Our semi-professional league is starting to change people's attitudes, and it'll get better as the years go on."
"I know other people say that football isn't easy as a sport for girls, but my family and friends have always been really supportive."
"The World Cup is what we've done all them hours for. It's why we give up normal life."
"We have to be playing near-perfect football to go and win a World Cup."
"The image of women's football has definitely changed. Now we've got to make sure it keeps developing."
"We've got to make sure we keep the media attention on us; being on telly and in the papers gets people interested."
"At Arsenal, we train for about two hours a day and are treated just the same as the men. It makes a big difference, and it gives young girls something to aim for."
"Twitter's brilliant. It allows us to talk to fans and gets them to games."
"Playing for England, it's a massive honour to wear the shirt anyway, but to come and play at Wembley Stadium, in terms of how women's football has developed, it's a massive opportunity."