Bradley outlined his affinity for coaching.
"I don't feel like my career stopped. The routine is the same. I'm still at a training ground every day. I'm still on the field every day. I still watch games, watch training back like it's all the same," he said on Saturday. "Obviously, what I do is a little bit different, but in terms of the routine, in terms of the feelings that I get, the passion that I have. That part is about the game, and I'm a part of it every day. So that part is, it's one of the reasons why I stopped playing, and I knew that I wanted to coach.
"I didn't waste one second, because had I waited then maybe there would have been a little bit of emotion. But the fact is that I literally just turned the page and then began to begin the coaching. People ask me a lot like, 'Do you miss playing?' And the honest answer is, no. I loved playing more than anything in the whole world. But now I love coaching more than anything in the whole world. And when I miss playing, I just set up a training session that needs a neutral player to make myself a neutral player."