Milton Bradley doesn't regret comments made earlier this week about the "hatred" he faces at Wrigley Field. "Stand out in right field one day and maybe you'll see," he said. "Put on my Jordans one day and maybe you'll see. Walk around and see the world from my eyes, but you can't do that." He added that he often hopes games end after nine innings so he can get off the field and go home. "I'm always the story, whether I hit .500 or hit .100," Bradley told MLB.com on Thursday in the wake of his comments. "Somehow, someway, everything revolves back to me. I guess I'm kind of a big deal or something. People like talking about Milton Bradley. Not to my face, always behind my back." The Cubs right fielder insists that he's misunderstood. "I just go out there and try to give an honest answer, and I don't know why people can't respect that or respect how I feel," Bradley said. "You can't say that a person's feelings are wrong. That's one thing you can't do. Unless you get paid $30 million to play right field for the Chicago Cubs, then you can't speak on how I feel, because you don't know."