Champions League is a very tough competition.

For me to be able to play football was a gift.

FC Barcelona is the national team of Catalonia

My memories from childhood always involve a football.

Many people have told me I could be a coach, but it doesn't appeal.

The power which football has is enormous. Football moves the masses.

My parents were skeptical about me becoming a footballer and encouraged me to study.

Winning one Champions League title is a dream come true, so just imagine winning three!

I was one of those players who loved to train and tried to enjoy every day, every session, every game.

Every player dreams of winning the World Cup, and there are very few who are fortunate enough to actually do it.

I could never have dreamt of the kind of career I had, but I was always happy with the ball in my hands or at my feet.

There's a special part of Messi's brain allowing him to see the split-second chaos of football in his own personal super slow motion.

I've been lucky enough to play in the final of a World Cup before, but it's always an amazing experience to walk out at a packed stadium.

Sometimes I played as a goalkeeper with my brother and his friends - they were all older, and nobody wanted to go in goal, so it had to be me!

Development has to start from the base; the kids need to be playing, and the institutions have to come forward. There needs to be focus on grassroots.

World Soccer Stars presents a great opportunity to celebrate the arrival of football, and from what I know, football is the next emerging sport in Pakistan.

I've been lucky enough to play for the Spanish national team and Barcelona, two sides who've shown that you can play good, attractive possession football and win major titles.

I don't want to be an invisible coach. I want to provide guidelines to solve problems, coming from the base I have, as I had to work a lot considering I did not play at Barca until I was 17.

I don't have Romário's technique, [Marc] Overmars' pace or [Patrick] Kluivert's strength. But I work harder than the others. I'm like the student who is not as clever, but revises for his exams and does OK in the end.

I'm not a big fan of revolutions. People nearly always call for them when a team that's triumphed a great deal goes a year without winning anything. For me, however, the experience gained in previous victories is important.

Leo Messi is a spectacular player, there is nobody else like him. I should not because I have suffered so much in training. I think he is the best forward at the moment and I think he will be so for many more years. He has his feet on the ground.

My job will be to transmit - using my experience, my knowledge - with the intention of making the player more professional. I want to be a 'life-coach' who helps them to think, to make decisions, to manage their emotions with intelligence in difficult situations.

It's frustrating to see part of your body not responding - even more so given the way I am and the way I like to train and always give 100 per cent. You experience sadness, anger, and powerlessness... you really want to do something, but you can't. In the end, however, you have to be honest with yourself and those around you.

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