http://deportes.elpais.com/deportes/2012/09/30/actualidad/1349038330_373784.html
My good luck is having landed in this Barça
The Argentine, 25 years old, who expects the arrival of his first child in about a month, recaps his career at Barcelona and his challenges for the future.
Leo Messi called journalists at 9 am at the sports city in Barcelona and he arrives with extreme punctuality. The sun is warm and the footballer has the tendency to get cold so the members of the Club’s press team offer him a jacket that he rejects, “I’m fine”. At 25 years old, the Argentine from Rosario expects in about a month the birth of his first son, Thiago, and he looks happy. Besides the hour, he doesn’t ask for anything else in order to give the interview. Kind, smiley and willing to explain himself if needed, he doesn’t keep anything when he answers, convinced that being before the press is a demand either expendable or manageable.
Q: They say you love to sleep, but you arrived here at 8:30. Are you getting ready to lose your sleep when Thiago arrives?
A: I’ve always loved to sleep, but I keep sleeping less and less. I do love to nap, though. For Thiago’s arrival I’m so ready. I’m so looking forward to it.
Q: Clearly, you learned that nap thing here in Barcelona…
A: I learned everything here! I arrived here when I was 13 years old, I grew up here, I went to school… Most of the stuff I know I learned here in Barcelona. I’ve always said I’m very grateful because I truly feel it.
Q: Do you feel you’ve given back to Barcelona even more than what you received when you were a kid?
A: No, I don’t know… I’ve always wanted to show my commitment to the club. At first, maybe it was more obvious. Now it’s the usual. This is my home, my club. I owe everything to Barça. And, I’ve always said it, I’m happy here.
Q: What does it mean that the youth team coach and two more kids from that team are working in the first team now?
A: It’s an example of how Barcelona works. Everybody knew that that team had one of the best generations in the youth academy. There are three players playing for the first team now [Piqué, Cesc and himself], but there are a lot more being professional players, like Vázquez and Valiente, and they have already played in Spain. There are others playing for other teams too, but everybody knew that most of us will get far, maybe not in the first team, but at least to earn a living playing football for good clubs.
Q: You state that you don’t care how many goals you score, that you rather win titles. Is there anything that you especially care about?
A: Yes, I prefer to win titles with the team instead of individual awards or score more goals than anybody. I am more concerned about being a good person than being the world’s best player. Besides, in the end, when this is all over, what do you take with you? My intention is that, when I retire, everybody will remember me for being a good guy. I like to score goals, but also having friends among the people I played with [or against]. It’s good to be valued as a person, that they have a good impression of you, beyond scoring lots of goals.
Q: So you’re not worried about winning the fourth Ballon D’Or either?
A: The awards are fine. I’m grateful, of course. But, deep down, you [journalists, public] care more about it, you’re always asking is this player is better than the other one. Xavi or Iniesta? Who knows? My good luck is having landedin this Barça, full of amazing players. They’ve given me everything: the awards, the titles, the goals, everything. This is a team that already made history for everything we won. I’m lucky to play here and play for Argentina, where I have amazing footballers by my side. That’s the most important thing. The teams makes me better, for sure. Without the help of my team mates, I would be nothing, I wouldn’t win anything. No titles, no aawards, nothing.
Q: What makes you angry?
A: I hate to lose. In life? In life, poverty. I come from a country where it’s glaring. There are very young kids who have no choice than go out to the streets to ask for money or they have to work doing whatever they can and they are all very young.
Q: What about that famous bubble where all footballers live? Aren’t you oblivious to these mundane things?
A: No. How are you going to be oblivious to this! We’re privileged people for living the way we live. I never lacked anything when growing up, beyond of course missing my siblings and my mother when I had to stay here in Barcelona with just my dad. But reality is very different. Lots of parents have to work very hard to give their children what they need… I know it.
Q: You’re going to be a dad. Has that changed the way you see things?
A: Yes, you start to think about everything in a different way. You don’t think about yourself anymore. You think about him, that he never has any kind of problem, anything. It does change the way you see things, of course.
Q: Speaking of change, have you practiced the whole diaper business?
A: I already went through it with my nephews. I’m an expert.
Q: You have a foundation to help children in need.
A: We focus in the education, we try to get them out of the streets through education and sports. We work with Unicef, hospitals, schools… It’s nice to be able to help.
Q: Few times we see your face light up more than when a kid comes near you to say hello. What’s that about?
A: Children are the most precious thing in the world, especially when they’re little and there’s no evil in them. They see you and they transform. Some feel very embarrassed. They don’t speak, they don’t understand I’m there talking to them because they only see you on television and, when they see you right in front of them, they almost freak out. Making a kid happy is what makes me feel best.
Q: Kids and adults try to get near you… Fame puts you in the spotlight all the time. Is it tiring?
A: No because I’m not faking it in any moment. I am the way I am on and off the pitch. That’s why I’m never worried about being observed because I’m always the same. I’m always myself. It’s been a long time since I’m well known and the embarrasment you felt in the beginning is long gone.
Q: You said once that on the pitch it is more difficult to play the way Iniesta or Xavi do it than playing the way you do. Is what you do easy?
A: I do what I can to help the team and I wouldn’t know how to do what they do. I just try to help the team, always. I don’t like losing anything and I try to help the team to win. I’ve always said: I go out thinking about winning, not about scoring lots of goals.
Q: The way you play, can you train for it?
A: I don’t think so, I don’t know… Since I was little I played this way…
Q: That’s whay Tito Vilanova says.
A: What does he say?
Q: He says that, for his own surprise, you do what you do since you were a kid, but now you do it against the best in the world, not 14 year-old kids.
A: My way of playing didn’t change much, it’s true, but I obviously learned a lot of things about the game. It helped that I came here to Barcelona and I worked in the way the cantera is taken care of. Just yesterday I was watching the seven year-old kids training right next to us, and the way they’re schooled is different than anywhere else in the world. Since you’re very young, they teach you how to play, to take care of the ball, tactics, to understand the game. And even though they are very young they already play the way we do! It never ceases to surprise me.
Q: They say that when you knew Tito would take over Pep Guardiola’s place, you just smiled, but that that smile made the whole club feel reassured.
A: Yes, it’s possible I’d smiled because it made me feel good to know that Tito would replace Pep. I know him since I was a kid and we’d been five years together, with Pep and him. I thought that might be good. Look, Tito was the first coach that made me play because up until that moment I was either on the bench or not playing at all and it was him who made me a starter in that category [cadete]. I know him. He’s a very normal person, open. He goes straight to the point, he says everything face to face with no problem. I like that.
Q: There were fights when you were cadetes, people say…
A: I can’t remember! [Laughs]. Surely there were some because it was a team with great people, but dangerous!
Q: Do you remember your first game in the cantera?
A: No, but I remember I injured my shinbone a little bit later.
Q: Is it true Piqué was always defending you when you were kicked?
A: Yes. He was already the tallest and we were all smaller. Dad was always there standing up for us.
Q: So did you agree to become fathers to go all together to the park?
A: No! Pure coincidence. All at once [Piqué, Pedro, Villa and Valdes will have children too]. It’s a symptom we are all growing up and we have more responsibilities. A beautiful responsibility.
Q: Seeing you’re never satisfied with scoring just once, we can only assume you’ll have a big family, right? Are you going for a treble?
A: No, I don’t know… The more, the better. As many as they come!
Q: Another thing that amazes us is that is very difficult to make you fall and you never dive.
A: That’s another thing I have since my childhood. It’s always been that way. I’ve always tried to finish the play. I don’t know… I’ve never been one to dive, I’ve never tried to do it.
Q: They say that you were the only player at the youth academy they never try to correct and they always respected your skills.
A: Sometimes they corrected me, but I can’t remember. They respected my way of playing, though here the philosophy is stop and the first touch. But… I didn’t give the ball to anybody! Lots of times they told me to try to let the ball go until they realized I couldn’t do it so they let it go. But it’s true that, little by little, I tried to pass more. But when I first got here… I didn’t give the ball to anybody!
Q: Do you speak much on the pitch?
A: No, I don’t speak much [laughs].
Q: Your rivals and the refs wouldn’t agree with that…
A: Oh! With the refs and the rivals I speak more. With my team mates only what is needed. It’s been a long time since we play together that we just need a look in the eye.