I came to Chelsea because one club and one coach believed in me.
I'd like to play in every game, like everybody else.
I really enjoy London.
I would never regret joining a club like Chelsea, and hopefully I will be a long time at Chelsea.
For Spain, the more I play, the more goals I score, the more chance I have of making the World Cup and starting games.
Everyone can have a bad period in their life, but we are famous; we have a lot of things. Sometimes people think we are not human, with no feelings, with no problems.
I won in Italy, I won at Real Madrid, and I felt important.
I should never have left Italy and Juve.
Of course I would return to Real Madrid once I win all there is to win with Chelsea and after a long and successful career at Chelsea.
I will continue going to the psychologist. It helps me to manage the pressure and emotions.
I really enjoy playing a lot of games because I always want to score more and play more.
My wife would like to live in Spain; I'd like to live in Italy.
Real Madrid needs a coach that knows the club and understands the values that it represents.
During my time at Juve, I didn't score more than 20 goals a year, but I won every title except the Champions League. I've scored 15 or 16 goals, and I've lifted titles, and other strikers have scored 35 and haven't won anything.
It's difficult to say no to Madrid, especially for a Madridista.
I have nothing to prove to anyone.
I am hugely grateful to Mourinho. He is the coach who gave me my opportunity with Real Madrid, and I wish him lots of luck.
The idea of going to the psychologist, for anyone who has any problem, is associated with something negative. I think everyone sees it that way when it's really a very important thing.
It's hard to imagine going back to Italy, despite my experience in Serie A being extraordinary.
I grew up at Real Madrid and played there a long time.
Real Madrid are Real Madrid, and any player would want to be at Real Madrid. Why would I want to leave Real Madrid? I wanted to play, nothing else.
Conte is the manager who most 'bet' on me without even ever having had me in his team. I feel indebted to him because he's the coach that most trusted in me, most wanted me.
I'm always really grateful to Butragueno. He asks me how I am doing; he congratulates me when I score... I will always be grateful.
Whatever position I play, I will do the best I can.
I believe you have to take care of the kids from the youth team, the ones coming through, and people like Butragueno know how to do that.
Playing for the national team is always an honour. We must make the most of every opportunity.
I think it's not important if you score 25 or 30 goals: it's important you help the team to win.
Fernando Llorente has been very important for me. He gives me a lot of advice; we talk a lot. I will thank Fernando for my entire life because it's hard to find people like him, especially in the world of football.
Someday, I'll write a book about what I've been through.
It's hard as a striker. It's cut and dried. Your job is to put the ball in the back of the net.
I am ambitious and hungry to succeed.
You always want to contribute wherever you are.
I think it's very important to have confidence. Things go well for you.
Sometimes you have to mature.
I always want to go out and score, but there are times when you can't.
I've always liked Dzeko - he's a champion.
When I was seven or eight, I got a trampoline. My dad used to say to me all the time, 'Come on with the head,' and then pass the ball to me as I jumped. I really think it's helped my heading game because I practiced this all the time with my dad.
In the Premier League, we have to play a lot, and we always need the support of the fans.
Of course I would have liked to have spent my whole life at Real Madrid, but if it cannot be, it cannot be, and you have to move on.
Obviously I have to respect Chelsea, who made a huge effort to sign me, and I'm very happy here. But Madrid will always be Madrid for me.
My two years at Juve were fantastic. I was just a lad when I arrived, and I was a real footballer when I left.
OK - we like to say how a striker creates space and influences matches in other ways, but let's not pretend: at the end of the season, the best striker everyone talks about is the top scorer.
For a Spaniard, Italy is the best place to live. You've got all the beauty, history, art, good food, and fashion.
I'm a striker; my job is to score goals.
I'm willing to play any position.
Sometimes football is not just.
With what I have learned in Italy, if I have the chance to learn something more in England I think it would make me a more complete, better player.
When a player hears the word 'psychologist' at the first, you are taken aback, but I realised that I needed help.
I needed something Real Madrid could not give, which was playing every Sunday, whether I was doing well or not.
In football, physical condition is very important, but the head is the most important thing. If you don't have the head, if the mentality is not good, then you are in trouble.
Any player wants to be at Real Madrid.
I don't have to prove anything to Zidane.
You should never have regrets in life. All the steps that I have taken in my career have served for something, and I have learned from them.
I don't think about scoring more goals than a team-mate, only to score.
I fought all my life to be at Real Madrid, to try to be in the starting XI.
Goals flow when you play with a smile and don't think too much.
He does not scare us; other things in life scare me. We all respect Messi, and he is one of the best players in the world.
I will always be grateful to Madrid. I never said a bad word about anybody there. Everyone there, even the president, treated me really well always.
At Real Madrid, I did heading drills with Cristiano Ronaldo. You see him go up for headers, that spring and power - he is a real beast. At Juventus, I saw Fernando Llorente, how he finds space and directs his headers.