Top 100 Quotes & Sayings by Alvaro Morata - Page 2
Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Spanish athlete Alvaro Morata.
Last updated on November 24, 2024.
Chelsea is a big club, a club that has given me the opportunity to play as a starter, to grow even more.
The important thing is the team.
English football is different to Italy and Spain. You don't have that much time to calm down or relax because, all the time, the ball is on fire.
Chelsea gave me everything that I needed, and now I have time to give back all that Chelsea give me.
Your life can change in a moment, depending if the ball goes in.
I am a happy person, especially off the field, outside of football.
A footballer can have even more problems than other people. Sometimes money and fame can become a problem, too.
The day I signed for Chelsea, I had to go around the world - from Los Angeles to Singapore, through London - and I trained. Difficult.
In adversity, you have to find motivation to continue and do well.
To play a World Cup for your country is everything you dream of.
People think we're machines; they don't realise that behind a bad run, there's almost always a personal problem, some family issue. You have feelings; you make mistakes. You're a person.
At the end of the season, the important thing is to be in first place. It doesn't matter if you score 15 or 20.
Sometimes I go home, put the game on, and think, 'How can I miss that?' It affects you; it also affects you to know your career also depends on the opinion of journalists, fans, directors, and sometimes they're not really qualified to judge.
I will always wish the best to Madrid.
I always think this is a team sport.
There's no way to stop Messi. The only way is for him not to have a good day, but that's difficult because most of the times he has good days.
I had a period where everything... if it's raining, I'm angry because it's raining. If I miss, it's because the pitch is too wet. It was only excuses. It was not good.
Antonio Conte helps you to grow because you can never get too comfortable or find a comfort zone.
You can't think you're God when you score an important goal or the worst player around when its going badly.
I really like London now. But probably, in the future, when I need to bring my child to the school and take up a school, when I finish my career, I'd prefer to come back to my country. It's normal. For me, I prefer the place I was born.
My only intention is to be happy and be in a place where I feel wanted.
All I want is to be just another member of the squad and fight for a place in the side.
Both Atletico and Real Madrid called my dad, but at that time, I wasn't doing too well at school, and they wouldn't let me go until my grades improved. They both called back, and since Atleti was closer to home, I joined their football academy. It was the start of a period where I stopped enjoying football - I lost the love for it.
I had the chance to go to Manchester United and other teams in the Premier League.
In the Premier League, I think if you win your first five games, you're in the fight, because here in every game, you can lose or drop points.
I lived Real Madrid, with all the perfect things to grow up.
Scoring lots of goals in Italy is much more difficult: they are experts in defending.
Every player wants to be at Real Madrid, of course. I fought my entire life to be at the club, but only in the starting line-up.
It is great to play with a player like Eden Hazard. He is one of the best in the world, and I am very lucky to play with him.
I've learnt more in two years at Juventus than in my entire life.
I'm a striker. it's our job, and it's true that we need to score, and I am happy when I do.
It is always a good feeling to score the first goal in a new stadium.
What fascinates me about London is its multi-ethnicity, the coexistence of cultures and religions, but I do not see myself living here for very long. It's too big, too much stress, too much of a metropolis.
Clearly, any player would want to go to Real Madrid, but I think if there wouldn't be all the space that one needs there, then it wouldn't be the best move.
I want to score more than 30 goals, but I would prefer to score 15 or 20 and get the Premier League or one big trophy.
I want to score more goals, to play more games, but at the end of the day, the most important thing is that the team wins. The other things come with that.
It's the best feeling in life, when you see a little human, and they look to you, to learn something in life. It's a responsibility, but it's the best feeling in life.
In Spain, you get seven clear chances a game to receive the ball and shoot. In Italy, you get very few clear balls, and you have to fight everyone to score; that makes you improve and develop.
I want to score more than 20. It's my job. But it is not an obsession for me ahead of winning titles for the team.
I don't see why I should be happy scoring a goal against an opponent on a much lower level than we are.