Top 100 Quotes & Sayings by Diego Forlan

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Uruguayan athlete Diego Forlan.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Diego Forlan

Diego Forlán Corazo is a Uruguayan professional football manager and former player who played as a forward. Regarded as one of the best forwards of his generation, Forlán is a two-time winner of both the Pichichi Trophy and the European Golden Shoe at club level. With the Uruguay national team, he had huge individual success at the 2010 World Cup, finishing as joint top scorer with five goals, including the goal of the tournament, and winning the Golden Ball as the tournament's best player.

It is only natural that the years pass, and after consecutive matches, you feel more and more tired, but it is normal.
I try to see the positive side of things.
We are just lucky to be able to watch Ronaldo and Messi at their best. — © Diego Forlan
We are just lucky to be able to watch Ronaldo and Messi at their best.
A player always comes on to the pitch to give their best, and I cannot be criticized for my commitment, only for my performances.
I try to go through my life not owing anything to anyone.
Retiring from international football was a personal decision, and I was very sure about what I was doing. I played for my country for more than ten years, and there were highs and lows. It was a fantastic experience, though, and the most wonderful thing is that it ended well.
Football is a really simple game, and the most important thing, in any formation, is that the players do their jobs, not the formation which they play in.
There are many great players to have won the adidas Golden Ball Award, and it is a great privilege to receive this award and be part of this select group of players.
Atletico players have always been characterised by this kind of player in attack like Fernando Torres, Sergio Aguero, Diego Costa, and Radamel Falcao.
I feel I have nothing to prove at all, my scoring rate in La Liga speaks for itself.
Other Brazilians who've gone to Europe haven't always settled so quickly. Neymar has.
I am not saying that I am at the same level as Messi or Ronaldo. They are the best two players in the world, but I am very proud that I managed to finish above them in the goalscoring charts, especially as I was playing for Atletico Madrid, not Barcelona or Real Madrid.
I keep really fit. — © Diego Forlan
I keep really fit.
There were great players at United, and I just didn't have the chance to play, which was fair. It was difficult getting into the team, that's all.
My father played for Sao Paulo for several years. I played in Brazil, too, and made a lot of friends there.
As soon as Jose Mourinho was given the job, I knew that he was the right man for Manchester United.
With a good start, players can relax a bit more and aren't so anxious throughout the season.
I was very young at Manchester United, and I feel that I was just starting to find my feet when I was sold and Rooney was brought in.
I like every game to matter, to feel like we must win.
During my career, I've have a lot of satisfaction, but I miss the Champions League. I'd like to win it with Inter.
All of the usual formations have advantages and disadvantages, but none would work without the magic of the players.
I have never been at a club where the players talked so much about a previous manager as they did about Jose Mourinho at Inter Milan.
Courtois was rated highly enough by Chelsea to go back and replace Petr Cech, one of the best goalkeepers of modern times. He has lived up to his reputation.
People have high expectations of me, and I want to fulfil them.
Ronaldo can score every type of goal. He can use both feet, his head, take free kicks, finish from close range or outside the box. He has everything.
I will never play in England again, but I still actually look back with fond memories at some moments.
Systems, coaches, and directors or club presidents do not win games - players do, they are the only people who can make a significant difference once that game starts.
2010 was a magical year and was unforgettable.
Time moves on for everyone.
I can't recall playing for a team who weren't involved in a fight for points at the end of the season. That would be strange for me.
I'd be happy to play in Sao Paulo. It would be a dream; that would be very exciting.
Playing a World Cup is spectacular.
There are games when you do well, and others that go differently.
I have a career, and I deserve respect.
Although I will not always play well, I always give everything on the pitch.
Every player loves to score goals, but hat-tricks should be savoured, as they don't happen very often.
I have huge respect for Porto, a great club that's always in the hunt for titles, but they aren't Real Madrid, one of the biggest clubs in the world.
It was a privilege to enjoy the national team and be part of a group that gave so much to our country, wear the shirt with great people. — © Diego Forlan
It was a privilege to enjoy the national team and be part of a group that gave so much to our country, wear the shirt with great people.
We're a small country, and if you look at it that way, then we're at a disadvantage, though I know that most of the players who know or have come up against Uruguayans prefer to avoid us.
I wake up at 7 A.M. each morning and work out with a personal trainer.
The best strikers make you sit up and take notice because every time they get the ball, you think that something amazing could happen. Of course they'll score goals, but they'll have something in their game which makes you think, 'Wow, he can win this game by doing something magical.'
Even as a kid, I'd kick a tennis ball against a wall with both feet for hours. That was one way to become two-footed.
Argentina produces great footballers, but Uruguay does the same.
Football doesn't do sentiment well; it's a cruel profession.
It's hard to know when to call it a day as a footballer.
When Atletico wanted to sell me, I was told that I earned too much money and they wanted me off the wage bill. I liked that honesty.
It is easy to criticize me from behind a pen or a microphone, from someone who never set foot on a football field.
There are no logical answers in football. That's just the way it goes. — © Diego Forlan
There are no logical answers in football. That's just the way it goes.
Uruguay is a small country but with a lot of football history. We've won so many things, and so the people are always expecting us to do good things.
Luis Suarez is one of the best players in the national team - and in the world, in fact.
Sometimes, in the last minute, against big teams... you never expect you have the chance to win, but there is that 'garra' that everyone talks about.
Football has allowed me to see the world, and in Paz, I have a wife who is keen to see the world with me.
Milan is beautiful, and the Interista fans are even more so.
I am very happy here at Atletico, and I want to bring the same kind of joy to all the fans.
I'd never thought of going to Japan, but the J-League came to me, and I could see that they wanted me to be part of the project. In the beginning, they said, 'We have two or three teams for you, although we cannot say which ones at the moment, but we want you as a player, as everything.'
It's not easy for a coach to deal with a player who is in slow decline.
You never know for sure whether a player will adapt to a new country until he gets there.
Winning the Europa League with Atletico Madrid and then reaching a semi-final of the World Cup is great.
I try to do my best both on and off the pitch, giving a good image in my behaviour.
Italy won the world title in 2006 and went out in the group phase in 2010 and 2014. They didn't make it beyond the first round. You don't win things because of your history, the shirt, or the names on the teamsheet.
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