@Nico7GcR@gxldecerezoo Vaya películas que te montas en la cabeza. La realidad es que simplemente será algo gracioso que el viejo senil quiera a Julián por 150m. A esa gente le van a pedir la cláusula y ya
@AbrahamSilva__@gxldecerezoo Mucha imaginación tienes tú me parece a mí. Todo lo que no sea favorable al Barça es madridista según tu, no?
No os tenéis que confundir; seguimos odiando al Madrid, pero también al Barça
Felicidades al @PSG_espanol por ganar la Champions dos años consecutivos.
Prohibido olvidar que GxlDePaulinho le sacó nudes a una menor de 12 y se burló del suicido de una chica.
Celebrad el título a lo grande, parisinos 💙❤️
@Opyniom@ElForasterfcb@rubennatm Entiendo lo que dices, pero ahí Suárez está hablando del silencio del club, mientras los periodistas hablan por el Barça. Las situaciones son similares, en cierto modo. Quieras o no, esto hace pensar que el Barça tiene a sueldo unos cuantos periodistas para hacer presión
@Opyniom@ElForasterfcb@rubennatm El club responde así por las informaciones falsas que salen para presionar. Quieras o no, eso hace pensar mal. Véase el caso de Luis Suárez https://t.co/t1RX38ooxG
🇺🇾❤️🩹 Luis Suárez in an interview about Barça, its journalists and Atlético Madrid:
"At Barça, you have terrible holidays with your family, then you start looking ahead and wondering what will happen with your future, and suddenly it’s: “Suárez has to leave,” “Suárez wants to leave,” “Suárez wants to leave”, and there wasn’t even a coach appointed yet.
And every day it was the same thing. Every single day.
“They’re going to reach an agreement with Suárez for him to leave,” “they need to separate him from Messi,” “they’re a problem in the dressing room,” this, that, and the other.
Then there comes a moment when you say: “Why is nobody from the club calling me and telling me anything directly?”
A coach arrives, and after one or two days he tells you: “I need to talk to you. You’re not in my plans from a footballing perspective.”
And that’s when something doesn’t add up with everything that had been said before.
If you tell me: “Look, the club wants to move on from you,” then you say, “Okay, fine. Let’s reach an agreement and that’s that.”
But the press, seemingly briefed by the club, was saying they didn’t want me there anymore because of dressing-room issues and all sorts of other things.
Then the coach comes and says it’s for footballing reasons, when I had always been, behind Leo, the player who scored the most goals.
Did it hurt? Yes. Things happen for a reason.
I accepted it while hurting. Yes, I suffered.
I suffered because of my family too.
I suffered because of the change my family would have to go through as well.
But fortunately, I went to a team where I could prove that I was still at the top level.
I had the luck and privilege of winning a league title with Atlético de Madrid, showing that Suárez was still very much capable and relevant."
@yisus_0703@1critalvent Y que me quieres decir con esto? La queja viene por usar a periodistas para dar información falsa, no que se intente fichar. Véase el caso de Luis Suárez https://t.co/t1RX38ooxG
🇺🇾❤️🩹 Luis Suárez in an interview about Barça, its journalists and Atlético Madrid:
"At Barça, you have terrible holidays with your family, then you start looking ahead and wondering what will happen with your future, and suddenly it’s: “Suárez has to leave,” “Suárez wants to leave,” “Suárez wants to leave”, and there wasn’t even a coach appointed yet.
And every day it was the same thing. Every single day.
“They’re going to reach an agreement with Suárez for him to leave,” “they need to separate him from Messi,” “they’re a problem in the dressing room,” this, that, and the other.
Then there comes a moment when you say: “Why is nobody from the club calling me and telling me anything directly?”
A coach arrives, and after one or two days he tells you: “I need to talk to you. You’re not in my plans from a footballing perspective.”
And that’s when something doesn’t add up with everything that had been said before.
If you tell me: “Look, the club wants to move on from you,” then you say, “Okay, fine. Let’s reach an agreement and that’s that.”
But the press, seemingly briefed by the club, was saying they didn’t want me there anymore because of dressing-room issues and all sorts of other things.
Then the coach comes and says it’s for footballing reasons, when I had always been, behind Leo, the player who scored the most goals.
Did it hurt? Yes. Things happen for a reason.
I accepted it while hurting. Yes, I suffered.
I suffered because of my family too.
I suffered because of the change my family would have to go through as well.
But fortunately, I went to a team where I could prove that I was still at the top level.
I had the luck and privilege of winning a league title with Atlético de Madrid, showing that Suárez was still very much capable and relevant."
@Jack24724197@Reycholosimeone Si solo hubieseis hecho eso, entonces perfecto, pero estáis usando la prensa a vuestro antojo. Véase la salida de Luis Suárez del Barça https://t.co/t1RX38ooxG
🇺🇾❤️🩹 Luis Suárez in an interview about Barça, its journalists and Atlético Madrid:
"At Barça, you have terrible holidays with your family, then you start looking ahead and wondering what will happen with your future, and suddenly it’s: “Suárez has to leave,” “Suárez wants to leave,” “Suárez wants to leave”, and there wasn’t even a coach appointed yet.
And every day it was the same thing. Every single day.
“They’re going to reach an agreement with Suárez for him to leave,” “they need to separate him from Messi,” “they’re a problem in the dressing room,” this, that, and the other.
Then there comes a moment when you say: “Why is nobody from the club calling me and telling me anything directly?”
A coach arrives, and after one or two days he tells you: “I need to talk to you. You’re not in my plans from a footballing perspective.”
And that’s when something doesn’t add up with everything that had been said before.
If you tell me: “Look, the club wants to move on from you,” then you say, “Okay, fine. Let’s reach an agreement and that’s that.”
But the press, seemingly briefed by the club, was saying they didn’t want me there anymore because of dressing-room issues and all sorts of other things.
Then the coach comes and says it’s for footballing reasons, when I had always been, behind Leo, the player who scored the most goals.
Did it hurt? Yes. Things happen for a reason.
I accepted it while hurting. Yes, I suffered.
I suffered because of my family too.
I suffered because of the change my family would have to go through as well.
But fortunately, I went to a team where I could prove that I was still at the top level.
I had the luck and privilege of winning a league title with Atlético de Madrid, showing that Suárez was still very much capable and relevant."
@HilosTuna@Jack24724197@Reycholosimeone Una cosa no quita la otra. Julián no ha rendido en liga, pero por lo menos se sabe que tiene mucho margen de mejora respecto a este año
@PaulinhCachondo@Jack24724197@Reycholosimeone Me refiero a usar la prensa para soltar información falsa. Véase el caso de Luis Suárez y cómo salió del Barça https://t.co/t1RX38ooxG
🇺🇾❤️🩹 Luis Suárez in an interview about Barça, its journalists and Atlético Madrid:
"At Barça, you have terrible holidays with your family, then you start looking ahead and wondering what will happen with your future, and suddenly it’s: “Suárez has to leave,” “Suárez wants to leave,” “Suárez wants to leave”, and there wasn’t even a coach appointed yet.
And every day it was the same thing. Every single day.
“They’re going to reach an agreement with Suárez for him to leave,” “they need to separate him from Messi,” “they’re a problem in the dressing room,” this, that, and the other.
Then there comes a moment when you say: “Why is nobody from the club calling me and telling me anything directly?”
A coach arrives, and after one or two days he tells you: “I need to talk to you. You’re not in my plans from a footballing perspective.”
And that’s when something doesn’t add up with everything that had been said before.
If you tell me: “Look, the club wants to move on from you,” then you say, “Okay, fine. Let’s reach an agreement and that’s that.”
But the press, seemingly briefed by the club, was saying they didn’t want me there anymore because of dressing-room issues and all sorts of other things.
Then the coach comes and says it’s for footballing reasons, when I had always been, behind Leo, the player who scored the most goals.
Did it hurt? Yes. Things happen for a reason.
I accepted it while hurting. Yes, I suffered.
I suffered because of my family too.
I suffered because of the change my family would have to go through as well.
But fortunately, I went to a team where I could prove that I was still at the top level.
I had the luck and privilege of winning a league title with Atlético de Madrid, showing that Suárez was still very much capable and relevant."
@Opyniom@ElForasterfcb@rubennatm Yo aquí no estoy hablando del Barça como institución. Estoy hablando del aficionado culé. Yo te estoy transmitiendo las causas del malestar del Atlético promedio
❤️🩹 🗣️ Entrevista a Luis Suárez sobre el Barça, su prensa y el Atlético de Madrid.
Te molestaban las formas. No es que uno se queje, que se sigue quejando, no. Te molestaban las formas de ese momento porque era todos los días lo que hablábamos, viste, de consumir la prensa. Veníamos de perder contra el Bayern, unas vacaciones horribles con la familia, y empezás a mirar un poco qué va a pasar en el futuro. Y empiezan: "A Suárez quieren que se vaya", "que Suárez se quiere ir", "que Suárez se quiere ir". Y no había entrenador todavía.
Todos los días lo mismo, todos los días lo mismo. "Sí, se va a arreglar con Suárez para que se vaya", "hay que separarlo de Messi", "que son no sé qué del vestuario", "que esto", "que lo otro". Y ahí llega un momento en que decís: "A ver, ¿por qué nadie del club me llama y me dice nada a mí?".
Agarra un entrenador y, a los dos días, o al otro día, te dice: "Necesito hablar contigo. No entrás en mis planes futbolísticamente". Hay algo que no me cuadra con lo que se venía diciendo. Si me decís: "Mirá, el club quiere prescindir de vos", decís: "Bueno, perfecto, vamos a llegar a un acuerdo". Y perfecto.
Pero la prensa decía, por parte del club, que no querían que yo estuviera más por unas cosas del vestuario, que esto y que lo otro. Y después viene el entrenador y me dice que es por una cuestión futbolística, cuando yo había sido siempre, por detrás de Leo, el que más goles hacía, a pesar de ser el 9.
—¿Esos momentos te molestaron? ¿Te dolieron?
—Sí, por algo las cosas pasan.
—¿Lo aceptaste dolorido?
—Sí.
—¿Sufriste?
—Sí, sufrí. Por la familia también.
—¿Sufrís por el cambio que pueda sentir tu familia?
—También lo sufrí. Pero, por suerte, fui a un equipo a demostrar que todavía seguía vigente, y tuve la suerte y el privilegio de ganar una Liga con el Atlético, demostrando que todavía Suárez seguía vigente.
🇺🇾❤️🩹 Luis Suárez in an interview about Barça, its journalists and Atlético Madrid:
"At Barça, you have terrible holidays with your family, then you start looking ahead and wondering what will happen with your future, and suddenly it’s: “Suárez has to leave,” “Suárez wants to leave,” “Suárez wants to leave”, and there wasn’t even a coach appointed yet.
And every day it was the same thing. Every single day.
“They’re going to reach an agreement with Suárez for him to leave,” “they need to separate him from Messi,” “they’re a problem in the dressing room,” this, that, and the other.
Then there comes a moment when you say: “Why is nobody from the club calling me and telling me anything directly?”
A coach arrives, and after one or two days he tells you: “I need to talk to you. You’re not in my plans from a footballing perspective.”
And that’s when something doesn’t add up with everything that had been said before.
If you tell me: “Look, the club wants to move on from you,” then you say, “Okay, fine. Let’s reach an agreement and that’s that.”
But the press, seemingly briefed by the club, was saying they didn’t want me there anymore because of dressing-room issues and all sorts of other things.
Then the coach comes and says it’s for footballing reasons, when I had always been, behind Leo, the player who scored the most goals.
Did it hurt? Yes. Things happen for a reason.
I accepted it while hurting. Yes, I suffered.
I suffered because of my family too.
I suffered because of the change my family would have to go through as well.
But fortunately, I went to a team where I could prove that I was still at the top level.
I had the luck and privilege of winning a league title with Atlético de Madrid, showing that Suárez was still very much capable and relevant."
@pymeriano@l3p4n_@Kuns0_ Fabrizio no tiene tanta información del Atleti como antes. Desde el año pasado más o menos, le han cerrado bastante el grifo a todos los periodistas. La excepción son los que habitualmente informan del Atleti