I couldn’t look at a football –Neymar
Brazil superstar Neymar admits that
after his nation’s quarter-final defeat to Belgium at the World Cup he
couldn’t look at a ball and didn’t want to see any of the remaining
matches.
“I wouldn’t go as far as to say I didn’t
want to play again but, I didn’t want to see a ball, or to see any more
football played,” 26-year-old Neymar told AFP in an exclusive interview on Saturday.
The PSG forward was talking at his
Neymar Praia Grande institute where the Red Bull Neymar Jr 5’s
(five-a-side-soccer) tournament was being played.
Dressed in a sleeveless t-shirt, with
his six-year-old son Davi Lucca sat upon his knee, the striker was
however in a relaxed mood as he explained his post-World Cup blues.
“I was in mourning, I was really sad
about it, but sadness passes, I have my son, my family, my friends and
they don’t want to see me moping around. I’ve got more reason to be
happy than sad,” said Neymar, reflecting on his team’s 2-1 quarter-final
defeat to Belgium.
Asked about reports in Spain linking him
with a transfer to Real Madrid the forward said “that’s all speculation
from the press.”
“The guys who come up with these stories
seem to know more about my life than I do. I won’t respond to this type
of question because nothing happened,” he scoffed.
The Brazilian superstar, who moved to
PSG for a world record 222 million euros ($264 million) last year,
insists that the burden of expectation on his shoulders — whether with
his club or country — does not weigh heavily.
“No, all the great players feel pressure,” he said.
“It’s true that when it comes to me,
there are double standards. I have been aware of this responsibility,
not only for Brazil, but also in club football, since I was 17, 18 years
old.
“I have prepared myself to handle this
pressure and I know that when the results are not what they should be
then that pressure increases.”
Neymar has been hit by a barrage of
criticism fortheatrical rolling around after being fouled at the World
Cup, but says he should have been better protected.
“People were faster to criticise the one being fouled than the one doing the fouling,” he insisted.
“I went to the World Cup to play, to
beat the opposition, not to get kicked. The criticism of me was
exaggerated, but I’m a big boy, I’m used to dealing with this kind of
wow, sorry for the lost against belgium
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