Andrés Iniesta: ‘I’ve Squeezed Out Every Drop, There’s Nothing Left’

Andrés Iniesta celebrates after his goal won the 2010 World Cup for Spain. He says he game reached ‘another level’ that day. Photograph: Clive Mason/Getty Images
Andrés Iniesta celebrates after his goal won the 2010 World Cup for Spain. He says he game reached ‘another level’ that day. Photograph: Clive Mason/Getty Images
TT

Andrés Iniesta: ‘I’ve Squeezed Out Every Drop, There’s Nothing Left’

Andrés Iniesta celebrates after his goal won the 2010 World Cup for Spain. He says he game reached ‘another level’ that day. Photograph: Clive Mason/Getty Images
Andrés Iniesta celebrates after his goal won the 2010 World Cup for Spain. He says he game reached ‘another level’ that day. Photograph: Clive Mason/Getty Images

“‘An intimate moment,” he calls it. Late on a Sunday night, his last there, Andrés Iniesta sat alone in the middle of Europe’s biggest stadium, silenced now. The nets had been folded up, the lights turned out and everyone else had gone but he remained, kit on, boots and socks off to feel the grass. “It was lovely to sit there, a moment between me and the pitch where I enjoyed myself so much,” he says. “Just me saying goodbye to my home. Every corner of the Camp Nou holds a memory. It’s very powerful, brutal. It was emotional.” After 22 years, 16 in the first team, he was leaving Barcelona; leaving Spain, too.

As he sat, he thought: memories, nostalgia, back to when he arrived from Albacete in an unreliable Ford Orion. “The origins,” he says. And then, at last, he got up, collected his things and was gone. “I accepted the idea some time ago, assimilated it: I knew the end was coming.” He also says that while it “wasn’t easy to say goodbye” he “digested it well” – all the tributes, “so much affection”. Yet there was also part of him that wanted to get beyond that and back to what he knows. Because it was not the end just yet. Japan awaits, with Vissel Kobe. And before that, Russia. At 34, the man who scored the most important goal in Spanish football history, winning their only World Cup in 2010, has just days left at the highest level. Exactly how many depends on how well he and his Spain team-mates do the thing he has always done best: play football.

“This will be my last World Cup,” Iniesta says, sitting across a table at Spain’s Las Rozas HQ, hours before boarding a plane heading east. He has been coming here for 12 years but probably will not be back. “I don’t know if my Spain career will definitively close but this might be the last time. In July we’ll analyse everything. It will have been four World Cups and there won’t be another. I’m determined to enjoy every moment knowing it’s the last but I’m also going not wanting to ‘know’ it’s the last. It’s a contradiction: I don’t want to it be ‘the last World Cup’, like another homage, a testimonial – far from it. I want to compete like the first. The desire hasn’t changed; what’s changed is the moment.

“Russia will be calmer [than the last few weeks of homages] and hopefully there’s still a way to travel. It’s different now: football and tributes were mixed up, now it’s only football and just one objective.

“I’m leaving because my body’s asking me to. If not, I would have continued. When my body told me I couldn’t give more, I knew. I understood: I have to get out. It takes longer to recover physically and mentally it’s exhausting – so many years, the last three as captain. I’ve squeezed out every drop, there’s nothing left. This is the honest thing to do. It would have been easy to carry on, not worry if I was playing or performing, but I couldn’t do that. It could have been next year but it’s this. Now was the time.”

There is a determination to end at the very top, a belief that he can, and it’s tempting to see a parallel with Zinedine Zidane, who left Real Madrid in 2006 and led France – champions eight years before, unable to get out of the group four years after that – to the World Cup final. As with Iniesta, some thought he had gone too soon, while others saw him as a retiree already, but there was a sense of mission about him and he produced some of his finest football. Not that anyone is suggesting Iniesta will bow out with a Materazzi moment.

“I hope not,” he says. But there is a parallel? “Yes, in that it’s the last big occasion. And no longer being at Barcelona doesn’t mean I’m not prepared, that I’m incapable of taking on this challenge. When you make a decision, you think up to the World Cup. And then it’s over. After that, everything will be different, everything changes. I know that. But first I want to win the World Cup.”

Just like in 2010. Johannesburg inevitably comes to mind, the moment when the ball sat up before him. Yet it was not just the goal, there is something deeper. Watch that final again, watch extra time, and it is extraordinary: Iniesta seems somehow to elevate above the rest, a portrait of his game distilled into 30 minutes of near-perfection. “That’s the way I felt, too. I don’t know if I’d say I felt better than everyone, but I felt a strength from somewhere. It was the same in the [Spanish] cup final: I knew it was my last final with Barcelona, we’d come from Rome, and that game was everything. In South Africa, I felt it and I think it was contagious – my team-mates felt it, too. I seemed to get an incredible amount of touches, I felt I could win every one-on-one, like there was another level.”

And then, the goal. Sitting in front of the television in Spain was Jessica, wife of Dani Jarque, the Espanyol captain who suffered a fatal heart attack a year earlier. She had not watched a game since; that night she watched Iniesta pull off his Spain shirt to reveal a vest dedicated to Jarque.

“When [my friend and biographer] Marcos explained that, we shed many tears,” Iniesta says. “There are things that make your hairs stand up and make you proud.” Iniesta had asked Hugo, the physio, to prepare the vest minutes before kick-off. “It’s the only time I’ve ever done that,” he says. “I don’t know how you explain that, what you call it: destiny or something. I’m not psychic, I can’t see the future. There has to be some word for it, why I chose that night to write the message, score, then remember and take off my shirt, because it’s easy to get swept up in everything and it doesn’t occur to you. There’s something there that made sure it all went that way.”

If there is a moment in Iniesta’s career, it is South Africa, but there is something less tangible about it, less defined by a single second – more by sensations, a joy of the game itself, the way he played.

It has not always been as easy as he made it look. He has talked eloquently about finding himself in a “dark place”. There have been injuries: he was told not to shoot in the 2009 European Cup final and almost did not make it to South Africa. And football’s surroundings can tire. “The less the actual football gets discussed, the less I like it. You hear things that aren’t true and sometimes you end up believing what you read instead of what you felt. That can influence you, which isn’t healthy.”

With Spain, there is an extra dimension: politics. Even Iniesta – cautious, neutral, rarely outspoken – has felt it; when he appealed for a solution to the Catalan crisis, it was hardly the most outlandish statement, but still some waded in. “It’s a sensitive subject, a difficult situation. People say players should give their opinion; then you give your perfectly logical and sensible opinion and you get hit from all sides. You think: ‘Is it worth opening myself up?’”

Was that ever a problem for Spain? “Inside? No, no. Everyone has their opinion: you’re not removed from it, there are personal feelings of course, but it’s lived differently. It’s a political situation to be resolved by politicians, who represent people and brought it about. It never became a big problem inside because ultimately we’re a football team and we want the same thing on the pitch.”

On the pitch, Iniesta was always different, challenging preconceptions, changing the game. He talks about Pep Guardiola and “another step forward in the evolution of football”, insisting that “years later we still see teams emulating things we started doing”, and is happy to be remembered not only for winning but the way they won. At times, that was best expressed by opponents: “You’d sometimes hear things like: ‘Bloody hell, that’s enough now, you can stop …’” Then there was Sir Alex Ferguson, a man he describes as “very special”, talking about that moment when “Xavi and Iniesta get you on that carrousel”.

Are there no regrets? How about – and, come on, indulge us here – not playing in England? “I’m sure it would have been nice, a good experience,” he says. “But I was always fine where I was; I never felt the calling, never thought I’d be better off anywhere else. Look, I’m only leaving Barcelona because my body asks me to. If not, I’d have continued.”

Iniesta was like a beacon of hope to every man, his “normality” abnormal. The day he arrived at Barcelona, one La Masia resident said: “He doesn’t look like a footballer” and that became part of his appeal. “Well,” he says, “maybe I can be an example to players with my body type, my stature, my physique, but I don’t see it like that. I don’t see football as a sport for people who are 1.80m and 75 kilos. It’s about being a team, balance, and I don’t think there’s an ideal type I don’t fit. Plenty of players have been very good without being ‘athletes’. And I never got intimidated. I always enjoyed playing against older, bigger boys. More than anything because in my village there weren’t really that many boys my age anyway. You learn to ‘survive’, you improve. Beating them drives you.”

“Beating them,” he says. Winning is something Iniesta has done rather well. He has won 35 titles. If Spain were to win the World Cup again, many would be delighted precisely because it is his 36th on his last great stage. But this is not some goodbye tour where he will be applauded everywhere and nor does he want it to be; this is the World Cup.

“Some might say it would be nice for Spain to win it, but for others it would be great for Leo to win it; others want Cristiano Ronaldo. It could be [all of] our last tournament, so it might be extra special. It’s been an incredible era. I don’t know if we’ll see something like this again. Everything, everyone, around me made me better. Everyone emerges with their own baggage, stories, titles, and there’s also a lasting respect. I’ve shared almost my entire career with some of them. The respect goes beyond the rivalry in the end.

“There’s a world of difference between saying ‘wouldn’t it be nice’ and it actually happening; 2014 was horrible, a lesson that if you’re not 100% anyone can beat you. This time, we’re in good shape. It will be hard but we know we’ve got a great team that can fight for good things. I’ve started looking at opponents. Portugal, say: maybe we had the same feeling in France [that they weren’t favourites], but they won the Euros. It’s building now and once you’re in Russia you know the time has come.”

The last time.

And then? What does he do? What do the rest of us do, come to think of it? Is there another Iniesta out there? “No, no,” he says, “but only in the same way there wasn’t another Xavi, another Puyol, Raúl, Villa, Fernando [Torres], in the sense that every player is different. Plenty of players can be more important than me, but that doesn’t matter; what matters is the journey I travelled, the memories.

“I hope I have a lot of football left. I’m happiest when I’m playing. I’ll have another life which is totally different, I’ll play differently, in a different context, but it will still be a responsibility and I hope to keep enjoying it. Then I’ll try to become a coach or something. I want to feel close to the grass. I don’t know how long I have left. I said I want to play at 40 – I don’t know if I’ll make it.”

Iniesta is laughing now. “I’d have to renew for another three years. That wouldn’t be bad.

“Football’s been my life. It has been since I was four or five, since I started kicking the ball around the village with my dad. It’s been the motor, the driving force of my life and the lives of the people around me; you become the axis around which everything turns. I’ve had an incredible experience, shared with my family. It’s been a fairytale, really – everything I lived, how I lived it. And then something new will begin that will, I’m sure, be very nice. Football’s been my life and I hope it continues to be.”

(The Guardian)



Sports Investment Forum Allocates Third Day to Women's Empowerment to Promote Sustainable Investment in Women’s Sports

Sports Investment Forum Allocates Third Day to Women's Empowerment to Promote Sustainable Investment in Women’s Sports
TT

Sports Investment Forum Allocates Third Day to Women's Empowerment to Promote Sustainable Investment in Women’s Sports

Sports Investment Forum Allocates Third Day to Women's Empowerment to Promote Sustainable Investment in Women’s Sports

The Sports Investment Forum announced that the third day of its 2026 edition will be dedicated to empowering women in the sports sector, in partnership with Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University. The move reflects the forum’s commitment to supporting the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030 and enhancing the role of women in the sports industry and sports investment.

This allocation comes as part of the forum’s program, scheduled to take place from April 20 to 22, at The Ritz-Carlton, Riyadh. The third day will feature a series of strategic sessions and specialized workshops focused on sustainable investment in women’s sports, the empowerment of female leadership, the development of inclusive sports cities, and support for research and studies in women’s sports, SPA reported.

Forum organizers emphasized that the partnership with Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University, recognized as the largest women’s university in the world, represents a model of integration between the academic and investment sectors. The partnership contributes to building a sustainable knowledge base that supports the growth of women’s sports and enhances investment opportunities at both local and international levels.

The dedicated day will address several strategic themes, including sustainable investment in women’s leagues and events, boosting scalable business models, empowering female leaders within federations, clubs, and sports institutions, and developing inclusive sports cities that ensure women’s participation in line with the highest international standards. It will also include the launch of research initiatives and academic partnerships to support future policies and strategies for the sector.

This approach aims to transform women’s empowerment in sports from a social framework into a sustainable investment and development pathway that enhances women’s contributions to the sports economy and reinforces Saudi Arabia’s position as a leading regional hub for advancing women’s sports.

The day is expected to attract prominent female leaders, decision-makers, investors, and local and international experts, in addition to the signing of several memoranda of understanding and joint initiatives supporting women’s empowerment in the sports sector.

The Sports Investment Forum reiterated that empowering women is a strategic pillar in developing the national sports ecosystem, contributing to economic growth objectives, enhancing quality of life, and building a more inclusive and sustainable sports community.


Liverpool Boss Slot Says Isak in 'Final Stages of Rehab'

Soccer Football -  FA Cup - Fourth Round - Liverpool v Brighton & Hove Albion - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - February 14, 2026 Liverpool manager Arne Slot celebrates after the match REUTERS/Phil Noble
Soccer Football - FA Cup - Fourth Round - Liverpool v Brighton & Hove Albion - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - February 14, 2026 Liverpool manager Arne Slot celebrates after the match REUTERS/Phil Noble
TT

Liverpool Boss Slot Says Isak in 'Final Stages of Rehab'

Soccer Football -  FA Cup - Fourth Round - Liverpool v Brighton & Hove Albion - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - February 14, 2026 Liverpool manager Arne Slot celebrates after the match REUTERS/Phil Noble
Soccer Football - FA Cup - Fourth Round - Liverpool v Brighton & Hove Albion - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - February 14, 2026 Liverpool manager Arne Slot celebrates after the match REUTERS/Phil Noble

Liverpool manager Arne Slot said on Thursday he believes striker Alexander Isak is in the "final stages of rehab" and could return by the end of next month to bolster the Reds' push for Champions League qualification.

The British record signing has been sidelined since mid-December when he fractured a bone in his lower leg and needed ankle surgery following a sliding tackle from Tottenham's Micky van de Ven.

His injury came just as 26-year-old Sweden international Isak, who joined Premier League champions Liverpool for £125 million ($169 million) from top-flight rivals Newcastle in September, was finding his form at Anfield with two goals in six matches.

"Alex has been on the pitch, not with his football boots but with his running shoes for the first time this week," Slot told reporters, according to AFP.

"The next step is doing work with the ball, which every player likes most, then the next step is to come into the group and then it takes a while before you're ready to play.

"It will be some time around there, end of March, start of April, where he is hopefully back with the group. That is not to say you are ready to play, let alone start a game.

"But it's nice that rehab goes well; that's a compliment to him and our medical staff.

"I think we all know the moment you go on the pitch it doesn't take three months but these final stages of rehab can also make it change."

Isak is one of five Liverpool first-team players currently sidelined, with only Jeremie Frimpong close to a return.

The right-back has been out since the end of last month with a hamstring injury but is expected to be available for next weekend's visit of West Ham.

Liverpool have had a rare week without a match ahead of Sunday's trip to Nottingham Forest.

"It is nice and useful as the players we are having, nine out of 10 go to the national team so for seven, eight, nine months they hardly have a time off," said Dutch boss Slot, who insisted he had no need of a rest himself.

"It was nice but I did not really need it. Last season I felt I needed it more in this period of time. I am enjoying the work I do here."

Liverpool, after a slow start to their title defense -- are now sixth and within three points of the top four with 12 games to go.

They next play three of the bottom four clubs as they look to get themselves into a Champions League position.

Premier League leaders Arsenal were left just five points clear of second-placed Manchester City after blowing a two-goal lead in a shock 2-2 draw away to rock-bottom Wolves on Wednesday.

Slot, however, said: "We didn't need yesterday to know how difficult it is to win a Premier League game. What has made the Premier League nicer this season than three, four, five, six years ago is it's more competitive."


Familiar Face Returns to Marseille where Habib Beye Takes Charge

(FILES) Rennes' French-Senegalese head coach Habib Beye looks on before the French L1 football match between Le Havre AC (HAC) and Rennes at the Oceane Stadium in Le Havre, Northwestern France, on April 13, 2025. (Photo by Lou BENOIST / AFP)
(FILES) Rennes' French-Senegalese head coach Habib Beye looks on before the French L1 football match between Le Havre AC (HAC) and Rennes at the Oceane Stadium in Le Havre, Northwestern France, on April 13, 2025. (Photo by Lou BENOIST / AFP)
TT

Familiar Face Returns to Marseille where Habib Beye Takes Charge

(FILES) Rennes' French-Senegalese head coach Habib Beye looks on before the French L1 football match between Le Havre AC (HAC) and Rennes at the Oceane Stadium in Le Havre, Northwestern France, on April 13, 2025. (Photo by Lou BENOIST / AFP)
(FILES) Rennes' French-Senegalese head coach Habib Beye looks on before the French L1 football match between Le Havre AC (HAC) and Rennes at the Oceane Stadium in Le Havre, Northwestern France, on April 13, 2025. (Photo by Lou BENOIST / AFP)

Marseille is looking to reignite its season with a new coach on board.

The nine-time French champion appointed Habib Beye to replace Roberto De Zerbi following a bad patch of form that saw the club exit the Champions League and drop 12 points behind Ligue 1 leader Lens.

Beye, a former Senegal international who played for Marseille, will be in charge of Friday's trip to Brest.

After leading Red Star to promotion to Ligue 2, Beye spent the last year and a half as the Rennes coach. The club sacked Beye this month.

Key matchups Marseille has failed to win its past three league games, badly damaging its title hopes. The results including a 5-0 mauling at PSG have left fans fuming. The club hopes Beye, a disciplinarian advocating ball possession and a strong attacking identity, will produce a jolt.

Beye's hiring "refocuses us on the challenges we still need to tackle between now and the end of the season,” The Associated Press quoted Marseille owner Frank McCourt as saying.

Since McCourt bought Marseille in 2016, the former powerhouse has failed to find any form of stability in a succession of coaches and crises. It hasn’t won the league title since 2010.

PSG abandoned the top spot to Lens after losing to Rennes 3-1 last week. Luis Enrique's team bounced back with a 3-2 win at Monaco in the first leg of their Champions League playoff and hosts last-placed Metz on Saturday. Lens welcomes Monaco the same day.

Third-placed Lyon, on a stunning 13-match winning run, plays at Strasbourg on Sunday.
Players to watch With the World Cup in his country looming, former Arsenal striker Folarin Balogun is hitting form at the right time. The American forward scored twice inside 18 minutes against PSG and has 10 goals and four assists this season.

At PSG, the man in form is Désiré Doué.

After his team quickly fell behind by two goals against Monaco midweek, Doué came to the rescue to turn things around. The France international was relentless and left his mark on the match after coming on as a replacement for Ousmane Dembélé. He first reduced the deficit, played a role in Achraf Hakimi’s equalizer then netted the winner.
Out of action Dembélé is expected to miss PSG's match against Metz because of an injured left calf.

Off the field PSG was sanctioned with the partial closure of the Auteuil stand for two matches and a 10,000 euros ($11,800) fine by the disciplinary committee of the French league following banners displayed and insults directed by supporters during the match against Marseille on Feb. 8. at the Parc des Princes. There were brief discriminatory chants about Marseille at the start of the game and the referee stopped play for about one minute around the 70th.