As a child, we would all go to a tiny village near Burgos, and we'd have typical Spanish parties in the summer. There would be a band and grandparents dancing all night dressed up as American Indians and things like that.

Everything I do is about improvement.

There are so many clubs with great squads, good managers, good financial situations that allows them to sign good players.

I'm the way my father taught me to be.

I just want to be playing! I love to play. But I think I can play in the three positions behind the striker.

It's amazing knowing that a club like Manchester United is interested in you. It's a good feeling.

You have to feel free enough to do what your body is telling you to do. Sometimes, though, the pressure of winning and the fear of defeat limit your performance.

The managers I've known all had their own specific way of working.

My duty, what I have to do, is try my best in every training session, leave everything of me on the pitch. That's how I can go to bed at the end of the day and be happy with myself.

Like any footballer, I love to play. I love to feel important. I love to enjoy the game.

I will always be grateful to Chelsea, to the players, the directors, the owner, the fans.

I like to be in contact with the ball, have possession, to play.

There are some examples in my career when my family was more concerned than me. So every time I win or I score, I always think about them.

Football generates a lot of money, but there has to be a social responsibility that goes with that. It can positively affect people's lives.

It is true that footballers are mistrustful.

Winning the World Cup is something that will always be inside your mind and inside your body.

I think every footballer, after 20 years playing football, the first thing that comes to your mind is to relax.

If I was 19, 20, 18, and I had the chance to play with first-team players of Manchester United, I will definitely try to take my chance.

I've been lucky to be born in Spain to a good family. But some team-mates reached the same position from a tough background. Football is equal, and it doesn't matter where you come from.

Through Common Goal, we're creating a collaborative way for football to give back to society.

I never lose faith. I believe in myself. I know what I can do.

In Spain, they show many Premier League games on TV, and it is an inspirational league. Maybe I would like to play in the Premier League.

I've scored as many goals for Manchester United in the Premier League as for Chelsea, but in something like 30 games less.

For a kid that just played for Oviedo, to then going to play for a team like Real Madrid, it felt fantastic. But being taken out of my family home and moving away alone, into the residence Madrid have for young players, it was a bit difficult. But as time passed, I got used to it.