Interview: Lionel Messi on His Sport, Cristiano Ronaldo — and Argentina

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Joachim Ladefoged / VII for TIME

Lionel Messi of FC Barcelona, photographed Jan. 11, 2012

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On his preparations for the next World Cup, and what he learned from the last one:
I'm preparing now like I would for any match, any important match whether it's the World Cup or Champions League or the Copa del Rey. I play all games the same, as if they were all finals. Nothing changes in my preparations.

On whether playing for Argentina in the World Cup brought a different kind of pressure:
No, we feel pressure with every match: not just me, but anyone who's on a national team. What I can say that I learned [in the 2010 World Cup in South Africa] is that the most important thing is that the team be strong, that they be united. That's what's important in a tournament that is so short.

On whether his rivalry with Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo makes him a better player:
I don't think so. I never really fixated on him or compared myself with another player. My mentality is just to achieve more each year, to grow both as an individual and as a team, and if he wasn't there, I'd be doing the same thing.

On what he thinks of Ronaldo:
I think he's a good person. I think he's a good player, who brings a lot to Madrid, and who, in any moment, can decide a game.

On whether, when Ronaldo scores in a game, he feels pressure to do likewise:
No. I care about how Madrid's doing because they're competing against us, and they're in our League, and because almost every year, we compete for the title. But against Ronaldo, no.

On his competitiveness, and how he feels when he loses:
I am competitive and I feel bad when we lose. You can see it in me when we've lost. I'm in a bad way. I don't like to talk to anyone. I just retreat into myself and go over the game in my head: the things that went wrong, what I did wrong, why we didn't win.

On how long he broods:
Until the next game. Luckily we play a lot, so it happens quickly.

On how he feels when criticized by fellow Argentines for his performances with the national team:
Yes, yes, it hurt, it bothered me. Because they said things that weren't true — that I didn't care as much about wearing the [Argentine] shirt. I didn't feel that, I didn't think that. And now, I think what people there understand that this is a team game, and that I try to play the same way there as I do in Barcelona, and always do the best I can.

On his strong identification with Argentina, despite having lived in Barcelona since age 12:
I've never stopped being Argentine, and I've never wanted to. I feel very proud of being Argentine, even though I left there. I've been clear about this since I was very young, and I never wanted to change. Barcelona is my home because both the club and the people here have given me everything, but I won't stop being Argentine.

On why he feels his countrymen are finally warming to him:
You see it in the affection that people there have, for what they say on television. Before, there was a lot of criticism and everything was bad. And now it's not like that. That's good, because every country I go to, people have always received me very well, and in my own country that wasn't happening.

On the reception he gets from fans around the world, like in Kolkata, India, where he recently played:
Incredible. It's happened in a lot of countries I've visited, but it's still surprising. I never imagined that so far from Spain or Argentina, people would have this affection for me. It makes me very happy.

On whether this adulation puts more pressure on him to score:
No, I play the same as always. Whether it's a friendly match, or for points, or a final, or any game — I play the same. I'm always trying to be my best, first for my team, for myself, for the fans, and to try and win.

On the qualities of his teammates that he admires:
I haven't changed my values, the values that I learned from my family. They're the same ones I brought to Barça, to the club, that the guys in charge at La Masía teach to the kids: respect, humility, collegiality, respect one another no matter who he is.

On the World Cup 2014, and whether it will be his moment to silence his critics:
I hope so. I hope it's the moment for Argentina and that we can become champions. I'm going [to Brazil] because I want to be a champion and share the World Cup with my national team. But if it doesn't turn out that way, I can't do anything about it. And there's still a lot of time. There's still a lot of time to prepare and to improve.

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