I manage a team, for beach soccer. I'm the coach. Player, coach.
I stopped playing football because I'd done as much as I could. I needed something which was going to excite me as much as football had excited me.
I started beach football in Monte Carlo when I retired from football in 1997. I liked the game very much.
I prefer to play and lose rather than win, because I know in advance I'm going to win.
Sometimes you get submerged by emotion. I think it's very important to express it - which doesn't necessarily mean hitting someone.
I try to find different ways of expressing myself. Without that I will die.
I don't want to be in Terminator. I don't want to go to Hollywood.
I didn't study; I live.
I am searching for abstract ways of expressing reality, abstract forms that will enlighten my own mystery.
Actually, I wanted to act even when I was still playing football.
I'm proud of what I achieved there, but a life built on memories is not much of a life.
Even as a footballer, I was always being creative.
In football you have an adversary; in cinema that adversary is yourself.
My best moment? I have a lot of good moments but the one I prefer is when I kicked the hooligan.
Often there are players who have only football as a way of expressing themselves and never develop other interests. And when they no longer play football, they no longer do anything; they no longer exist, or rather they have the sensation of no longer existing.