22.06.2007 15:00
Ronaldinho after a fresh start
Sandra Sarmiento
After a year without winning any major trophies, Ronaldinho thinks it’s time to go back to square one and think the whole situation through in order to “make Barça champions again along with all my team mates.”
Having just returned from Pretoria, Ronaldinho is on the point of starting his summer holidays, and
spoke to Barça TV and www.fcbarcelona.cat about a complicated season, in which he has admitted he
has not performed to the best of his ability.
Two titles out of seven. What has been the problem this season? Was it
overconfidence?
“I don’t think so. We tried our best but sometimes that is
not enough. Now we have to go on holiday and look at the things we did well and what we did bad. We
have to be enthusiastic about the start of next season. We have all made mistakes and we have to
keep working around those mistakes.”
What went wrong?
“I think we could have done better in every aspect. We all wanted to do well, but after
a great year in which everything worked out well for us, we were very confident and enthusiastic.
We have to start again from scratch and start fighting like we did the year before.”
Have your own problems been poor fitness training, the tour and arriving without a proper
holiday, as you said?
“I think so. I had just got back from the World Cup and immediately started work again,
and not separate from the rest of the group, and that wasn’t good for me. I never felt good
all year, I was tired. I was shattered. I hope to get next season off to a good start and to be
physically in shape.”
Were you lacking humility?
“No, the players were the same as ever. When things don’t
work out, little things crop up here and there. But the squad was fine and the players we have here
will be able to make Barça strong again next season.”
The president says there was a lack of commitment and responsibility.
“He is the boss, and he has to see things as he does and makes the decisions he does,
but I think we always behaved the right way. In football, if you don’t win, you try to work
out what went wrong. I think we did all we could to make the team strong and we just need to look
at the little things we didn’t do well.”
Do you agree that there is a need for an internal code?
“Everybody sees things in their own particular way, and has their own ideas of what is
right. We have always done things the same way here and things have gone well. We have to wait and
see what the bosses decide and then we just have to get on with doing our jobs.”
Would you accept the new rules?
“I’d have no problem with them. I have worked with a lot of coaches and
presidents and they all have their own ways of working. I have no problem with that, I can work
whatever way they want.”
You were the top scorer this season, but didn’t play as well as you have done in
other seasons. Was it a physical thing?
“Yes, always. I was never one hundred per cent fit. There are
moments when I felt fine but I lacked strength in several games and that is why I decided not to go
to the Copa America. I need to rest and start next season at the same time as the rest of the squad
so that I can play better next season. I am delighted with the number of goals I scored but I want
to keep scoring and to be fully fit.”
Has this been your most demanding season?
“Yes. When you don’t win trophies or matches, you have to be critical.
That’s normal, when you don’t win titles.”
Do you feel that the criticism has been unfair?
“No, unfair no, never. I have been criticised in the same way that my team mates have.
That’s football.”
A lot of things have been said about you...
“Normal, just like they say nice things when you win, if you don’t, they look for
reasons. But sometimes they say things that aren’t true.”