Newly debuted FC Barcelona number 4 Cesc Fàbregas  (24) gave his first  interview to Barça TV today. Many questions were answered  about topics such as his drawn out transfer from Arsenal FC, why  “Fàbregas” instead of “Cesc” appears on the back of his shirt, and if  his arrival signals the forthcoming retirement of midfield maestro Xavi  Hernández (31). Ultimately, for Fàbregas, “the last months I’ve been  under a lot of pressure. Mentally it’s really tiring, but it finally  happened and I’m very happy to be back at Barça.”
Fàbregas first spoke of his transfer which  consumed many months and caused a lot of stress for both clubs.  Surprisingly, he took some responsibility for all the angst by saying, “it  is partly my fault for having left. Not in my wildest dreams had I  imagined that one day I would play for the Barça first team. Not as a  child, nor playing with Arsenal had I thought I’d live a day like Monday  [his presentation].” His reason for leaving the Barcelona  youth system in 2003 at the age of 16 was because “I saw that I  didn’t have any chance of getting into the first team and Xavi was very  young at that time. Also there was Andres and some of the youth players  who were far ahead of me, and I saw that I was well behind them. I  thought it was funny that an English team like Arsenal were asking about  me, and I was amazed that the first team manager, Arsene Wenger, cut  his holidays short to come and see me. I was 16 and playing for Barça  juniors. The offer they made me was brutal.”
After being away  from Barcelona for eight years, Fàbregas admitted that “the easiest  thing would have been to stay at Arsenal. I’m the captain, playing  every game. We are always in the Champions League, always fighting for  titles. For all that, and the tough competition here, perhaps now might  be the worst time to return to Barça. It’s going to be really tough to  make the starting 11, but I needed a new challenge in my life. I thought  I’d stagnated a bit, and needed a change of scenery. I needed a special  motivation to bring the best out of myself.”
And so, he  decided to come home, but some elements of that 16 year old still  remain. “I think that Cesc has changed very little. I have improved  in some ways, but I’ve always been willing to work hard, and that’s  what’s helped me to improve every day. I am always keen to learn. It’s a  mistake to think you know it all or you are better than others.”  Fàbregas hopes his signing can be considered one important for the  present and future of Barcelona, assuring “I’ll work hard to make it  happen. I’m very young and the best years of my football career are  beginning now, and in the future. I still have a lot to learn and hope  to mature with Barça for many years to come.”
Memories of his  time at Arsenal will always stay with him, though picking just one that  stands out is “very complicated, but I guess I’ll remember my debut  the most. It was the day when I least expected it. I thought I would  make the squad and that’s it, and suddenly there I was in the starting  11, and my family was in the stands. It was a really spectacular day.”  He’ll miss his adopted city London as well, but at least he still has  his grandmother’s superior crayfish. “I’ll miss the London banter,  but there’s nothing to compare with my grandmother’s crayfish. They are  the best.”
Much of Fàbregas’ transfer was due to the hard  work of the two club coaches, Arsène Wenger and Pep Guardiola. On  Wenger, Fàbregas thinks “the image of Wenger here is a bit mistaken.  If I’m here today it’s, at a high percentage, thanks to him. He makes  the decisions, and told me I could come. It’s he who took the lead in  the negotiations. Thanks to Wenger I am now a Barça player.” As for  Guardiola, Fàbregas knows he was “the key. I know I can learn a lot  from Pep and my teammates. I know they’ll bring the best out of me. On  top of that there are many tactical and technical aspects that will make  me better in this team.”
Having the opportunity to play for  his childhood idol is a dream come true for Fàbregas, though he is sure  he has not bettered Guardiola’s fast thinking on the pitch just yet. “Not  at all! There are also two before me who think very fast, like Xavi and  Andrés, and they’ve demonstrated that fact. They are 2 stars on and off  the field. Pep has always been a reference for me, but now they are  both the benchmark.”
It wasn’t only Guardiola’s playing  skills that drew Fàbregas to him, it also had to do with a kind gesture  Guardiola made involving a personally signed shirt that read “you’ll  be the Barça number ’4′.” His “parents separated when I was 13  or 14. I went to play in a tournament in Valladolid or Italy, I don’t  remember very well. I was a bit depressed about the separation. I was  having a bad time, and my manager, Rodolf Borrell, a fantastic person,  came and told me that he’d heard that he was going to give me this  shirt. It’s a great coincidence, an anecdote. My father has kept the  shirt. I’ll treasure it forever.”
Next, Fàbregas commented on  his new teammates, though most he had played with before, including the  ’87 generation of Barcelona’s youth squads which he, defender Gerard  Piqué (24), and forward Lionel Messi (24) were part of. However,  discussions of once playing for the first team together were scarce. “We  played some very good championships with that team and we were very  together. They were the best years of my life. But talking about it, no  we didn’t. I don’t think that any of the three of us ever imagined that  one day we’d play together in the first team.”
Fàbregas also  thinks that playing with his two best friends Piqué and captain Carles  Puyol (33) is “special. It’s what I really wanted. They are great  friends and I have other great friends in this dressing room. But it’s  also true that I lived with them via the national team in European  Championships and World Cups. For me it will be a brutal experience, and  they’ll certainly help to get the best out of me.” Though he  hasn’t known Puyol as long as Piqué, he says, “for me Carles is an  amazing person. Last year in the World Cup I was having a really bad  time, and he was in my room every day encouraging me. And finally, I  came on in the World Cup Final, it all ended well and he said to me ‘do  you see that you have to have more confidence in yourself?’. He’s a  captain on and off the field, due to his personality and his humility.  I’ve met very few people like him in football.”
Not to worry,  though the trio of terror now share a dressing room, it won’t mean the  end of endless Twitter conversations and the “oh oh!! moc moooooc!” fans  have come to love. “Certainly not. Now we’ll do it more often  (laughs)!”
With the addition of Fàbregas, Barcelona’s  midfield may be considered the best in the world, with the likes of  Xavi, Andrés Iniesta (27), and Thiago Alcântara (20) just to name a few.  But Fàbregas stays conservative, answering, “time will tell,  depending on results and performances on the pitch. Thiago and myself  have come this year, hopefully to offer more quality, and more  competition. Together we’ll be a great group. It doesn’t matter whether  or not it’s the best ever. The most important thing is that Barça  continues performing at the top level, keeps winning titles, and that  the fans enjoy it.”
All of this power in the midfield brings  up concerns over playing time, but Fàbregas believes every player will  find their place. “We are players that understand football the same  way, yet we’re quite different. More than people think. Together we make  a very good combination and at a footballing level that’s great, but we  have to prove that on the pitch. We understand football the same way,  but we all have different characteristics, which might just make us a  very special group.”
Xavi lovers everywhere are also wary  that Fàbregas will take his place, much like Xavi himself took over for  Guardiola. Fàbregas, though, doesn’t know if he is Xavi’s heir. “I  think that Xavi still has some years left in him, huh! He does things  you wouldn’t believe! I haven’t come to retire Xavi. I came here to play  with Xavi, to compete with Xavi, and to win with Xavi. What I’m saying  about Xavi also goes for Andres and Thiago. I think altogether we make a  very good group. I know what we’ll do. With the great group we are,  we’ll do great things together.”
Will this great group of  midfielders help aid Barcelona to continue playing their unique, flowing  style and win titles? “We’ll try but it’ll be difficult. There are  teams like Madrid, who have strengthened their team, who’ll want to beat  us, and don’t only want to win the League but also want to win the  Champions League. There’ll also be Manchester United, Inter, etc. up  against us. We’ll have to be very careful, therefore, be very  disciplined and work to maximum capacity. We can’t relax. If you relax  too much that’s when the problems start.”
Fàbregas also  finally answers the question of the name on the back of his shirt, and  it’s not because some people have a hard time pronouncing it. “No,  it’s not because of that. I let everyone call me what they want. I can’t  do anything about it, there’s no remedy. At least I know they’re  talking to me. It doesn’t matter. It’s a funny story and nothing more.”  The real reason is he “would normally wear the shirt with Cesc, but  it’s what I wanted and it’s not that I’m superstitious. In England I  had to put Fabregas because the player’s surname has to be displayed and  when I made my debut with the national team, they put Cesc on the back  and things didn’t go so smoothly. But then, they changed it to Fabregas  and we won the European Championships and World Cup. Barça were going to  put Cesc on the shirt, but I thought ‘if everything has gone well with  Fabregas, then we should continue with Fabregas and carry on winning  trophies.”
The ‘One That Got Away’ is finally back where he  belongs, where Barcelona “will get the best out of me.”
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