Looking back at his 25-year-long managerial career, the former Chelsea, Manchester United and Real Madrid manager told UEFA: "A coach is born and dies with the same DNA; he doesn't have a choice. But as a person, there are differences. Maybe in the beginning, I thought more about myself, and I've transformed in a way where, I don't know, I feel more altruistic. I feel like I'm in football more to help my players than to think about what will happen to me in a year, two, or three. It's a natural change that doesn't distort me as a coach, but as a person, it gives me a different side.
"I feel stronger, I feel like a much better coach than before. A coach is better with accumulated experience. There are matches in my career where I felt like I was the one who won. Because sometimes you have the right ideas, decisions, strategies, sometimes before the game, but other times during. But I've never felt like a genius. A provocateur, maybe a bit, but I've never felt like a genius or a devil."