The key thing is knowing how to adapt. Adapting to the group that you have at your disposal; adapting to the place where you're working; adapting to the local environment. This is crucial: adaptability.
That's what international football is all about - be able to bounce after a bad performance.
It's not just about the words you use, but the way you use them, and the message that puts over. Also your face too and the way you project your message. If you're telling the group to stay calm, be good, and you have beads of sweat dripping down your forehead, you're in trouble.
To score three goals and not concede any is always interesting for a coach.
I'm not immune to disciplinary problems and it's up to me to make strong choices. It's my responsibility.
Players like me, we did something of a thankless job. You don't show a hard tackle or stripping someone of possession in slow motion on the big screen. But if you add it all up, I was always the one that the coaches wrote down automatically on the lineup card.
Nothing is impossible. Lassana Diarra did not play for France for five years and then returned.
Either a player accepts competition or they say they absolutely need to play. For a player to have an open door, I have to have, at the same position, an element that is just as good or even better.
There is no worse situation to enter competition than losing the home opener.
Look, I was a water carrier, I don't reject my image. I didn't have the pretension to think that I could change a match by myself.
Sport is a way of uniting people.
It is always good to be careful or vigilant.