I'm used to being the main goal scorer, but I also always like to help.
— Luis Suarez
Every player would love to get to the absolute top, and Real Madrid is it.
Nobody in England knows the real Luis Suarez.
Coaches have told me I can help the team much more if I don't talk, if I don't moan.
There are people who criticise me, and that's normal because of the way I am on the pitch. I get angry, I get tense.
I'm an emotional person, and I externalise my feelings a lot with some things, but I'm strong with others.
I have to put my career first.
Every soccer player can be on the edge, at the limit, be the bad guy. We have to get used to it. Sometimes I am one of those.
If you win while scoring goals, then you leave happy, but the most important thing is always the team. I do not think just of me.
It disturbs me that Liverpool are not in the Champions League and fighting for the Premier League.
Away from the pitch, I'm a very calm person. I maybe have the odd cross word with my wife, like any relationship, but that's it.
There are only three million people in Uruguay, but there is such hunger for glory: you'll do anything to make it; you have that extra desire to run, to suffer. I can't explain our success, but I think that's a reason.
I wanted my children to be able to see me play at the World Cup.
Of course I don't like the fact that my wife goes to the supermarket and there are photographers. But I realise that the press attention is the same wherever you go.
I need to be playing in the Champions League.
On the field, sometimes passion overwhelms you, and you do things you regret afterward.
Obviously, being a forward, I would like to score more goals. But while the team does well, there is no problem.
I will give my soul every game.
On the pitch, I argue, I shout, I talk rubbish and generally do anything I can to get ahead.
My wife says that if people reach conclusions as to what I am like based on what they see from me on the pitch they would say I am a guy who is always annoyed, always in a bad mood, they'd say what must it be like to live with me. There are two of me, two different people.
Injuries are not only a physical question, which is the most important thing, of course, but also a question of your mind. If you're thinking: 'I'm not going to make it', 'I can't cope', 'it hurts', 'it's never going to get better', then it won't.
Liverpool will always be special for me: my daughter was born here.
I've scored many goals that I've liked, but I think the best memory I have is the one against Korea in the 2010 World Cup.
I want to change the bad boy image that has stuck for a bit because I don't think I am at all how I have been portrayed. I would like that to change because it's awful to hear and read what is said of you.