Zlatan Ibrahimovic says Fabio Capello taught him to demand respect and become a superstar

AC Milan’s Zlatan Ibrahimovic reacts after his last game for the club at the end of their Serie A match against Hellas Verona at the San Siro stadium in Milan, on Jun. 4, 2023. (AP/File)
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Updated 10 October 2025
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Zlatan Ibrahimovic says Fabio Capello taught him to demand respect and become a superstar

  • Ibrahimovic first encountered Fabio Capello, who had been named Juventus coach before his transfer in 2004, at the Bianconeri breakfast table
  • Ibrahimovic was one of PSG’s first high-profile signings under Qatari ownership in 2012

ROME: When Zlatan Ibrahimovic walked into a Serie A locker room for the first time at age 22 and saw the likes of Alessandro Del Piero, David Trezeguet and Gianluigi Buffon staring at him, he acknowledges that it felt like a “fantasy world.”
The retired Sweden superstar, now an adviser at AC Milan after also playing for the Rossoneri over two different spells as well as city rival Inter Milan, credited the Italian league with shaping him into one of the world’s top strikers during an entertaining on-stage discussion at this week’s European Football Clubs assembly.
“When I came to Italy, it was the biggest competition in the world, and all the big players were playing there. I was young. I didn’t have a lot of respect, to be honest, because I wanted to prove myself,” Ibrahimovic said.
“But the first time I came to Juventus was a little bit fantasy world for me because I came from Ajax. I came in a locker room to Juventus where I saw (Lilian) Thuram, Buffon, (Fabio) Cannavaro, Del Piero, Trezeguet. All these big stars and I was like one week before I used to play PlayStation with these guys. One week later I was with them in the locker room.”
‘I became an animal’
Ibrahimovic first encountered Fabio Capello, who had been named Juventus coach before his transfer in 2004, at the Bianconeri breakfast table.
Capello was reading the Gazzetta dello Sport, Ibrahimovic recalled.
“I was like, ‘Good morning, mister.’ He didn’t react, and I said (to myself), ‘Oh. I said the wrong word now.’ But I let it go. I waited five, 10 minutes. He just put the paper down and walked out. I was just like, ‘Wow. This is on a different level.’”
Ibrahimovic, who went on to score 16 Serie A goals that season, eventually earned Capello’s attention.
“I asked him, ‘How do you gain respect’ from a group that he had? Because he had a team that was world-class players and everybody was like, ‘I’m the best in the world.’ And they were the best of the world,” Ibrahimovic said. “He said, ‘I don’t ask for respect. I take the respect.’ That’s what he did with me in the breakfast by not talking to me.
“He was demanding. His discipline was very high. So, he raised me, and he put me down on the ground. So, one day I could be the best in the world, the next day I could be the worst player in the world. That was him triggering me and playing with my mind to bring the best out of me,” Ibrahimovic added. “He shaped my mentality. From a normal human being, I became an animal.”
Ibrahimovic went on to win Serie A five times — three trophies with Inter and two with Milan. Two Italian league titles at Juventus under Capello were stripped due to the Calciopoli scandal.
Mourinho, Guardiola and Ancelotti
Ibrahimovic also played under Jose Mourinho at Inter and Manchester United, Pep Guardiola at Barcelona and Carlo Ancelotti at Paris Saint-Germain.
“They made a change in football. They changed the game in their own way,” Ibrahimovic said. “Because I changed a lot of clubs, I had a lot of coaches.”
PSG’s ‘architect’
Ibrahimovic was one of PSG’s first high-profile signings under Qatari ownership in 2012.
“I will still say I’m the architect of that club. … It’s fantastic to be in a club where you started from one thing, with all the respect from the past, and (see) what it is today,” Ibrahimovic said, adding of PSG’s first Champions League title last season: “I was happy when PSG won it.”
Ibrahimovic himself never won Europe’s biggest club trophy.
“Everybody knows I didn’t win the Champions League, so it’s no secret,” he said. “But the people will remember more that I didn´t win it than the 90 percent that won it.”
Work ethic vs. talent
Known for his powerful and acrobatic goals, Ibrahimovic highlighted his mentality and training methods for helping him rise to the top.
“It was like a survival mode, and I brought that with me,” he said. “I say always 50 percent is in your mind. It’s not only about the talent because the talent makes you over-confident. But the hard work makes you succeed and if you don’t do the hard work you will not arrive. The talent is not enough.”
Billionaire vs. millionaire
In all, Ibrahimovic played for nine different clubs, beginning with his hometown Malmö and also including the LA Galaxy before retiring with Milan in 2023.
While he said he respects players like Del Piero and Francesco Totti who spent decades with the same club, “the challenge is (when) you bring your zip pack, and you go to the garden of somebody else to prove yourself. That’s different, because then you come to a different country, different culture, different club.”
In his typical brash fashion, Ibrahimovic added that he would be happy to start his career all over again now, because then “I will be a billionaire, not a millionaire.”


Ton-up Farhan helps Pakistan seal Super Eight spot with Namibia rout

Updated 58 min 49 sec ago
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Ton-up Farhan helps Pakistan seal Super Eight spot with Namibia rout

  • It was Farhan’s maiden T20 ton and he became only the second Pakistani to score a T20 World Cup century after Ahmed Shehzad in 2014 against Bangladesh

COLOMBO: Sahibzada Farhan hit a magnificent unbeaten century to help Pakistan seal the final Super Eight berth at the T20 World Cup with a thumping 102-run win over Namibia in Colombo on Wednesday.

Farhan scored 100 not out off 58 balls with four sixes and 10 fours as Pakistan posted 199-3 before they routed Namibia for 97 in 17.3 overs.

Pakistan’s victory took them to six points from four games in Group A and eliminated the United States, who finished with four points.

India also have six points and play the Netherlands in the group’s final game later Wednesday.

The defending champions India, South Africa, Zimbabwe and the West Indies will play each other in the Super eights Group 1, hosted in India.

Pakistan join New Zealand, England and co-hosts Sri Lanka in Group 2, hosted in Sri Lanka.

After a morale-shattering 61-run defeat against India, Pakistan needed a victory to avoid an early exit, which was achieved with ease as spinners Usman Tariq (4-16) and Shadab Khan (3-19) tore through the Namibia batting.

Louren Steenkamp scored 23 while Alexander Busing-Volschenk was the only other batsman to reach double figures with 20.

‘Complete performance’ 

Skipper Salman Agha praised a clinical show.

“It is a complete performance,” said a relieved Agha.

“We batted well and Farhan anchored the innings. He has been batting well for a while and I am happy that he got his hundred.

“With the ball we were lethal.”

Namibian skipper Gerhard Erasmus admitted Pakistan’s spin bowlers were too hot to handle.

“It (spin) is a special skill to have, to turn the ball both ways like they do,” said Erasmus.

“I think that’s one of the things we’ll definitely take home and look to improve on.”

Farhan earlier blasted a six and a four off pace bowler Jack Brassell to enter the 90s before taking a single off Gerhard Erasmus to complete his hundred in the final over.

It was Farhan’s maiden T20 ton and he became only the second Pakistani to score a T20 World Cup century after Ahmed Shehzad in 2014 against Bangladesh.

Shadab Khan, promoted to No. 5 with Babar Azam left out, hit three sixes and a four in his 36 not out off 22 balls as Pakistan smashed 42 from the last three overs.

Farhan put on 40 for the opening wicket with Saim Ayub (14) before consolidating the innings during a 67-run second wicket stand with captain Salman Agha (38).

Pakistan also left out pace bowler Shaheen Shah Afridi after a poor show in the first three matches, including conceding 31 in two overs in the defeat against India on Sunday.

Farhan’s ton means this is the first T20 World Cup in which three centuries have been scored.

He followed Sri Lanka’s Pathum Nissanka, who scored a hundred against Australia on Monday, and Canada’s Yuvraj Sama who reached three figures against New Zealand on Tuesday.