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Rediff.com  » Sports » Bale reveals Madrid move was highly stressful
This article was first published 11 years ago

Bale reveals Madrid move was highly stressful

September 05, 2013 17:47 IST

Image: Gareth Bale

Real Madrid’s most expensive buy, Gareth Bale said his drawn-out move to the Spanish giants for a world record transfer fee was "stressful to say the least".

The 24-year-old joined Madrid from Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday for 100 million euros, a fee which made him the world's most expensive player.

"It was a long time. It was very stressful to say the least," Bale told BT Sport on Thursday.

"I knew their interest from the start and I was always confident the move would go through but obviously the chairman Daniel Levy had to do his business and do Tottenham well so I kind of understood that.

"But at the same time, thinking of myself, it was a hard time, it was stressful and I just had to be patient and try and focus."

'We used to go Spain, and we'd bring back replica shirts of Real Madrid'

Image: Gareth Bale (left) with Real Madrid president Florentino Perez

Bale, who was unveiled at Madrid's Bernabeu on Monday, said once Madrid showed their interest in him he was determined to move and realise a boyhood dream, with a picture being revealed at his unveiling of him wearing a club shirt as a child.

"When I was younger I had some close friends and we always loved European football and Real Madrid at that time were the dominant force and we always watched Real Madrid," he said.

"I remember family holidays, we used to go Spain, and we'd bring back replica shirts of Real Madrid and wear them out and always pretend to be the players when we played in the park.

"It just started from there and I followed them since.

"Obviously the football they play, the team they are is amazing and it's just great to be there."

'It's quite nice to come back and get back to normality'

Image: Gareth Bale

Bale is currently preparing for Wales's upcoming World Cup qualifiers against Macedonia and Serbia.

He has not played since July and missed most of Spurs' pre-season training due to injury, so is unlikely to play the full 90 minutes in either Friday or Tuesday's qualifier.

He rejoined his Wales teammates soon after being presented to thousands of fans as Madrid's latest "galactico" signing and said it was somewhat of a relief to be back among familiar faces.

"It's obviously been a whirlwind few days," the former Southampton player said.

"It's quite nice to come back, relax and get back to normality, really."