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The message lies beneath a 16 May interview on popular Spanish chat show La Resistencia, in which Julen Lopetegui is feted for his impressive work in charge of a Spain team that, back then, was about to light up the World Cup.
Today he is the Real Madrid boss, but most likely for not much longer. After Sunday's humiliating 5-1 defeat by Barcelona, Lopetegui appears set to be sacked for the second time in four months.
This is the story of a startling fall from grace that began in bizarre circumstances, and hit rock bottom in Barcelona.
Nobody would have predicted the series of events that unfolded following that comfy sofa sit-down back on the brink of summer.
For starters nobody thought Zinedine Zidane would resign and leave Madrid needing a new manager, then nobody thought Lopetegui would end up replacing him, and then nobody thought his decision to do so would cost the national team their coach.
Just two days before the World Cup began, Lopetegui was fired by the Spanish Football Federation president Luis Rubiales, who claimed to be acting on a point of principle. He said Lopetegui had gone behind his employers' back in accepting the job at Madrid without informing him, although the club disputed this, and would not have his authority diluted.
Regardless of your opinion on Madrid's, Lopetegui's and Rubiales' handling of the situation, the decision came as a shock. Suddenly, Lopetegui would not be overseeing the culmination of two years' work on football's greatest stage.
Instead he would be taking charge of what many consider to be the biggest club in the world, having only failed outside the international game, at Rayo Vallecano in 2003, and at FC Porto from 2014 to 2016. Oh, and Cristiano Ronaldo, for so many seasons Madrid's talisman, would be sold to Juventus.
Despite all this, things did not start too badly for Lopetegui. When results went well, including a 3-0 win at home to Roma as the Champions League returned in September, his team's new style and the decision not to replace Ronaldo with a big name was hailed as emphasising and getting more out of the collective.
But there can be no arguments, results have not gone well since and it is now five matches without victory. Madrid have not started a season this badly since 2001.
The run began with a 3-0 defeat at Sevilla, continued with a 0-0 home draw with city rivals Atletico Madrid, a 1-0 defeat away by Alaves, a 2-1 loss at home to Levante, and now this crushing blow at the hands of their most bitter rivals.
That the result of El Clasico defines managers' times in charge of Madrid is not necessarily true - Jose Mourinho survived a 5-0 home defeat in the first of his three seasons, for example.