Chelsea's Torres grateful to Liverpool
Spanish striker Fernando Torres has praised his former club Liverpool for making him a top player after joining rival English Premier League club Chelsea.
"They made me a top player and gave me the chance to play at the top level," he said on Tuesday after signing an astonishing 50-million-pound (USD 80 million) contract.
In his first appearance for Chelsea, the 26-year-old Torres will face Liverpool on Sunday.
"I will never say anything bad about Liverpool. I have been very happy there, but now the history is different and I am playing for Chelsea," said Torres.
"If I have the chance to play, I will do my best for Chelsea and hopefully I can score," he added.
Torres scored 81 goals in 142 games during three and half years at Liverpool but he submitted a written transfer request on Friday after growing tired of life at Anfield.
The club has spent most of this season in the lower half of the table and failed to qualify for the Champions League after a poor campaign the season before, and had undergone a period of instability off the pitch.
Managers Rafael Benitez and Roy Hodgson left in quick succession while a lengthy ownership wrangle ended with the club changing hands in October.
Chelsea broke the British transfer record with the deal, which is football's third-most expensive transfer.
Real Madrid is the holder of the two most expensive contracts, spending 80 million pounds (USD 131 million) in 2009 to purchase Cristiano Ronaldo from Manchester United and then 65 million euros (USD 92 million) to get Kaka from AC Milan.
In his first appearance for Chelsea, the 26-year-old Torres will face Liverpool on Sunday.
"I will never say anything bad about Liverpool. I have been very happy there, but now the history is different and I am playing for Chelsea," said Torres.
"If I have the chance to play, I will do my best for Chelsea and hopefully I can score," he added.
Torres scored 81 goals in 142 games during three and half years at Liverpool but he submitted a written transfer request on Friday after growing tired of life at Anfield.
The club has spent most of this season in the lower half of the table and failed to qualify for the Champions League after a poor campaign the season before, and had undergone a period of instability off the pitch.
Managers Rafael Benitez and Roy Hodgson left in quick succession while a lengthy ownership wrangle ended with the club changing hands in October.
Chelsea broke the British transfer record with the deal, which is football's third-most expensive transfer.
Real Madrid is the holder of the two most expensive contracts, spending 80 million pounds (USD 131 million) in 2009 to purchase Cristiano Ronaldo from Manchester United and then 65 million euros (USD 92 million) to get Kaka from AC Milan.
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