"I am tired of football. I want to enjoy my family, stop and have some quiet in my life. I am exhausted."
Argentina, of course, did not win the World Cup. They did not win the Copa America this summer, either, a failure which led to Tevez - whose crucial penalty miss against Uruguay in the quarter-finals guaranteed their elimination - gaining more than a stone in weight.
Little wonder Tevez has shown so little respect for his employers, agitating for a move away from the Etihad Stadium for more than a year. Little wonder City's ascension to the elite of English football, a revolution in which he has played a considerable part, has left him so cold to the adoration which washes upon him from the club's fans. Little wonder he was not bothered about warming up or coming on - whichever is the case - on the night in Munich which changed everything.
And little wonder, too, that he is now prepared to gamble everything on a legal challenge to Roberto Mancini which a number of leading defamation lawyers believe he has no hope of winning. Tevez has not been in love with soccer for some time. Now he has evidently grown to hate it.
When the announcer for Argentina's first game in that fateful Copa America welcomed Tevez to the pitch, he was greeted with the honorific "the people's player". And yet he now spurns and scorns his public, for country as much as club. After all, he will not be in Alejandro Sabella's Argentina plans if he is not playing regular soccer.
And he will not play if he persists in this legal wrangle. His career at City is quite finished, whether a bid of sufficient value is received to tempt Sheikh Mansour into parting with him or not. City are adamant: they stand behind their manager.
The loyalty of the club's fans is staunchly with the Italian, the man who masterminded their storming of Old Trafford. Their owner will no more be fazed by a gargantuan legal bill than he would be by the prospect of letting Tevez rot in the club's reserves.
And who, precisely, would be willing to recruit Tevez - at whatever cost - if his reaction to criticism is to sue? The very suggestion of it almost renders him unemployable.
And yet, so deep does his loathing for soccer seem to run, that he does not seem to care. The Argentine has lost his war with City, with Mancini.
A headstrong, foolhardy determination to win the last remaining battle, the ultimate Pyrrhic victory, does not suggest a desire to right wrongs and restore his reputation. It indicates a professional death wish from a man consumed by his own hatred.
- Independent