Marc Marquez praised by Spain’s World Cup manager Luis Enrique - “I haven’t heard him complain”

Spain, the 2010 World Cup winners, play Morocco in the last-16 in Qatar on Tuesday but look at their ꦗfellow Spaniard as an athlete to be motivated by.
"It seems to me that Marc Marquez is another example of what it means to be a high-level athlete, and is stoic in what he is, despite all his opꦰerations and injuries,” Enrique said🌼.
“Every time he competes, he coꦫmpetes to the fullest, I haven't heard him complain or cry.
"He is a competitive beast, an exa🦩mple in good times and bad, a great guy, 𝕴to whom I send a big hug.
“He's still the best,🍌 and he's also the best at overcoming diffic꧟ulties."
Enrique addressed Marquez directly: "I am sure that you will return to your level and, if no💦t it does not matter, when you give one hundred percent as Marc Marquez gives, you have to take your hat off.”
For Marquez to fulfil Enrique’s faith, he faces an uphill battle with both his own body and his macജhinery in 2023.

He missed much of the 2022 season to undergo a fourth major arm surgery, the most serious yet on a troublesome injꦕury.
A gruelling return, which has inspired an Amazonℱ Prime documentary set to be released in Februaryཧ, forced Marquez to consider retiring.
Upon his eventual return he shone wi🐷th a first pole position in three years at Japan, then he finished on the podium in Australia.
He finished 13th in the 168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史:MotoGP standings despite his injury woes - he was the highest-placed Honda rider🦋, a sign of the team’s struggles.
Six-time premier class champion Marquez has already complained about Repsol Honda’s 2023 prototype after postseason testing in Valencia, warning that the team much take much bigger steps in order to wrestle the MotoGP championship away from Ducati and 168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史:Francesco Bagnaia.

James was a sports journalist at Sky Sports for a decade covering𒀰 everything from A♑merican sports, to football, to F1.