Ryan Reynolds & Rob McElhenney spread the love! Hollywood superstars help evergreen Wrexham striker Steven Fletcher to get his spark & smile back

Steven Fletcher is enjoying his football again at 36, with the evergreen striker loving life alongside Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney at Wrexham.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Veteran frontman joined as a free agentEndured testing 2022-23 campaign in ScotlandBack among the goals & targeting promotionWHAT HAPPENED?

There was a chance that the former Scotland international would call it quits and head into retirement following his release by Dundee United in June 2023 at the end of a campaign that delivered relegation out of the Scottish Premiership.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT FLETCHER SAID

Fletcher was, however, presented with an intriguing offer from Hollywood superstars in North Wales and has said of rediscovering a spark in the twilight of his career: “I am really enjoying it here, especially at my age. I had a disappointing season last season so to come here and be enjoying my football again is great. Being near the end of your career, it is nice to be in this sort of atmosphere challenging for promotion.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Fletcher, who will turn 37 in March, has registered seven goals for Wrexham this season – including a hat-trick against Barrow and a match-winning effort versus Notts County last time out – and added on his return through 20 appearances: “Seven goals, I can't complain with that. I just need to keep that going and stay in the team.”

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty/GOALWHAT NEXT FOR FLETCHER & WREXHAM?

Phil Parkinson has suggested that Fletcher and Paul Mullin form his favoured strike partnership, and they may get another opportunity to lead the line on Tuesday when the Red Dragons take in a trip to MK Dons. They head into that game sat third in the League Two table, but boasting games in hand on all of those around them.

Exclusive: John Barnes on racism in football and society

[ad_pod ]

Football FanCast recently held a series of interviews with former England and Liverpool winger John Barnes, who was speaking on behalf of bookmaker comparison platform BonusCodeBets.co.uk

In part one of our conversation with Barnes, he discussed Liverpool’s current title credentials and reflected upon his own experiences of being a key part of the last Liverpool side to win a league title.

Barnes is also remembered as one of the most high-profile black footballers of his generation. Along with Viv Anderson, Barnes was one of only two black players to have been included in the England squad that travelled to Mexico for the 1986 World Cup.

This season has seen a number of high-profile incidents of racial abuse occurring at Premier League grounds. A banana skin was thrown at Arsenal striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, whilst Manchester City’s Raheem Sterling was also subjected to abuse at Stamford Bridge.

Is this a problem that never actually went away?

“Yes. It’s a problem in society and I’ve said it for the last 20 years, as long as racism exists in society then it exists in all walks of society, which football is a part of. Because there’s been a directive to ban people if they’re engaging in racist chanting, they’ve kept their mouths shut. Now they’re opening their mouths again. So I never felt it went away. 

“Maybe people felt a little bit complacent in showing their true colours because they knew they’d get kicked out of matches, but in the heat of the moment people say things. They’re not the only ones and that’s not the only time it’s happened, it’s been happening throughout. It’s happened at lower division games, it’s happened at games that aren’t high-profile. Now it’s happened in a high-profile game – with Raheem Sterling – so it’s mentioned. But at every single game, I should imagine, there will have been some kind of abuse if there were black players playing.

“I suppose people now are reporting it more, whereas probably they didn’t report it over the years because they didn’t think it was important, and now people are reporting it. I don’t think it’s necessarily getting worse than it ever was.”

Be sure to check out the incredible story of the man who rose from a Tanzanian refugee camp to become one of Australia’s biggest football stars in the video below…

Some people might think things have got better in the last 10 or 15 years…

“I don’t know why people would think that. What goes on in society has not got better, so why should football be any different?

“Football isn’t different to society and if you look at incidences of discrimination in society we still haven’t gotten any better, so why should football? What they’ve done is they’ve kept it quiet.

“So, what are we trying to do? Are we trying to get rid of racism or do we just not want to hear it? All football can do is make people not say it, which means that you can keep your mouth shut but be as racist as you want, but people just won’t hear it. Then people think it has gone away.

“No, it hasn’t gone away. So, every now and again, when people can’t control themselves, they say things that they’ve probably been thinking for the last ten years but they haven’t said.”

In terms of the authorities, do they have a responsibility to do more?

“The clubs can do nothing. How can a club change a racist’s ideas if he’s a racist? What can the club do? The club’s say ‘keep your mouth shut when you’re in our stadium’, but apart from that, how are they going to change that man’s perception? [Perceptions can only change] through education, and people understanding why they’re racist in the first place.

“The clubs and the authorities can’t change grown men’s ideas and perceptions of other people. That’s not what they’re there to do. What they can do is govern their house by saying ‘if we hear anything, then we will ban you or kick you out, or arrest you.’ They can’t change the perception that, if you are racist, you have. Society has to do that, not football clubs or football players or football managers.”

Can the media play a greater role in changing these perceptions?

“Of course. Raheem [Sterling] mentioned the fact that he feels that they have an influence. The media do influence peoples’ perceptions. I’m not talking about with footballers, I’m talking about in life. You read about Muslim grooming gangs or Jamaican Yardie drug dealers – but if they’re white, they don’t say white grooming gangs or English drug dealers. 

“The media has a role in influencing peoples’ perceptions of other cultures. That is much more impactful than anything football does. This stuff is in the media every day.”

Is that different media treatment something you experienced as well, in your own playing days?

“I didn’t experience more than the normal man in the street. That’s the thing everybody experienced. That’s what I’m saying, we cannot compartmentalise it and say ‘in football it’s like this but in society it’s not.’ I’m no different to anybody else in society, any other black man walking down the street who is racially disenfranchised.

“So, yes, it’s high-profile, so we know about it in football or maybe with John Barnes, but it happens everyday for black people in their lives and I am one of them. It’s no different for me than with anybody else.

“The most important thing is not to focus on Raheem Sterling being abused, or John Barnes, but to focus on what’s going on in the inner-cities if we really want to get rid of racism. Until we get rid of that kind of racism, that effects the average man in the street, you’ll always have it in football.”

In part three of Football FanCast’s interview with Barnes, he discusses England’s World Cup run in Russia and reflects upon his own career at international level.

Cristiano Ronaldo injury scare! Al-Nassr boss offers update after seeing CR7 leave AFC Champions League fixture with concerning neck issue

Cristiano Ronaldo was unable to see out the full 90 minutes for Al-Nassr in their latest AFC Champions League game, with a neck issue forcing him off.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Portuguese superstar picked up a knockHad to be replaced late onCoach hoping he will be fit to face Al-HilalWHAT HAPPENED?

The five-time Ballon d’Or winner did enough during his time on the pitch to ensure that his Saudi Arabian club made their way into the next round of continental competition. A 0-0 draw with Persepolis has seen them progress as winners of Group E.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT CASTRO SAID ABOUT RONALDO

The sight of Ronaldo having to be replaced in the 78th minute has caused some concern amid Al-Nassr supporters, and the Portuguese’s global fan base, but head coach Luis Castro remains hopeful that the legendary 38-year-old will be ready for the club’s next game. He told reporters when delivering a fitness update: “The medical team is studying the injury and will do everything to make sure he is ready for the next game.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Ronaldo won more plaudits during his time on the field against Persepolis, with the all-time great advising the match referee to reverse a decision at one stage that had seen him awarded a penalty. CR7 made the officials aware that he had not been fouled and that no spot-kick should be lined up.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

GettyWHAT NEXT FOR RONALDO & AL-NASSR?

Al-Nassr will be back in Saudi Pro League action against table-topping Al-Hilal on Friday, with Ronaldo – who has hit 24 goals through 25 appearances in all competitions this season – hoping that he will be ready to figure prominently in that title-chasing encounter.

‘Cristiano Ronaldo is LeBron James, Lionel Messi is Steph Curry’ – Comparisons between football icons and NBA superstars explained by ex-Barcelona loanee Kevin-Prince Boateng

Kevin-Prince Boateng has compared football superstars Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi with NBA icons LeBron James and Steph Curry.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Argentine icon has a special giftPortuguese forward all about hard workBasketball legends boast similar traitsWHAT HAPPENED?

The former Barcelona loanee once played alongside seven-time Ballon d’Or winner Messi at Camp Nou, while he has crossed paths with Portuguese legend Ronaldo down the years. Boateng is well placed to pass judgement on the all-time greats, with the ex-Ghana international explaining why a couple of eternal rivals from the world of football can be likened to talismanic figures in the NBA ranks that also have plenty of major honours to their name.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT THEY SAID

Boateng has told Rio Ferdinand’s : “I always compare LeBron James with Ronaldo, and Steph Curry with Messi. These [Ronaldo and James] both have their talent, LeBron James is hard work. Talent, of course, but hard work – like Ronaldo, hard work to be the best. Both these guys [Messi and Curry], they have just a gift.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Boateng has also told a story which highlights how Messi is able to turn his special ‘gift’ on and off at the flick of a switch, with one memorable performance against Liverpool in the Champions League from back in 2018-19 springing to mind. Boateng said: “Liverpool first leg, we won 3-0, when Messi scored this free-kick. Unbelievable. So we’re coming into the dressing room, he’s just sitting there with his phone. Whatever, gets a massage sitting down. Two minutes before we go out he just stands up, closes his boots, we go out. Warm-up, just long balls, control, dribbling a little bit, crossbar challenge… at the warm-up Champions League against Liverpool. He goes back inside. Coach makes the last adjustments talking, Messi’s on the phone… The coach was talking, saying ‘now you have to go left, you have to go right’. Messi was FaceTiming: ‘Yes, Si, Claro’. Thirty seconds before we go out, he just comes down, puts his jacket on, goes out, boom. Go, go, go, go. Like this.”

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

GettyWHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

Messi is now strutting his stuff in MLS with Inter Miami – with the Argentine currently nursing an unfortunate injury – while Ronaldo is showing no sign of slowing down at Saudi Arabian side Al-Nassr despite being 38 years of age.

'You're a bunch of f*cking fatty f*cking footballers' – Paul Mullin reveals infamous 'Welcome to Wrexham' scene involving manager Phil Parkinson was secretly edited

Another revelation has emerged from Paul Mullin's autobiography, as the Wrexham striker has shone light on one of Phil Parkinson's most famed rants.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Mullin's autobiography discuss Parkinson rantsSays boss has "a switch on him"Reveals secret Welcome To Wrexham editWHAT HAPPENED?

The publication of Mullin's autobiography 'My Wrexham Story' has revealed some fascinating stories behind the rise of North Wales' biggest club, from his doubts about joining to his experiences of promotion. He's also given a clearer picture of Wrexham boss Phil Parkinson, famed for his explosive, expletive-packed dressing room rants. However, according to Mullin, these moments, captured on film for 'Welcome To Wrexham', aren't always what they seem like from the outside.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT MULLIN SAID

"The gaffer, like all bosses, has a switch on him," wrote Mullin. "There’s a famed scene in Welcome to Wrexham where, at half-time in a game where we’ve not been at the races, he exasperatedly comes out with the unique ‘You’re like a bunch of f*cking fatty f*cking footballers.’ Or at least that’s what he appears to say. I’ll let you into a secret: his actual words were changed on the voiceover. Sadly, I can’t reveal here what his real words were. If you see me at the ground, I might tell you, but only in the strictest confidence! In brief, he was telling us we needed to be a bit more aggressive if we were going to win the game. There are times when, being on the inside, you watch Welcome to Wrexham and can hardly help pissing yourself laughing – and that’s one of them. In reality, it’s very rare for the gaffer to lose his rag. When he's got something to say, he says it in a calm way. That's Phil's way, and as a group we listen and understand."

THE BIGGER PICTURE

According to Mullin, Parkinson's strategy is a broader reflection of modern coaching methods. "Fewer managers scream and shout than you might think," he wrote. "What's the point of blowing up, saying everything's shit? What a manager should be doing is telling his players what to do to make things better."

Whatever the 55-year-old is doing, it seems to be working. Having won the National League with a remarkable 111 points last season, Wrexham are on the hunt for another successive promotion this campaign. They're currently 2nd in League Two and in line for an automatic promotion to the third tier, if they keep their current form up.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR MULLIN?

Mullin's new book comes out at a crucial stage in his career, when the talismanic striker is aiming to pull the Red Dragons up to League 1 for the first time since 2005. So far this season, he's contributed 7 league goals and 3 assists, a tally he'll be hoping to build on significantly. But before he does so, Mullin and his teammates face an FA Cup second round clash with National League South side Yeovil Town this weekend.

Buy your copy of Paul Mullin's brilliant new autobiography My Wrexham Story on Amazon.

Barbecue ribs & playing with a smile! Ex-Man Utd star Jesse Lingard sends ‘the boy is happy’ message from South Korea

Jesse Lingard is eating barbecue ribs and playing with a smile in South Korea, with the ex-Manchester United star saying “the boy is happy” again.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Released by Forest in summer of 2023Spent several months as a free agentTaken on exciting new challenge in AsiaGettyWHAT HAPPENED?

That was not the case for a long time, with the former England international spending several months as a free agent following his release by Nottingham Forest at the end of the 2022-23 campaign. Despite working on a personal training programme and taking in trials at West Ham and Al-Ettifaq, Lingard struggled to attract a contract offer.

AdvertisementTHE BIGGER PICTURE

He was linked with a move to MLS at one stage, while also attracting interest from Turkey, but now finds himself in the Far East with FC Seoul. Lingard has stepped a long way outside of his comfort zone, but is embracing a new challenge in Asia.

WHAT LINGARD POSTED

Lingard has settled quickly among new team-mates, with his infectious personality rubbing off on those around him. He has now shared a collection of pictures on social media that help to prove why he is “happy” once more – as the 31-year-old midfielder enjoys himself on and off the pitch.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

GettyWHAT NEXT FOR LINGARD?

Lingard has committed to a two-year contract with FC Seoul and will be hoping to rediscover a spark that he lost towards the end of his time at Old Trafford and during an injury-ravaged one-season stint with Forest at the City Ground.

Erik ten Hag reveals friends warned him not to take Man Utd job but admits he ‘wanted the challenge’ after Sir Alex Ferguson inspiration

Erik ten Hag says many people told him not to accept the "impossible" job of succeeding at Manchester United, but he felt he was up to the challenge.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Ten Hag was urged not to take Man Utd jobWas told succeeding at Old Trafford is impossibleDutch coach wanted to take on the challengeWHAT HAPPENED?

No United manager has managed consistent success since legendary manager Sir Alex Ferguson stepped down in 2013. The current incumbent has found himself under pressure despite positive signs in his first season in charge, and Ten Hag revealed that he was warned against accepting the role at Old Trafford.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT TEN HAG SAID

Ten Hag revealed his admiration for Ferguson's treble winning team of 1999 as he outlined why he took the job, telling independent fanzine (via ): "I loved the teams of Sir Alex, that [Champions League final] win in Barcelona. It was inspiring. A big, successful club was constructed, which then dropped in the last 10 years.

"Everyone was telling me: ‘You can’t succeed in that job’. They said it was impossible. Me? I wanted the challenge. I knew it wouldn’t be easy, but it was such a great club with such a great fanbase. People love Man United — or they are against Man United. I like clubs like this. Ajax was like this. This job is the most difficult to do, but I want the challenge."

THE BIGGER PICTURE

After guiding the Red Devils back to the Champions League with a third-place finish in the Premier League last season, Ten Hag has endured a more rocky campaign so far in 2023-24. The Dutch coach has been on the end of heavy criticism as his side sit sixth in the league table and are in danger of crashing out of the Champions League if they fail to beat Bayern Munich in their final game of the group stage next week.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

GettyWHAT NEXT FOR MAN UTD?

After beating Chelsea 2-1 at Old Trafford on Wednesday thanks to two goals from midfielder Scott McTominay, Ten Hag's team are looking to claim another three points on Saturday when they host Bournemouth.

Christian Pulisic wanted to go in goal! Why USMNT star saw offer snubbed as AC Milan turned to Olivier Giroud after Mike Maignan red card

Christian Pulisic offered to go in goal for AC Milan after seeing Mike Maignan sent off versus Genoa, but that offer was snubbed as he is “too short”.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Rossoneri saw regular No.1 dismissedHad used up all their substitutesFrench star favoured over AmericanWHAT HAPPENED?

The United States international forward stands at 5ft 10in tall, and that is not considered to be enough for a role between the sticks. That did not stop the USMNT star offering up his services when seeing Milan lose their goalkeeper to a red card while having no substitutions left up their sleeve.

AdvertisementGettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

World Cup-winning France international Giroud took over the gloves instead – as he is 6ft 4in tall – with Milan boss Stefano Pioli explaining the thought process there to : “Pulisic wanted to go in goal but we told him he was too short, so Oli got picked to go in.”

DID YOU KNOW?

Giroud justified that show of faith when pulling off a brave late stop which preserved Milan’s narrow 1-0 lead. The 37-year-old told reporters afterwards, having pulled Maignan’s keeper top over his own No.9 jersey: “I’m taking this shirt home and framing it.”

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

GettyWHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

Pulisic netted the crucial goal for Milan at Genoa, with the American winger finding the target in the 87th minute, and another battling victory for the Rossoneri has them sat at the top of the Serie A table with 21 points taken from eight games so far.

USMNT star Yunus Musah 'back on track' – but not for long! AC Milan midfielder set to sit out Champions League clash with Borussia Dortmund

Yunus Musah is pleased to be “back on track” at AC Milan, after returning them to winning ways, but he is about to step aside in the Champions League.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Rossoneri returned to winning waysWelcome success in Serie AEuropean action up nextWHAT HAPPENED?

The United States international continues to make an impressive contribution at San Siro during his debut campaign in Italian football. The versatile 20-year-old has settled quickly in new surroundings following his summer transfer from Valencia.

AdvertisementGettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Musah was given another 84 minutes of Serie A action in Milan’s latest outing, and he helped them to a welcome 1-0 victory over Fiorentina. Theo Hernandez scored the only goal from the penalty spot, but USMNT stars Musah and Christian Pulisic played their part in the collection of three hard-earned points.

WHAT MUSAH SAID

Milan had gone four games without success in the Italian top flight, but are now up to third in the table and hoping to build momentum again after an unfortunate dip that led to uncomfortable questions being asked of title-winning coach Stefano Pioli. Musah has defiantly said on social media: “Back on track.”

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

WHAT NEXT FOR MUSAH & AC MILAN?

Musah is, however, about to get off that track as he will not figure in Milan’s next fixture. The Rossoneri are due to play host to Bundesliga giants Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League on Tuesday. Musah will be forced to sit that game out as he must serve a ban for collecting three yellow cards in European competition this season.

Jude Bellingham to Barcelona?! How Aston Villa loanee Louie Barry's La Masia woes kept Real Madrid's new icon from moving to Camp Nou

The Blaugrana were keen on signing the England midfielder in his teenage years, but the experience of a close friend meant it never happened

In May 2023, pictures of an old scrapbook emerged. In the pages, printed in 2009, a young Jude Bellingham described his dream job: "A professional footballer for Barcelona and England."

Those comments, expressed by a child who had not yet reached his teens, were soon used as ammunition by Barcelona fans to declare, definitively, that Bellingham would sign for the Blaugrana that summer. They weren't the only fanbase to make lofty assumptions with little evidence, but their claim, based on the scribblings of a child, was among the more far-fetched.

Of course, things turned out differently. Bellingham signed for Real Madrid, and has quickly established himself as one of the best players in not just La Liga, but Europe. On Saturday, he will face off against Barca in his first taste of El Clasico, taking the field at the Olympic Stadium for Los Blancos in what could already prove to be a pivotal clash in the title race. It is the perfect contest for a rising star to show himself as being one of the world's best.

But those Barca fans who clung to old scrapbooks, it has since turned out, came closer than they might have thought to having their wishes come true. Although a host of clubs chased after Bellingham throughout his teens — Manchester City and Liverpool were also keen suitors — the Blaugrana had a real chance of landing him from Birmingham City before anyone outside of England's second city knew his name.

In 2019, in fact, Barca secured a meeting with Bellingham's father, Mark, only for him not to show up. The reasons why were only recently made public…

BarcelonaWhy did Barca fail?

This all starts with a different English teenager: Louie Barry. A Birmingham boy like Bellingham, Barry had impressed over a 10-year spell at the West Brom academy, and, before even making a first-team appearance, had fielded interest from Paris Saint-Germain and Barcelona.

Barry eventually chose Barca, and became the first English player to ever walk through the doors of the famed La Masia academy. However, things didn't go to plan from the outset, and as a close friend of Bellingham's from their time in the England youth set-up, word of his struggles soon got back to the Midlands.

Just five months after the Barry penned his Barca contract, the Catalan club were due a meeting with Mark Bellingham in London. It did not go to plan.

"He didn't show up to the meeting," Bojan Krkic Sr., father of the former Barcelona attacker and a club scout for over a decade, told in 2022. "I know he did it to a lot of people. His excuse with us was that we had already signed an Englishman his age [Barry] from Aston Villa or West Bromwich, and he jokingly said: 'My son will not sign for Barca because he cannot play with someone of that limited quality'."

Bellingham did go on to leave Birmingham in the summer of 2020, joining Borussia Dortmund that July.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesWhat happened to Barry at Barca?

And Bellingham's father was arguably right in his judgment of how Barry had been treated in Catalunya. The teenage forward never really found his footing at La Masia, despite reportedly impressing on the training pitches.

The problems started early on. West Brom believed they were owed £235,000 ($285,000) compensation for having their academy's brightest talent pinched. A cash-strapped Barca disputed that, and arguments over paperwork went on and on, all while Barry was unable to make his competitive debut for over two months.

Once he was cleared to play, Barry didn't get the opportunities many expected he would. The 16-year-old was thrown into Barca's Under-19 setup, and but constantly saw older, more experienced players get chances to play ahead of him. Sources close to the player told GOAL in 2021 that the player's different style saw him siphoned out of the team. His patience, quite appropriately, was wearing thin.

“Louie wasn’t happy with the time he was given, and justifiably so,” a source involved in the deal that took him to Camp Nou said. “He always played well and got some goals. His team-mates thought he was a great striker."

The onset of the Covid-19 pandemic in spring 2020 saw Barca crowned U19 league champions early, but despite signing an initial three-year deal with the club, Barry had already left. Aston Villa, the club he had supported throughout his childhood, had made their interest known in January, and Barry jumped at the chance, leaving Spain without ever coming close to the senior team.

Getty ImagesDid Bellingham make the right choice?

Bellingham saw his career go another way. He signed for Dortmund around six months after Barry left Barca, and the move was met with a mixture of surprise and confusion from fans around Europe. Dortmund paid Birmingham a staggering €25m (£23m/$29m) for a 17-year-old with no top-flight experience, while his boyhood club famously retired his No. 22 shirt. It has since emerged that Bellingham turned down not only Barcelona, but also rebuffed serious interest from Manchester United to continue his footballing career in Germany.

And it seems he made the right decision. Bellingham wasn't an instant hit in Dortmund. Rather, he was given a chance to grow into the Bundesliga side, staying away from the spotlight of big clubs, and avoiding the inevitable scrutiny that would have come if he penned a deal with Barca or United.

But his quality was undeniable. After working his way into the team during the 2020-21 season, Bellingham started nearly every game in the next two, and a standout campaign last year almost drove Dortmund to an unlikely league title. He made Gareth Southgate's England squad for the pandemic-delayed Euro 2020, and was a crucial player for the Three Lions in the Qatar World Cup at the end of 2022.

He was always likely to leave last summer. Although Dortmund made repeated efforts to get the teenager to pen a new deal, Madrid came in with an offer that was simply too good to turn down — paying up after a long courting process. Going to Germany, then, was the best possible decision he could have made.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty ImagesWould Bellingham have fit at Barca?

A Barca move might not have been catastrophic, though. After all, the Englishman is an immensely-talented midfielder who, even at 17, would've had a chance to break into the Blaugrana's first team.

Barca, at that time, were undergoing immense change as a football club, and bringing a handful of talented young players into the side. Bellingham would have broken through at the same time as Ansu Fati and Pedri, completing what could have been a deadly trio in the attacking third. Add that to the fact that a certain Lionel Messi was still floating around, and there is reason to believe that it could have worked out. Team success, it seems, could have been attainable.

But the cons certainly outweigh the pros here. To be a youngster in Catalunya is to live in Messi's shadow. The better the player, the more difficult it becomes to succeed, it seems. Fati, who was hailed as 'the next Messi' and ultimately given his No.10 shirt, has already burned out. Pedri was overused and now cannot stay fit for an extended period of time. Bellingham's legs needed to be protected — they still do now. Going to Barca could have thrown that all into jeopardy.

And then there would be the pressure of being a 17-year-old, unorthodox Englishman in Barcelona. Bellingham's technical quality is undeniable, but the midfielder is certainly not a player who would fit the classic La Masia mould. He's under an immense amount of scrutiny now, at Real Madrid, after proving he can be one of the best in the world. Things would simply have be much worse three or four years ago.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus