English lessons from the top of the class

Get out of your comfort zone

Spain star Cesc Fabregas believes that players in this country should be prepared to take the risk of progressing their careers overseas.

Cesc Fabregas Cesc Fàbregas is perfect. I knew this before meeting him as Sir Trevor Brooking, the FA director of football development, named the Arsenal midfield player the ideal role model, albeit wistful that he is not English. But Fàbregas is not remotely like your average English player. As the debate rages over whether an Italian should manage the England team and whether the England team need a foreign manager only because there are too many foreign players stifling English talent, Fàbre-gas pointed out something that has been too often overlooked. English players lack the bravery to go anywhere.

“I don’t see a lot of English players taking the risk to go out of the country to try to fight for their chance,” Fàbregas said. “It looks like they are comfortable where they are and that is it. For me, I had to leave my country to fight for my life and my chance and my dream. Sometimes that is what you have to do, but I don’t see a lot of English players going to Spain or Italy. Sometimes you have to take a step back to go one forward and sometimes they are just comfortable with what they have.”

But would English players be welcomed in Spain or Italy? “Definitely, why not?” he said. “There are amazing players and amazing talent in England. If they had the chance to go to another country and they could do it; there would be more English players who are great.”

Fàbregas knows all about taking the plunge. He went to London aged 16 and was shown the tourist attractions as part of his introduction to Arsenal, but he did not let it influence him. “I didn’t think about London for those things,” he said.

It was just as well he didn’t as he stayed cooped up in his landlady’s house. “I was training and I was enjoying what I was doing but not London really,” he said. “But I started to live on my own. I did more things because I was older, I started to know more people, get on better with my teammates.

“I go to Parliament or the Tower of London when my grandparents come because they want to see things. My grandad tells me about history, he knows more about it than me.”

His friends back home are not convinced. “People in Spain say to me ‘ah, you must be eating bad food or the weather is not good,’ ” he said. “I really like the food in London, maybe they go to McDonald’s every day.”

Fàbregas is extremely close to being fit enough, after a hamstring injury, to feature in Arsenal’s match against Chelsea tomorrow. “It’s just another weekend but an important one,” he said. “One of Liverpool or Manchester United will lose points, which is a good thing. We will still have to fight even if we win.”

He’ll catch half an hour of the game at Anfield on the team bus tomorrow and takes a particular interest in Liverpool because of the Spanish connection, often chatting to Xabi Alonso. “They are very intelligent, very strong,” he said of the Spanish contingent. “They know how to play in England. They don’t go crazy. They are calm, they know what they have to do as they have a very good manager and I think they are very intelligent.”

Cesc Fabregas and Arsene Wenger But just how mature is this player who, at the age of 20, is still young enough to be called a prodigy? For a brief moment it seemed he was desperately childish. Asked to sum up Arsène Wenger in six words, he chose, as one, “Smelly.” But he meant intuitive. For the record, Wenger is, according to Fàbregas, talented, sacrificial, intelligent, intuitive, patient and a winner.

Fàbregas was obviously a smelly – or, rather, intuitive – player from the minute he made his Arsenal debut aged 16 in 2003. But he has progressed from looking like a cultivated playmaker to an all-round goalscoring star. He scored four goals in 49 appearances last season, but has been on target 11 times this term. What is the secret? “It depends on the type of midfielder you are; if you are a defensive midfielder or an attacking midfielder,” he said.

“Sometimes you score goals but don’t really get into the game, but sometimes it’s the opposite; you get into the game but don’t score. I am working to be both things. I try to get into the box, I try to score goals, I try to assist my teammates, I try to be creative, to make them play. That’s what I am trying to do. I am working to be a more complete player.

“When I was young, my dad was the coach and he always put me in midfield, but when you are so young you don’t know what is midfield or right back so you just go and try to score goals. But then I joined Barcelona and they show you how to play tactically and it helped me to be calm and play for the team.”

So it was inevitable he would choose Arsenal. “Their philosophy helped me to adapt because it is the type of football I love to play,” he said.

Fàbregas makes ambitious statements but delivers his aims with a twinkle in his eye. Asked to draw a picture of himself on a white board at the Arsenal academy, he depicts himself scoring against Chelsea so that his team win 1-0. He behaves almost as an eager fan. “I ask the supporters to cheer and help the team even if we are behind,” he said. “It’s very important.”

And he appears to have genuinely enjoyed meeting the autistic children at the TreeHouse school in Muswell Hill, North London, that both The Times and Arsenal are supporting in a charity appeal this Christmas. “We played with the kids and enjoyed the time and made them smile because this is what it’s all about,” he said.

Was he nervous about meeting children who might not respond as others he has met respond? “Maybe a little bit, but we were very happy because you could feel they were having a great time,” he said. “We said ‘give me five’ and they were playing with us so we were very happy, William [Gallas] and I, at the end of the day.”

In all likelihood the kids did not know who Fàbregas was. “It’s not about famous people, it’s about being happy and trying to help them,” he said. “We don’t do it to get the publicity. We want to help these children. We don’t do it because we will look good. I know all my teammates do these things because it is the right thing to do.”

His family will fly over for Christmas and his grandmother will cook Christmas lunch. “My house is going to be packed,” he said with a laugh – and you can tell it is bound to be fun.

Author: Alyson Rudd
Source: The Times

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