The Malta Independent on Sunday

Depay has a chance to shine for the Netherland­s on big stage

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The European Championsh­ip is finally giving Memphis Depay the chance to shine on the big stage.

The Netherland­s forward has two goals and two assists heading into Sunday's match against the Czech Republic in the round of 16. He has scored seven goals in eight games in 2021 and, at 27, he's entering his peak years.

Depay's mercurial ability played a large part in the team's three wins in the group stage at Euro 2020, with the soon-to-be Barcelona forward scoring or creating half of the eight goals.

"He showed how important he is for us. He's a player with special qualities," Netherland­s defender Daley Blind said. "He can do magical things with the ball."

Netherland­s assistant coach Ruud van Nistelrooy, a superb finisher himself, said Depay has blossomed into a leader.

"I see a focus and conviction, a need to show what he has and the will to be the best," Van Nistelrooy said. "This is something which I find beautiful to see."

But it wasn't always that way for Depay.

When he joined Manchester United six years ago, it was amid much hype. He was given the iconic No. 7 jersey worn by George Best, Eric Cantona, David Beckham and Cristiano Ronaldo.

Best and Cantona were among the most skillful players ever to grace United, Beckham one of the club's finest midfielder­s. Ronaldo, a dazzling winger with lightning-fast feet, is now the corecord holder for most goals overall in a men's national team with 109. Ronaldo is also the leading scorer at Euro 2020 with five goals and he is the competitio­n's overall leader with 14.

The weight of expectatio­n at United crushed Depay, who scored only seven goals in 53 games.

He left in January 2017 to revive his career with seven-time French champion Lyon, the same year he started pursuing another passion as a hip-hop artist.

Depay netted 76 goals in 178 games for Lyon, including a spectacula­r turn and lob from the halfway line.

The Czechs have a major scoring threat of their own in striker Patrik Schick. He has scored three goals so far at Euro 2020, the same as Netherland­s midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum.

Schick scored one of the tournament's best goals with a spectacula­r looping shot from just inside the halfway line in a 2-0 win over Scotland. But he is the only player to have scored for the Czechs, who scraped through as one of the four best thirdplace teams.

CAPTAIN'S ARMBAND

Wijnaldum will wear a captain's armband emblazoned with "OneLove" and a multicolor­ed heart in Sunday's match.

"Of course, everybody knows the situation in Hungary," he told broadcaste­r NOS, referring to a new Hungarian law that prohibits sharing with minors any content portraying homosexual­ity or sex reassignme­nt.

The law has been denounced as anti-LGBT discrimina­tion.

There was strong support in

Munich on Wednesday for the LGBT community before Germany's match against Hungary.

Germany captain Manuel Neuer wore a rainbow armband. "That appealed to us," Wijnaldum said.

CRUYFF AND PANENKA

The two sides have met before, when then-Czechoslov­akia beat the Netherland­s 3-1 after extra time in the 1976 semifinals.

The Dutch had Johan Cruyff back then.

His signature move was standing with his back to a defender, then spinning around him while flicking the ball through his legs in one swift movement.

It became known as "The Cruyff Turn."

But the Czechs had a player who would become famous in his own right.

When the final against West Germany went to penalty kicks, midfielder Antonin Panenka had the tournament-winning kick at his feet.

In front of him was the imposing Sepp Maier, one of the greatest goalkeeper­s of his era.

Panenka took a long run-up but then softly chipped the ball down the middle of the goal as Maier despairing­ly dived to the left.

This style of penalty kick is known as a "Panenka."

France great Zinedine Zidane scored with a Panenka against Italy in the 2006 World Cup final, and Depay sometimes takes penalties that way.

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