Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

U-turn by PFA boss

- BY JOHN CROSS Chief Football Writer @johncrossm­irror BY JOHN CROSS

DIDIER DROGBA yesterday brought down the curtain on one of the great Premier League careers – and revealed it was nearly over before it began.

Drogba, 40, admits he was full of self doubt after his first year at Chelsea and it was only Jose Mourinho’s amazing pep talk which convinced him to stay and become one of the “22 kings” of the King’s Road.

The Chelsea legend, who has announced his retirement, has played one of football’s great fairy tales, as he went from being an unknown to superstar in three years, and then bowed out of England by winning the Champions League.

Drogba, despite winning the title in his first year, admitted: “There was a time after the first season I was looking for that comfort zone, which means going back to

Marseille to be the only striker with the team playing for you.

“And then I heard Mourinho saying something really interestin­g to me and the team. He was talking about the players.

“He was saying, ‘You know what, if you want to be the only king then go back to the team that you were playing and scoring for. Go back there.

“‘But here, there’s

22 kings. So you accept it, work together or you go.

Go back to where you came from and be the only king where everybody is behind you’.

“I understood it. For me, this is the challenge I was expecting and I had done that with Marseille already. Now I had arrived at a team where even the centre-back had scored 10 or 15 goals in the season.

“Suddenly I thought, ‘Wow, where is my place here?’ I knew I needed to improve and that’s what really challenged me and it’s why I became the player that I was.”

It seems remarkable now but Drogba (with Mourinho, right) endured a difficult first year at Stamford Bridge before becoming arguably the greatest striker in the Premier League era.

It is a career which boasts four Premier League titles during two spells at Chelsea, four FA Cups, three League Cups and the greatest triumph of all in the

2012 Champions League final. Chelsea were huge underdogs against Bayern Munich because the final was played in the Allianz Arena.

But Drogba scored a dramatic equaliser two minutes from time, Petr Cech saved a penalty, and then Drogba scored the winning spot-kick after it went to a shootout.

Drogba admits that game still sends a shiver down his spine but also revealed he has divine interventi­on to thank for what happened.

He said: “It was the best way to end a career. I would have loved for that moment to be now. You win it and just say, ‘Thank you, goodbye’. But that day was unreal.

“I believe in God and sometimes, when I’m on the field, I have some conversati­ons with him. That night I challenged him and said, ‘OK, if you really exist, now show me’.

“That’s how that goal came. I stopped believing when they scored their goal and on that last corner I was telling God, ‘Now I want to see you really exist’. So when I scored and I ran to the corner flag and was looking to the sky, I was lost, I was saying, ‘He does really exist’. That’s me and my faith and my connection with God.

“That’s the only way I can explain what happened because there was no way we were going to go to Bayern Munich in front of their fans, losing 1-0, I score the equaliser, give away a penalty that Petr saves, then the last kick and I score.

“It could have been a movie and it’s something I will never forget.”

Drogba carried on beyond that night to play for Galatasara­y, where he won the league, the cup and the Super Cup, had a spell in China and finished at US side Phoenix Rising (left), in which he has shares and plans to help their push for a place in the MLS.

“Trust me, if it was only up to me, I’d still be playing,” he added. “Because it’s a passion.

“If I see a ball rolling at 80, I’ll still chase it because it’s my passion. I’m not tired but feel the need to start something

else.” GORDON TAYLOR has been forced into a major climbdown by player power.

The PFA chief executive has recommende­d an independen­t review into the union he has run for 37 years.

The move follows pressure from PFA chairman Ben Purkiss, who is demanding change and has had support from more than 300 current and former players.

The PFA boss wrote an open letter addressing the issues after criticism his £2.2million-a-year salary is out of step with funding for causes such as the £100,000 for research into dementia among ex-players.

Taylor said: “We owe it to you, our members, to hold ourselves to the highest possible standards. We believe we do. However, I’m adamant criticism must not be swept under the carpet and instead addressed head on. It’s important we’re transparen­t, committed to constantly improving and restless in our mission to support you.”

The PFA’S trustees and its management committee would be asked to allow an

“independen­t QC” to carry out a “full and open review”, he added.

 ??  ?? Drogba says his goal in the Champions League Final was proof of God’s existence DIDIER DROGBA was banned for a year before his playing career took off.The Chelsea legend said his dad Albert stopped him from playing football when he was 16 so that the striker concentrat­ed on his studies.Drogba has gone on to set up a foundation that has raised huge amounts of money for his native Ivory Coast – opening his first school and the first mobile heart clinic to visit villages.But Drogba, who joined his first club Le Mans when he was 20, said: “Being a pro footballer was not the same 25 years ago.“My dad was like, ‘No, it’s not a secure job, you get injured and you lose everything’. But it was my passion. It became my job and now it’s different as there’s so much money in football that everyone is trying to push their kids.“That’s why I started late. When I was not studying well, my dad would stop me from playing. For him, football was not as important as school.“I had to be smart so the best way was to work well at school, please my dad and keep him happy.” CALL FOR CHANGE The PFA chairman Ben Purkiss
Drogba says his goal in the Champions League Final was proof of God’s existence DIDIER DROGBA was banned for a year before his playing career took off.The Chelsea legend said his dad Albert stopped him from playing football when he was 16 so that the striker concentrat­ed on his studies.Drogba has gone on to set up a foundation that has raised huge amounts of money for his native Ivory Coast – opening his first school and the first mobile heart clinic to visit villages.But Drogba, who joined his first club Le Mans when he was 20, said: “Being a pro footballer was not the same 25 years ago.“My dad was like, ‘No, it’s not a secure job, you get injured and you lose everything’. But it was my passion. It became my job and now it’s different as there’s so much money in football that everyone is trying to push their kids.“That’s why I started late. When I was not studying well, my dad would stop me from playing. For him, football was not as important as school.“I had to be smart so the best way was to work well at school, please my dad and keep him happy.” CALL FOR CHANGE The PFA chairman Ben Purkiss
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