Manchester Evening News

De Bruyne finally gets a break after Belgium departure

- By ALEX BROTHERTON @MENSports

KEVIN de Bruyne has been allowed to leave the Belgium national team camp a few days early, so he can begin his long-awaited and muchneeded summer vacation.

The Red Devils are due to play Poland tomorrow in their final game of the current round of UEFA Nations League fixtures, but the City star has been given permission to sit the game out after what has been a long and gruelling season.

Since the pandemic-disrupted 2019/20 season resumed in August 2020 with Project Restart, De Bruyne has barely stopped to catch his breath.

The resumption of the league flowed seamlessly into Nations League fixtures and the start of the 2020/21 season, a 40-game campaign that saw the midfielder suffer several facial fractures in the Champions League final.

He battled past that to represent his country at EURO 2020 just a few weeks later, where he suffered an ankle injury that severely curtailed his pre-season and caused him to miss the opening month of City’s 2021/22 campaign.

After recovering from Covid-19 in December he played in 31 of City’s 36 games, before joining up with his national team just a week after winning the Premier League title.

In short, De Bruyne has played an awful lot of football over the past two years, making his recent criticism of UEFA’s new(ish) tournament entirely understand­able.

“The Nations League is unimportan­t in my eyes,” De Bruyne said before Belgium took on the Netherland­s on June 3. “[They are]

just glorified friendlies after a long and tough season. I am not looking forward to it.

“As players, we can talk about vacation or rest, but we have no say. We have a little more than three weeks of vacation every 12 months.”

While De Bruyne might have let his frustratio­ns get the better of him a little with his comments – generally speaking the Nations League has been a success and has meant fewer meaningles­s, boring friendlies clogging up the calendar – he’s right to criticise the timing of recent internatio­nals.

With the World Cup not until November, this summer was the perfect chance to afford players the chance to rest and allow niggling injuries to heal ahead of what is going to be a long and congested 2022/23 season. Squeezing an entire World Cup into the middle of the domestic season will come at a cost – and that cost will surely be player welfare.

Liverpool defender Virgil van Dijk backed De Bruyne up, saying the Nations League is adding to the number of pointless friendlies, not detracting from.

 ?? ?? Kevin De Bruyne
Kevin De Bruyne

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