TINY TITLE TITAN
Impossibly small, rejected by a number of clubs, no outrageous hairstyle or flash car . . . how N’Golo Kante went from French Division 9 to being a serial champion
HE is the first player since Eric Cantona to win back-toback top-flight titles in England with different clubs, the recipient of English football’s most treasured individual awards and Frank Lampard recently described him as the world’s best midfielder.
For N’Golo Kante, the praise just keeps coming. He has already been recognised by his peers as the PFA Player of the Year and last week he received the equivalent prize from the Football Writers’ Association.
Kante is only the sixth central midfielder to win the PFA award, joining Steven Gerrard, Roy Keane, Peter Reid, John Wark and Terry McDermott in the 43-year roll of honour. Chelsea have sky-rocketed with him and Leicester threatened to implode without him.
Yet there was a time when such adulation was hard to come by for Kante, when rejection was the order of the day. During his mid-teenage years, Paris SaintGermain, Rennes, Lorient and the national Clairefontaine centre all took a look and turned away. Only six years ago, Kante was toiling away in the ninth tier of French football, fearful that the sport might leave him behind.
For context, Kante’s rise is the equivalent of a 19-year-old from Wisbech Town, of the United Counties Premier Division, climbing nine tiers of English football and pitching up as a title winner.
It is a trajectory that defies sporting logic. ‘Absolutely nobody thought he could get to this level,’ admits Pierre Ville, the secretary of Jeunesse Sportive de Suresnes, where Kante started aged nine.
Kante grew up on the outskirts of Paris, after his parents left Mali at the beginning of the 1980s. Suresnes is high up on the slopes of Mont Valerien, blessed with spectacular vantage points overlooking the French capital.
The streets are lined with horse chestnut trees, refined boulangeries and expensive charcuteries. Think Wisteria Lane, with immaculate gardens and middleclass housewives parading the walkways with their pooches.
The Kante home, however, was a modest second-floor flat at the end of the estate. It is there where N’Golo lived with his eight siblings.
It was a tight squeeze. ‘He’s had to fight for everything,’ says Ville.
For Kante, it has been a life touched by triumph and tragedy. Aged 11, he suffered the pain of losing his father, so his mother has been the major force in his life. Madame Kante would rarely be seen at the stadium in Suresnes. Kante came along by himself for his first training session, where he was immediately promoted into an age group one year older.
Ville explains: ‘He was the blueeyed boy, protected by everyone. His eldest sister sometimes brought him. He never answered back, he hardly ever got a yellow card and he was always available. The truth, however, is that we couldn’t get him into a pro club.
‘Scouts were looking at the players beating four men and smashing it into the top corner and his midfield work was often unnoticed. In his teenage years, he was half the size of his team-mates and there was a view in French football you needed to be strong and powerful to survive.’
Ville is not exaggerating about Kante’s height. Still just 5ft 5in today, in some early photographs, he appeared almost impossibly small besides his more developed teenage friends.
‘You cannot imagine the force of his determination,’ Ville continues. ‘He was desperate to get to the top. PSG wouldn’t look at him. No regional teams took a second glance at him. I was thinking: “Why can’t they see this quality?” It wasn’t a question of fear, though. He had the quality and his time would come.
‘Thanks to the influence of Barcelona and La Masia, perceptions are changing. We now prefer players who are bright, intelligent and use their brain rather power.’
Kante is Chelsea’s running man, the fuel that powered the title push. He has a passing accuracy of 89 per cent, is second only to Southampton’s Oriol Romeu in the number of Premier League interceptions by a midfielder and is behind only Everton’s Idrissa Gueye for the highest number of successful tackles.
Although his height attracted doubters, his athleticism has always impressed. Piotr Wojtyna, his coach at Suresnes, recalls Kante winning a 3km cross-country race aged 11, seeing off over 100 kids from the local area.
His willingness to learn continued to impress. Wojtyna explains how Kante arrived at the club with a weak left foot but within a couple of years, he could do more than 100 keepy-uppies on that side.
‘He was a small, quiet boy,’ Ville says. ‘He was listening, and smart people listen before they talk. He doesn’t have a Ferrari, there’s never been the stupid mohawks, diamond earrings or any bling. It doesn’t interest him.’
When he earned a move to Boulogne — a move organised by Suresnes president Jean-Pierre Perrinelle — he was placed into the reserves. Boulogne were in the third tier of French football but Kante began to shine. His humility continued to stand out.
He completed a course in accountancy to safeguard his future. He was among the oldest residents as he lived with other Boulogne teenagers in a room at a vocational high school, where the curfew was a strict 10pm.
At Boulogne, Kante travelled to training in a push-along scooter until a team-mate set up a rota to give him a lift there and back. At Caen, he upgraded to a secondhand Renault Megane. Now, at Chelsea, he has a Mini Cooper.
Kante’s transfer to Leicester earned Suresnes £200,000 through FIFA payouts for clubs that produce young talent. The club has bought two mobile goalposts, two minibuses to transport their young teams and also organised overseas tours of Belgium, Holland and Poland. His brother Mamari and sister Fatou are on the books and showing promise.
At Leicester, the shrewd eye of head of recruitment Steve Walsh, now at Everton, spottede his potential.
‘When I first saw him, I thought: “Are there two of him?”,’ Walsh said. ‘He was everywhere. He wanted to go to Marseille. Leicester? We had to almost kidnap him.’
Once at Leicester’s training complex, Kante’s phone was switched off until he put pen to paper. He was essential to their title charge and it may not be too much of a push to conclude that whichever side secured Kante last summer would have ended up as this season’s champions.
Observers of his training session with Chelsea in Minneapolis in July remember how players instantly recognised his quality.
Arsene Wenger has suggested Chelsea’s financial clout edged Arsenal out. Ryan Giggs has said Kante would have been a priority for him, had the Welshman remained at Manchester United.
Instead, Chelsea moved first and sealed the deal. At the Football Writers’ dinner last week, technical director Michael Emenalo joked he has ‘sent flowers to Leicester’.
Emenalo added: ‘It’s ridiculous to think N’Golo can improve. Can you remember N’Golo making a slide tackle? He doesn’t, ever. He knows how to nick the ball and intercept intelligently. It’s not because he’s tall or has big muscles — he understands what he needs to do and does it right.
‘He is a special human being. If you came to Cobham and look at the car park, you will see his tiny car. He is still complaining about the extra £500 he spent on it! ’
The Kante appreciation club is growing. This time last year, Sir Alex Ferguson labelled Kante the best player in the Premier League. One year on, there can surely be little doubt.
“Absolutely no one thought he could get to the top division”
“When I first saw him play, I said: ‘Are there two of him?’”