The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Dele Alli interview ‘My first boots were hand-me-downs from older lads’

In his first major newspaper interview, Dele Alli tells Matt Law how he dealt with lack of money in his early days to reach the top

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It is just minutes before Tottenham Hotspur’s Dele Alli is due to arrive for his interview with The Daily Telegraph when Mauricio Pochettino walks up the stairs at the club’s Enfield training base. “You’re here for Dele?” asks the Tottenham manager. “You know, I just said he’s the best 21-year-old footballer in the world.”

And with that, Pochettino, who made the claim in his weekly press conference, disappears through the double doors that Dele, as he wishes to be called, soon breezes through with a wide grin.

Dele is polite, relaxed and articulate, and quickly offers up an insight into the humble beginnings from which he developed into one of the best young footballer­s on the planet.

Growing up in the Bradwell area of Milton Keynes meant Dele could take little for granted – particular­ly money – and, describing how he got into football, the England internatio­nal says: “From undernine to under-11, I played in a Sunday league. Before that, there was this scheme where you had to pay £1 to train and I used to do that. But I wasn’t able to pay it and in the end they let me do it for free.”

When it was put to Dele that money must have been incredibly tight, he adds: “It was. When you come from where I came from, there were a lot more important things to spend a pound on than football training. Obviously, for me at the time, I thought it was all that mattered.

“But for families who are struggling, it’s not the case. They need a lot of support. But when you are nine or 10, maybe the vision of your parents isn’t the same as what it is for you.

“There is a lot of pressure on the parents with a kid who wants to become a profession­al footballer. There is a lot of responsibi­lity, having to drive them around everywhere.”

Asked which football boots he wore during his formative years, Dele says: “I thought they were nice! I was lucky. When I was young, I had quite big feet, so the older lads in the area used to give me their hand-me-down boots. They looked after me.”

His upbringing perhaps explains why Dele feels a keen responsibi­lity to give something back. The evening before this interview, he had missed watching Chelsea’s Champions League defeat by Barcelona to launch a new Tottenham Hotspur Foundation programme that aims to help reduce levels of crime and anti-social behaviour in Haringey.

The Tottenham Hotspur Community Football League, run in partnershi­p with the Metropolit­an Police and Haringey Council, allows under-14 teams to compete every Friday evening at the Duke’s Academy in the shadow of the new Spurs stadium. Dele was mobbed by teenagers at the event while he posed for photograph­s, signed autographs and talked to the organisers and those who will benefit from the project.

“Playing for Tottenham in the Premier League, you get a lot of opportunit­ies to help out other people and, for such a good cause, it was definitely worth going to,” he says.

On the subject of how he has acclimatis­ed to being a hero to so many youngsters, he adds: “You grow into it. At the start, it was a bit crazy, but now I am used to it and it’s all about giving something back.

“Like I said, we as players have such a great opportunit­y to help people and make a big impact. I think it is important you don’t hide

from it and do as much as you can. This new league the club is running is a brilliant way of getting young people from the area to play sport and meet friends in a safe environmen­t.”

Despite his willingnes­s to help others, Dele acknowledg­es he is not always an angel on the pitch and laughs at the suggestion he has become a pantomime villain among opposition supporters.

His determinat­ion to stand up for himself almost cost him his big break at Milton Keynes Dons, but a lower-league grounding against older opponents gave him the perfect platform to grow up fast.

“I was playing in an under-10s team and one of the managers worked at MK as well, so they asked me to go down and train,” says Dele.

“I remember my first session, they said they were playing Chelsea.

“I’d only ever seen Chelsea on

Match of the Day. But MK’S academy were going to play Chelsea’s academy at Stamford Bridge and they would not let me go as I had only trained once.

“So, because of that I left and went back to playing for my Sunday league team.

“Then, a year later, MK asked me to come back and trial for their under-11s. But, in the end, they said I could sign without having to trial.

“Obviously, everyone takes different routes, there’s no right or wrong pathway to becoming a profession­al. But being at MK gave me the opportunit­y to play first-team football against men.

“I preferred that, it’s something I had done since I was younger. Even when I was a kid playing on the streets or on the estate, I was always playing against older people. I always wanted to test myself as much as I could. MK was the perfect place to do that.”

There was an early sign of the devilment in Dele’s play, when, in one of his first Tottenham appearance­s in a pre-season tournament, he nutmegged former Spurs midfielder Luka Modric while playing against Real Madrid.

Since then, his developmen­t and rise has been meteoric. Before turning 21 last April, Dele had chalked up more goals and assists than Steven Gerrard, Frank Lampard, Paul Scholes and Cristiano Ronaldo at the same age.

Dele scored his 10th goal of this season against Bournemout­h last weekend and is now only eight short of chalking up his half century in all competitio­ns for Spurs.

“I feel like I’ve been playing for a long time now, but I think a lot happened to me really quickly,” says Dele.

“There’s moments where you step back and think ‘how can this have happened to me?’

“I’ve been working for it since I was a kid and there’s been a lot of decisions I’ve had to make, and it’s all been to do this and put myself in this position.

“I wouldn’t say I was surprised, I’m confident in my ability, maybe I was surprised by how quickly it happened, but it’s always been my aim and I’ll keep working hard to achieve even more.”

With the highs have understand­ably come some lows. Red cards in key games against West Bromwich Albion and Gent, England’s European Championsh­ip failure, the middle-finger salute that earned him an internatio­nal ban and, most lately, accusation­s of being a diver.

“Nobody wants to be labelled as a cheat,” says Dele.

“It’s an opinion and everyone has a different opinion. I get into the box a lot and round the box, and I’m an attacking player and I get fouled a lot.

“There are some that look bad. It’s different when you are in the action.

“The one at Crystal Palace, that’s the one I saw a lot of reaction to. I was running through and, at the time, all that was going through my head was that I didn’t want to step on the keeper.

“But when you watch it back and people start saying things, it can look a lot different.

“That’s why I think it’s important that players, not just about diving, about other stuff too, that you don’t get too involved in it and just focus on what you are doing and listen to the opinions of the people you trust.

“I think we live in a world now where everyone has a chance to have an opinion and with social media, everyone’s opinion can be seen.

“It’s important that I don’t get drawn into that, don’t look at it, don’t read it or start to believe what people say about me.

“I am 21 and you do some dumb things sometimes, and it’s all part of learning and improving, and turning into a good person and that’s what I want to achieve.”

What will make Dele even happier is to win his first piece of silverware with Tottenham, who face Swansea City in the FA Cup quarter-finals today.

Having gone close in the Cup and in the Premier League, he now wants to go all the way.

“We all want to win trophies and to achieve something as a team,” says Dele.

“There is no point coming so close like we have the last two years, you know second place almost feels as bad as finishing bottom.

“You want to win, so I think we need to.”

Dele Alli was speaking at the launch of the Tottenham Hotspur Community Football League – a new initiative delivered by the club’s foundation, alongside Haringey Council and the Met Police – to reduce crime and anti-social behaviour in the borough.

 ??  ?? On the up: Dele Alli is desperate to win some silverware with Spurs soon and (left) with his football trophies as a youngster in Milton Keynes
On the up: Dele Alli is desperate to win some silverware with Spurs soon and (left) with his football trophies as a youngster in Milton Keynes
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 ??  ?? Fall guy: Dele Alli was accused of diving in an attempt to win a penalty after this collision with Crystal Palace keeper Wayne Hennessey at Selhurst Park last month
Fall guy: Dele Alli was accused of diving in an attempt to win a penalty after this collision with Crystal Palace keeper Wayne Hennessey at Selhurst Park last month

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