The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Quirky Havertz excited to learn more at Chelsea

- By Rob Draper

HE is the donkey-loving, piano-playing 21-year-old from the ancient border town of Aachen in Germany, where he is hailed as the best creative player in a generation, a Mesut Ozil in the making.

He made his Bundesliga debut at 17 while he was still studying for his A Levels, meaning his mum, Anne, a lawyer and his dad, Ralf, a police inspector, fretted that the workload of competing in the Champions League and staying at grammar school would prove too much.

In the end, it was Roger Schmidt, then Bayer Leverkusen coach, who prevailed on him to continue. And it was the club’s school liaison assistant who pointed out to Kai Havertz that if he gave up now he would lay down a marker for the rest of his life: when things got tough, it would be easier to give up.

So Havertz missed a Champions League tie at Atletico Madrid to take his Abitur exams, the German equivalent of A Level. And he appears to have also learnt the value of perseveran­ce as he is now at the heart of the team Frank Lampard is building at Chelsea, the most expensive German ever after his £72million move from Leverkusen.

He grew up watching a midfielder, Michael Ballack, at Leverkusen and then in the blue of Chelsea. While Bayern, Barcelona, Real Madrid have shown passing interest in his talents, it was Lampard and Chelsea who made the biggest impression by consistent­ly insisting he was the man for them.

‘The coach has a big impact on my decision,’ said Havertz, handling a Zoom call in English with aplomb, demonstrat­ing the value of that grammar school education. ‘For me, I’ve loved Chelsea my whole life. I always watched the team as a kid, so it was not a very tough decision for me.

‘It was always important that a club comes to me or my agent and says: “You are the player and we want you and we do everything for you. Please come to us.” That was the first thing that I had in mind when I signed for a new club.

‘Of course we had in the last years some conversati­ons with other clubs as well. But in the end Chelsea give me everything. It’s a big project here.’

For Lampard, this has been a curious wooing process, conducted at the height of lockdown, where Zoom calls became the norm. But he had the advantage of some inside knowledge: Timo Werner is a friend of Havertz (left) and the pair are forging a partnershi­p for the German national team.

‘I was able to have some conversati­ons with Kai as the buying process happened,’ said Lampard. ‘I did as much watching of him as I could. By that time, Timo had arrived at the club and Timo and Kai are pretty close, so I could ask Timo quite a lot about him.

‘Again, I was very struck in the first conversati­ons I had with Kai about his humility and how he is as a person, which I love. I’ve no doubt about the impact he’s going to have as a Chelsea player.’

So what of the quirkier side to Havertz? The donkeys, for instance. ‘From my first years, my favourite animal was always the donkey. It was always a dream for me some day to have one of these,’ he said.

The piano playing was inspired by older brother, Jan, taking up the guitar: ‘I wanted to do the same and learn an instrument and that’s the reason I started the piano.’

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