Irish Daily Mirror

LUKAKU: INTER’S HUMBLE SUPERSTAR

The amazing, inspiratio­nal rise of Rom

- EXCLUSIVE BY DARREN LEWIS @Mirrordarr­en

HIS IS one of the footballin­g world’s most inspiratio­nal stories.

Which is why Romelu Lukaku will not be defined by Istanbul next Saturday. Nor will he be so desperate for Champions League success against Manchester City that he loses all perspectiv­e on the occasion.

Inter Milan’s Belgian striker – on loan from Chelsea – is emotional, tearful even, as he provides a powerful, poignant context to his arrival at the final of the biggest game in European club football.

As a child, he watched his mother, Adolphine, mix water with milk to make it last longer for him and his brothers. He saw her ‘borrow’ bread from the local bakery because she didn’t have the money to pay for it after his dad Roger’s retirement from his own profession­al career.

The money had gone. Never mind luxuries like satellite TV. The Lukaku family would have no electricit­y for weeks at a time.

It was as a 12-year-old that Romelu promised his grandfathe­r, days before his death, that he would “look after” Adolphine, his daughter.

Eighteen years on, having kept that vow several times over, Lukaku has an Italian title in the bag and is preparing to play in the Champions League Final. Little wonder the magnitude of the achievemen­t – and the question around what his grandfathe­r would think of this moment – reduced the striker to tears.

“All the goals that I have scored – everything,” he said. “I promised him that I would look after my mum, when I was 12, I did that.

“So every time when I look at my mum and I see her in the stands, I look at him (points upwards) after every goal and I say, I did it.

“It doesn’t matter – wins or losses, I take it in my stride.

“These are real family issues. So, for me, he meant the world.”

Among his accolades, Lukaku (right) is already Belgium’s all-time top goalscorer. He has been the Most Valuable Player at Inter, where he lifted the Scudetto in 2021, and he was the joint second-highest scorer at the 2018 World Cup.

In a world of snap judgments and knee-jerkers on social media, Lukaku’s journey is an education.

Five years ago he attracted an avalanche of respect for the full, unvarnishe­d truth of his story, powerfully told on the Players Tribune website. His preparatio­ns to play in the Champions League Final – after being exiled by Chelsea last summer – come with an even more inspiratio­nal background.

Particular­ly as Lukaku missed 10 years of watching finals on TV, with his family unable to afford it. Instead, he had to go to school and download the action during computer class.

Lukaku went on: “I feel blessed that I’m in this position because I can remember perfectly all those years, so many finals that I wanted to watch that I just couldn’t. I’d go to school and watch them on Youtube.

“I would lie. They would let me in and I’d go watch, and then I’d have my classmates telling me: ‘Oh, yeah, this happened’

“I’d be like, ‘Yeah I saw that!’ but, to be honest, to be in this position now, to have my family there, it would be a beautiful thing because then it has all come full circle.

“I couldn’t watch, but now, by the grace of God, I can play one.”

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