The Star Malaysia

Mahrez snubs France for Algeria as tribute to his father

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PARIS: Riyad Mahrez (pic) chose to play for Algeria rather than France, where he was born, in a tribute to his late father, the African player of the year’s brother said.

Propelled to global renown by Leicester’s amazing run to English Premier League glory, the 25-year-old will be one of the most watched stars at the African Nations Cup where Algeria start against Zimbabwe today.

Once considered too small for profession­al football, he will be one of the biggest names at the tournament in Gabon.

Three years ago, Mahrez was making his debut for Leicester in England’s second tier Championsh­ip having played for Sarcelles, the French town where he was born.

He only made his debut for Algeria in May 2014 a few months after declaring that he wanted to play for the African nation around the same time as serious riots broke out in Sarcelles.

At just 1.78m and a sinewy 70kg, nobody at Sarcelles imagined he could soar to such heady prodession­al heights.

At the age of 18, Mahrez was “frustrated” but determined when many of his Sarcelles teammates had signed profession­al terms, according to Hayel Mbemba, a teaching assistant at Chanterein­e school in the Paris suburb where Mahrez was a pupil.

“Despite all that, Riyad swore on his life and that of his mother, that one day he would be a profession­al. At that time we were pessimisti­c.

“Today, he has made it and you can only give him respect for that.”

His hunger only grew when his father, one of his biggest supporters, died suddenly in 2006.

“It gave him the force,” said elder brother Wahid. “He really did it for him, for me, the family.” When Mahrez chose to play for Algeria over France, “it was for his papa,” added the 30-yearold.

A childhood friend, Sofiane Seghiri, 26, said that Mahrez always had a ball at his feet.

“When you are 16-to-18 you want to go out, have fun with friends, maybe see some girls. He always had a ball,” said Seghiri, laughing. “That is why he is unique.”

Mahrez first had an unsuccessf­ul trial in Scotland, then played with Quimper in the French lower leagues and Le Havre in the Second Division where he was spotted by Leicester.

In the English Second Division it was tough for Mahrez to adapt his free dribbling game to the weekly confrontat­ions with hard-ground defenders.

But since Leicester’s fairy tale title win last year, he has been named Premier League player of the season, came seventh in the race for the Ballon d’Or and last week was named Africa’s player of the year.

He has left a big impact at Sarcelles where scouts from foreign teams are now regular visitors in the poor suburb north of Paris.

“It may be the Mahrez effect that has brought the English scouts here.

“Two have gone to English clubs and there will be more,” said Faysal Abdelwahbi, a childhood friend and coach of the Under-12 team at AAS Sarcelles. — AFP

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