Sunday People

Gutted by my United axing? Tattoo Dwight

- By Richard Tanner

DWIGHT MCNEIL’S tattooed right arm gives a permanent reminder of how he overcame the biggest setback of his life.

The winger was devastated when he was released by Manchester United as a 14-year-old but tonight he will line up against them at Goodison as a key part of Frank Lampard’s Everton re-build and proof that early rejection can be the making of a player.

If Mcneil needs any extra motivation for the fixture he looks forward to the most, then he needs only to glance at the text inked on his arm that quotes the late American rapper Juice WRLD.

“The tattoo on my left arm is about my family and my inheritanc­e growing up and then on my right arm are my heroes,” he said. “There’s Spiderman and Juice WRLD who used to be a rapper but died a few years ago.

“He’s represente­d by the number 999, and the text just says: ‘999 represents making whatever bad situation or whatever struggle you’re going through and turning it into something positive to push yourself forward.

“I relate it to my life and also to football. I use it a lot as a reminder and also as an inspiratio­n. I keep trying to find ways to push forward and to become better within myself.”

Mcneil, 22, has certainly stayed true to the text after being told by his youth coaches at Manchester United – where he had been since the age of five – that he wasn’t going to make the grade with them.

“It was a huge setback, particular­ly as I was a United fan,” he recalled.

“My parents told me in the car after training one evening. For the first two weeks it was really hard for me to take.”

But the rejection turned out to be the making of Mcneil, whose dad Matt, a former Macclesfie­ld and Stockport player, has been a huge influence on his career. Burnley offered him a trial and, fuelled by the determinat­ion to prove United wrong, he flourished at Turf Moor.

He made his Clarets debut at 18, clocked up 147 first-team appearance­s, and won 10 England Under-21 caps before his £20million move to Everton in the summer.

“The feeling was to try and prove wrong the people who made the decision to release me – and I think I have managed to do that,” he added.

“Getting released was hard to take at 14 but I look back on it now and don’t have any regrets.”

Mcneil will go into tonight’s game full of confidence after ending an 18-month goal drought in the win at Southampto­n last weekend that continued Everton’s upward trajectory .

It stretched their unbeaten run to seven games in all competitio­ns and moved them up to 11th in the table, level on points with Liverpool.

“There was a lot of outside noise about not scoring so it helps the confidence massively,” he said. “It is something to build on. about knowing where to be, timing runs to impact the game.

“Then I can get more goals and more assists.

“It is one of the reasons I came here. I know my stats are low but I am looking to move them forward.”

A goal or an assist for Mcneil against United would be right on message.

 ?? ?? INK OUT LOUD: Mcneil’s permanent reminder
INK OUT LOUD: Mcneil’s permanent reminder

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