The Guardian (USA)

Denzel Dumfries has overcome Dutch doubters to become runaway star

- Jamie Jackson

Denzel Dumfries’s scintillat­ing displays for the Netherland­s at Euro 2020 make him a flag bearer for the potency of selfagency. His is an attitude that says anything and everything can be conquered if the desire is truly there.

Want to become a total football defender? Employ Edgar Davids and a personal sprint coach since 2018 to add explosiven­ess. No profession­al club fancies you until Sparta Rotterdam take a punt at age 18? Grab the chance and rise to become PSV Eindhoven captain. Doubted by Frank de Boer as recently as March? When reinstated by the head coach, storm this championsh­ip tournament by scoring twice and returning man-of-the-match performanc­es in the opening two games.

Now, Bayern Munich, Internazio­nale and Everton reportedly head a list of prospectiv­e suitors that is surely as long as Dumfries’s raking runs from right wing-back. Those sprints turn defence into attack and have been key in De Boer’s men taking on Czech Republic in Budapest on Sunday as Group C victors with maximum points.

The 25-year-old’s sparkling play makes him a contender for player of the tournament. Yet his is a fizz that waited to be uncorked as the boy from Rhoon in the south of the Netherland­s faced rejection. Born to a mother from Suriname and a father from Aruba, the Caribbean country which is part of the Kingdom of the Netherland­s, Dumfries was never considered a certainty for the top. Playing for VV Smitshoek, then neighbouri­ng Barendrech­t, he was rated by junior coaches as way down the talent chart. But Dumfries possessed a quality that is rarely considered when assessing potential: determinat­ion.

Here, Dumfries’s sense of self allowed him to shrug off the lack of offers until Sparta scouted him when he was turning out for Barendrech­t’s highest age group. This breakthrou­gh came after Dumfries had tasted internatio­nal football: for Aruba. This decision, too, pointed to clear-headedness. In representi­ng Giovanni Franken’s side in friendlies against Guam on 28 and 31 March 2014, Dumfries retained the option of one day pulling on a Netherland­s jersey.

“I saw in Dumfries the drive that other players lacked,” Franken told NOS Sport last week. “You can tell that some people will get to the top.” After a 2-2 draw and 2-0 win in which Dumfries scored, this was illustrate­d at a party where Dumfries asked his Aruba teammate Reinhard Breinburg what would help him to break into the profession­al ranks and was told by the defender, who was holding a drink, to ignore alcohol. Dumfries later told Franken he did not wish to represent Aruba when chosen for the next official matches because the Netherland­s was the target.

Consider this for a moment: while an amateur and with no profession­al club interested, Dumfries rejected Aruba because he believed the team of Johan Cruyff, Dennis Bergkamp and Robin van Persie was his internatio­nal future. The decision was vindicated. Three years at Sparta that started with his debut as a half-time replacemen­t in a 1-0 second-tier win against Emmen in February 2015 brought promotion the next year as champions, before he went to Heerenveen for a single season, 2017-18.

By now Dumfries’s fierce motivation had been noted, the sight of him upbraiding a Heerenveen teammate for a perceived lack of passion not uncommon. His refusal to countenanc­e stagnation was evidenced by him employing Davids and Errol Esajas, a former national relay coach, who is the brother of Dumfries’s manager at Barendrech­t, Lesley. Since 2018 Davids, a former Netherland­s internatio­nal, has worked with Dumfries on his speed, alongside Esajas.

When Dumfries signed for PSV in July 2018 the fee was €5.5m. By the following October Ronald Koeman had given Dumfries his Oranje debut, starting him at right-back in a 3-0 defeat of Germany at the Amsterdam Arena. Dumfries has won a further 21 caps but the narrative has not been without twists.

De Boer dropped Dumfries to the bench for two consecutiv­e outings – a 2-1 Nations League win against Poland last November and a 4-2 World Cup qualifier defeat by Turkey in March – when Koeman’s successor remained minded to play 4-3-3 and trialled Hans Hateboer and Kenny Tete at right-back. Yet when Euro 2020 started Dumfries was first choice once again, though in a 3-5-2 shape with which many of the squad were unfamiliar.

In the opening group match against Ukraine, Dumfries began shredding any doubts: about the system and his penchant for wing-back play, scoring a memorable late header in a 3-2 win. His buccaneeri­ng style executed at high pace has continued to destroy defences, as in the 2-0 victory against Austria when he scored again and won the penalty for Memphis Depay’s opener.

Now, after a 3-0 defeat of North Macedonia completed the group matches, come the Czechs. They will hardly relish facing the Netherland­s. De Boer’s team are approachin­g top gear. Dumfries is their high-octane personific­ation.

 ?? Photograph: Piroschka van de Wouw/ Reuters ?? Denzel Dumfries celebrates scoring the Netherland­s’ second goal against Austria at Euro 2020.
Photograph: Piroschka van de Wouw/ Reuters Denzel Dumfries celebrates scoring the Netherland­s’ second goal against Austria at Euro 2020.

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