Granit Xhaka: ‘My Dad’s First Few Months In Jail Were Ok, Then The Beatings Started’

 Arsenal’s Granit Xhaka pictured in Camden, north London. ‘People probably don’t expect an Arsenal player to come to Camden Lock and, basically, be a normal guy.’ Photograph: Tom Jenkins for the Guardian
Arsenal’s Granit Xhaka pictured in Camden, north London. ‘People probably don’t expect an Arsenal player to come to Camden Lock and, basically, be a normal guy.’ Photograph: Tom Jenkins for the Guardian
TT
20

Granit Xhaka: ‘My Dad’s First Few Months In Jail Were Ok, Then The Beatings Started’

 Arsenal’s Granit Xhaka pictured in Camden, north London. ‘People probably don’t expect an Arsenal player to come to Camden Lock and, basically, be a normal guy.’ Photograph: Tom Jenkins for the Guardian
Arsenal’s Granit Xhaka pictured in Camden, north London. ‘People probably don’t expect an Arsenal player to come to Camden Lock and, basically, be a normal guy.’ Photograph: Tom Jenkins for the Guardian

It is the story that has shaped Granit Xhaka and fuelled the fires that rage inside him. The details are savage, barely comprehensible, and it is a wonder that the Arsenal midfielder can articulate them. Then again, like his father, Ragip – who spent three and a half years as a political prisoner in Yugoslavia – Xhaka is not a man who runs or hides.

“As far as I know, his first few months in jail were OK,” Xhaka says. “But then the beatings started.”

Xhaka Sr’s crime had been to take part in demonstrations against the communist central government in Belgrade. It was 1986 and he was a 22-year-old student at the university of Pristina in Kosovo, which was then an autonomous province in Yugoslavia. He would be arrested and summarily given a six-year sentence. Xhaka Sr shared a cell with four other men and he would be let out once every day – for 10 minutes.

“As his son, the story is something that touches me very deeply – it is really, really in my heart,” Xhaka says. “To describe my dad properly, you have to appreciate the full depth of it. It’s so tragic. I sometimes ask him: ‘Tell it to me again,’ but I still don’t think he has revealed all of it. There have always been silent moments where I’ve felt he has swallowed something and not spilled out the truth. Maybe it was just too much and he wanted to spare his kids all the grief.

“He was a proud Kosovarian and he thought they had a right to exist. He was standing up for their rights and they were basic democratic rights –necessities, such as being able to vote. It was not only him. There were other people arrested, including his uncle, who had been jailed a number of years earlier. He got 15 years. It was strictly political. My dad was asking: ‘Why aren’t we democrats here? We deserve to be democrats. We deserve to be heard.’”

To understand Xhaka is to understand his family; how they have suffered, how they have pulled together and worked tirelessly in order to overcome.

His guiding principles are loyalty and respect. When he commits to something or someone, he does so with body and soul – just like his father and just like his mother, Eli.

“One of the most revealing details about my parents is that they only got together three months before my dad’s arrest,” Xhaka says. “I have such an incredible respect for my mother. I have never heard of a woman being together with a man for three months – at that young age – and then waiting for him for three and a half years. My mother is just an incredible person.

“One of the strange things is we don’t know why my dad was released early from his sentence but he was let go at the same time as his uncle. None of the family knew about it until they turned up on the doorstep. My feeling is that they took a pact to go along with the prison rules, keeping their mouths shut and never causing any problems. This is why they released them because they thought: ‘There’s no problem with them any more.’ But I’m not sure about that.”

Xhaka’s parents knew that they needed a fresh start and, in 1990, they emigrated to Switzerland. Their first son, Taulant, would be born in Basel in 1991, with Granit following 18 months later. Taulant is now the key midfielder for the Swiss side Basel.

“My dad showed an incredible strength and Taulant and I have grown up with his mental strength,” Xhaka says. “We had this idol, this role model, who taught us that you have to be strong to achieve things. So we grew up very strong. It’s why on the pitch, we have this mental strength to get over things and really go for it.”

Xhaka owes everything to Switzerland, and the opportunities he was afforded there, but he cannot and will not forget his Kosovo-Albanian roots, which continue to touch him in London. During the photoshoot for this interview in Camden Town, an Albanian passer-by almost walks into the canal after he recognises Xhaka. He is thrilled when Xhaka acknowledges him in Albanian.

“I’ve found a few really nice Albanian people here,” Xhaka says. “Some of them run a car-wash and I take mine in there. We chat and, of course, it’s mainly about football. Some of them support Liverpool, some Manchester United and there are a lot of Arsenal fans. There is a lot of joking and competition.”

Xhaka lives in Barnet with his wife, Leonita, but they have found their home-from-home in Camden – one of the capital’s more eclectic neighbourhoods. They go there a couple of times each week – to browse the market, shop, eat and just chill out.

“I feel a connection to Camden that takes me back to my childhood,” Xhaka says. “When Taulant and I were kids, we had our first trip on a bus from Basel to Pristina so that we could visit our grandparents for the first time. My mum and dad had full-time jobs and, on top of that, they worked at night as office cleaners, and they saved up the money for our tickets. The bus stopped in various places and I saw all of these markets, which Camden now reminds me of. There was also the market in Basel.

“I am a very simple man, I love normality and I love normal people. I love to eat normal food. It’s how I grew up. In Camden, it’s just the atmosphere that gets me. It’s simple, it’s nice, it’s real. And it’s the people, too. I like to interact with them because they are normal and I am normal. People probably don’t expect an Arsenal player to come to Camden Lock and, basically, be a normal guy.”

Xhaka is stopped by Charles, a Nigeria-born, Arsenal-supporting Londoner and, it has to be said, his opening gambit does not sound overly friendly.

“You’re a good player, but …” Charles starts. Here we go. He goes on to argue that what Xhaka needs is a more skilful player in front of him, ideally Eden Hazard from Chelsea. “I’d much rather have him than Alexis Sánchez,” Charles adds.

In his fourth language – behind German, Albanian and French – Xhaka does not quite catch everything that Charles says and he later asks for clarification. But Xhaka is interested and engaging. He knows that everybody is a critic and there is no escaping the fact that, right now, Arsenal have plenty of them.

They lie sixth in the Premier League table, three places and four points below Tottenham Hotspur, whom they entertain in the derby at Emirates Stadium on Saturday lunchtime. Their local rivals are flying but that is not the only reason why everything has come to feel so fraught at Arsenal.

Many Arsenal fans cannot see how the club can win the title again under Arsène Wenger and with the current squad, and their misgivings erupt whenever there is a defeat. It adds up to a climate of negativity, in which the principal upside of a victory appears to be that crisis is kept at bay. How can the players perform to their maximum in such circumstances?

“We deserved to be criticised after we failed to qualify for the Champions League last season,” Xhaka says. “Normally – and certainly for me – the critics make you stronger but I believe that, for some Arsenal players, these critics are not good. They are not helping them.

“Personally, I can handle criticism, especially when it is deserved, and it’s because my dad never, ever said ‘well done’ to me. He did it on purpose so that I kept my feet on the ground. With us, it’s been a lot of little things; it’s never a big thing [that goes wrong]. After the 0-0 draw at Chelsea in September, I thought: ‘OK. We can build up from here.’ But then we see the 2-1 defeat at Watford and you start doubting yourself.”

At Vicarage Road, Xhaka was criticised for switching off for Tom Cleverley’s stoppage-time winner and, afterwards, the Watford striker Troy Deeney accused the Arsenal players of having no cojones. “I don’t know Troy Deeney personally but this has to do with respect,” Xhaka says. “If he believes we don’t have cojones, he can come to our locker room and see for himself.”

Xhaka hates to lose. When it happens, it is no exaggeration to say that he is overtaken by self-loathing. According to Leonita, it is impossible to speak to him for up to an hour after the final whistle. Do others in the Arsenal dressing room take it as personally?

“Sometimes, it’s difficult for me to come down,” Xhaka says. “I focus a lot of our defeats on myself. What did I do wrong? I never criticise my team-mates before I’ve looked at myself. I’ve been that way since I was a kid. Do I put too much pressure on myself? Definitely. And it’s getting worse as I get older. When I was younger, I never put as much thought into a defeat as I do now.”

Xhaka has polarised opinion since his arrival from Borussia Mönchengladbach in the summer of last year. His champions laud his anticipation and the way that he reads the game, together with the range and vision of his passing. No Premier League midfielder made more successful passes than Xhaka last season and he sits third on the Opta list this time out. He was outstanding in Arsenal’s FA Cup final win over Chelsea last May, showing what can happen when he and the team click but, on the other hand, he has been criticised for reckless tackling and defensive errors.

Xhaka was sent off twice for Arsenal last season, the first for a trip on Swansea City’s Mo Barrow, when he clearly intended to take a yellow card before regrouping; the second for a lunge at Burnley’s Steven Defour. “I thought football in England was supposed to be a lot tougher,” Xhaka says.

“I accept the Burnley decision but not Swansea. I was more surprised than angry at first. I’ve always watched the Premier League and I think a lot of fouls that are whistled for today were not given in the past.”

Xhaka is a ball-playing No8 rather than a destructive No6 but the lines have sometimes been blurred with him; partly because of his full-blooded commitment and chequered disciplinary record, partly because of how the Arsenal support have yearned for a defensive midfield general. Xhaka needs to be cherished for what he is rather than lamented for what he is not.

“I’d actually describe myself as a fake No10 – in other words, a No10 that plays further back,” Xhaka says. “But I do think I’m a two-sided player. I am very confident that I have certain skills in world football but I am also a dedicated fighter.”

Xhaka can look forward to the World Cup finals at the end of the season, after Switzerland qualified with their play-off victory over Northern Ireland. The principal talking point was the terrible penalty decision that gave Switzerland the only goal of the two-leg tie and it was put to Xhaka that the controversy had taken some of the shine off the qualification.

“Who cares about that?” he says. “We were the better team over the two games. Obviously, it wasn’t a penalty but we created enough chances. When we played Manchester City before the international break, they scored with an offside goal but nobody went on about it like this. It was a mistake but you must accept it.”

Xhaka’s pragmatism extends to the visit of Tottenham. “No one has to tell us to be motivated,” he says. “It’s the game of the year and you have to win it. It’s not about beautiful football and there can be no excuses. You simply have to win.”

The Guardian Sport



Gauff Sweeps Paolini Aside to Revitalize WTA Finals Defense in Riyadh

 Coco Gauff of the United States plays a shot against Jasmine Paolini of Italy during their women's singles match at the WTA tennis finals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025. (AP)
Coco Gauff of the United States plays a shot against Jasmine Paolini of Italy during their women's singles match at the WTA tennis finals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025. (AP)
TT
20

Gauff Sweeps Paolini Aside to Revitalize WTA Finals Defense in Riyadh

 Coco Gauff of the United States plays a shot against Jasmine Paolini of Italy during their women's singles match at the WTA tennis finals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025. (AP)
Coco Gauff of the United States plays a shot against Jasmine Paolini of Italy during their women's singles match at the WTA tennis finals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025. (AP)

Coco Gauff claimed a much-needed 6-3, 6-2 victory over Jasmine Paolini to keep her WTA Finals title defense alive in Riyadh on Tuesday.

The American third seed had lost her opener two days prior to Jessica Pegula but was far more clinical against Paolini, whose second singles defeat of the week means she has no chance of advancing to the semi-finals.

"I'm really happy with how I played today, definitely a turnaround from my first match," said Gauff, who posted her 10th top-10 win of the season.

Against Pegula on Sunday, Gauff struggled with her serve, committing 17 double faults and winning just 28 percent of the points behind her second delivery.

Her performance in the first set of her second match was already a significant improvement, as she won nine of 11 points on her second serve, misfiring just twice for two double faults.

The 21-year-old leapt to a 3-0 lead and despite Paolini's attempted comeback, was able to reclaim her advantage to take the opening set in 40 minutes.

The second set was a straightforward affair as Gauff notched two breaks of serve en route to her second win in five meetings with the Italian this season.

"I was just trying to play relaxed. I've played a WTA Finals where I lost all three of my matches (in 2022). So I tried to avoid that today," said the two-time Grand Slam champion.

"I thought I served smart. I don't think Jasmine was 100 percent today and I would like to wish her well. Playing singles and doubles here is not easy."

In other Stefanie Graf Group action, world number one Aryna Sabalenka will take on fifth-seeded Jessica Pegula later in the day. A straight-sets victory for the top seed would guarantee her a place in Friday's semi-finals.


Ronaldo Reveals Emotional Retirement Will Come 'Soon'

Football - Saudi Pro League - Al-Nassr v Al-Fayah - Al-Awwal Park, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - November 1, 2025 Al-Nassr's Cristiano Ronaldo scores their second goal from the penalty spot. (Reuters)
Football - Saudi Pro League - Al-Nassr v Al-Fayah - Al-Awwal Park, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - November 1, 2025 Al-Nassr's Cristiano Ronaldo scores their second goal from the penalty spot. (Reuters)
TT
20

Ronaldo Reveals Emotional Retirement Will Come 'Soon'

Football - Saudi Pro League - Al-Nassr v Al-Fayah - Al-Awwal Park, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - November 1, 2025 Al-Nassr's Cristiano Ronaldo scores their second goal from the penalty spot. (Reuters)
Football - Saudi Pro League - Al-Nassr v Al-Fayah - Al-Awwal Park, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - November 1, 2025 Al-Nassr's Cristiano Ronaldo scores their second goal from the penalty spot. (Reuters)

Cristiano Ronaldo has revealed he plans to retire "soon" as the Portugal and Al-Nassr star prepares for a tearful end to his glittering career.

Ronaldo discussed his thoughts on retirement and his life after football in an interview with Piers Morgan Uncensored.

The 40-year-old, who has scored a remarkable 952 goals, is one of the most decorated players in the history of the game, but the end is in sight for his astonishing career.

Asked when he would consider hanging up his boots, Ronaldo, who is under contract with Al-Nassr until 2027, replied: "Soon. But I think I will be prepared.

"It will be tough, of course. It will be difficult? Yes. Probably will cry, yes. I'm an open person. It will be very, very difficult, yes.

"But Piers, I prepare my future since 25, 26, 27 years old, I prepare my future. So I think I will be capable to support that pressure."

Ronaldo is confident he will be able to cope without football because he wants to focus on his family and his off the pitch interests.

"Nothing will be able to compare the adrenaline that we have for football to score a goal," he said.

"But everything has a beginning, and everything has an end. I have other passions. I'm going to have more time for me, I'm going to have more time for my family to raise my kids.

"I want to follow Cristiano Junior because he's at an age when kids do stupid things. I was the same. Mateo loves football as well.

"I want to do more fun things. I love playing Padel with my closest friends. We are getting quite good."

After starting his career with Sporting Lisbon, Ronaldo enjoyed successful spells at Manchester United and Real Madrid, Juventus.

He won three Premier League titles and the Champions League among other trophies in his first stint in Manchester.

Ronaldo joined Saudi Pro League side Al-Nassr after leaving United for a second time in 2022.

He still looks out for the Premier League club's results, given his affinity with their current manager -- his former Portugal team-mate Ruben Amorim.

But the five-time Ballon d'Or winner warned United fans to not expect miracles from Amorim, who is in the midst of a rollercoaster reign at Old Trafford following his arrival 12 months ago.

"He's doing his best," Ronaldo said. "What are you going to do? Miracles. Miracles is impossible.

"He's not going to do miracles. They have good players but they don't have, some of them, in mind what Manchester United is.

"Manchester United is still in my heart. I love that club. But we have all to be honest and look for ourselves and say, 'Listen, they are not in a good path'. So, they need to change and it's not only about the coach and players, in my opinion."


Xhaka Lifts Sunderland into Fourth after Everton Draw

Granit Xhaka scored Sunderland's equalizer. ANDY BUCHANAN / AFP
Granit Xhaka scored Sunderland's equalizer. ANDY BUCHANAN / AFP
TT
20

Xhaka Lifts Sunderland into Fourth after Everton Draw

Granit Xhaka scored Sunderland's equalizer. ANDY BUCHANAN / AFP
Granit Xhaka scored Sunderland's equalizer. ANDY BUCHANAN / AFP

Sunderland climbed into the Premier League's top four after Granit Xhaka's deflected strike salvaged a 1-1 draw at home to Everton on Monday.

The Black Cats would have moved up to second with victory, but were outplayed in the first half and trailed to Iliman Ndiaye's brilliant individual effort, said AFP.

Everton were left to regret not making more of their first half dominance as Thierno Barry missed a glorious chance and Jack Grealish hit the post.

Sunderland took less than a minute of the second period to hit back when Xhaka's strike flicked off James Tarkowski to beat England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford on his return to the Stadium of Light.

The home side then looked the more likely to claim all three points but Wilson Isidor fluffed Sunderland's best chance to snatch victory.

"The first 25 minutes was not good enough," Xhaka told Sky Sports. "At this level, you get punished but the second half was very good."

A point at least maintains Sunderland's unbeaten home record and their impressive start to a first top flight campaign in eight seasons.

Everton edge five points clear of the bottom three in 14th, but the Toffees glaring lack of a prolific number nine again cost them victory.

"For 20 to 30 minutes I thought I'd be disappointed going home with a point. By the end of the game, I was pleased we got a point from it," said Everton boss David Moyes.

"We missed a big chance to make it 2-0 and because we don't get that it gave Sunderland a bit of confidence and gave the crowd something to get behind."

A moment of magic gave the visitors the lead on 15 minutes as Ndiaye danced his way through four Sunderland defenders before firing into the top corner for his fourth goal of the season.

Grealish then hit the post from long range but it is Barry's miss that will live long in the memories of the travelling support heading back to Merseyside.

The Frenchman has still yet to score since his £27 million ($35 million) move from Villarreal in July and will not get a better chance than when he sliced horribly off target with the goal gaping at the back post from Grealish's cross.

Despite a sub-par first 45 minutes, Sunderland were level within 44 seconds of the second half when Xhaka netted his first goal since joining from Bayer Leverkusen.

A share of the spoils takes Sunderland above Tottenham and Chelsea and level on points with Liverpool.

But they will need to be much better to protect their unbeaten run at the Stadium of Light when leaders Arsenal visit on Saturday.