Leander Dendoncker: There Had to Be a Reason I Wasn’t in Wolves’ team

Wolves’ Leander Dendoncker. (AFP)
Wolves’ Leander Dendoncker. (AFP)
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Leander Dendoncker: There Had to Be a Reason I Wasn’t in Wolves’ team

Wolves’ Leander Dendoncker. (AFP)
Wolves’ Leander Dendoncker. (AFP)

Given it was hailed as a coup when Wolves signed Leander Dendoncker last summer, it was surprising to see him sitting on the bench during the first half of the season. Nuno Espírito Santo is known for rarely changing a winning team but there must have been times when Dendoncker wondered whether moving to Molineux was a mistake. There were even rumors the Belgian would ask to leave in January.

Yet it is not in Dendoncker’s nature to lose his cool. The 23‑year‑old grew up in Passchendaele, a small village known as a first world war battlefield, and he has never been the type to throw his weight around. He used his time on the bench to study how Nuno’s 3-4-3 system worked and made sure he stayed fit and focused. There was no question of him banging on the manager’s door.

“Never,” Dendoncker says. “I guess it’s just not how I am. I’m a quiet, calm person. I was thinking if I don’t play there must be a reason. It was a late transfer for me because of the World Cup with Belgium. I missed the training stage, so that made it a difficult start. Then the team started really well.

“I have played in this system before but every trainer has his way of thinking. He always wants to be well organized, which is very important in this system. I tried to look at the way they played, to see how we worked when they lost the ball and how we worked when we had the ball. Then I just tried to do my thing.”

Dendoncker’s chance arrived when he made his first Premier League start in the 3-1 win over Tottenham on December 29. Comfortable in defense or midfield, he has become a regular since the turn of the year, benefiting from Nuno’s switch to a 3-5-2. Having developed a good understanding with João Moutinho and Rúben Neves in central midfield, he has played a key role in Wolves rising to seventh place after winning promotion last season.

Wolves, who drew 1-1 at Bournemouth on Saturday and host Manchester United in the FA Cup quarter-finals on March 16, are starting to see why Dendoncker is so highly rated. He demonstrated his growing confidence by scoring his first goal for the club in the 3-1 win over Everton this month. “On the pitch I talk a lot,” Dendoncker says. “Maybe people don’t see it. I talk a lot but I never shout.” He is quieter away from the pitch. “I am more of a listener. I observe. There are enough other people speaking. It’s not in my nature to talk straight away – I think I should be humble, because I have just arrived.”

Not that Dendoncker lacks leadership qualities. He came through the ranks at Anderlecht and helped them win the Belgian title in 2017. “The year we were champions, that’s where people saw me as a leader. The year after I was captain – an even bigger responsibility.”

If there is a lack of ego to Dendoncker, perhaps it is because he comes from a tight-knit community. His family used to own a pig farm – they sold it two years ago and his father, Dirk, now works as a bricklayer – and this international footballer smiles as he remembers getting his hands dirty looking after the animals in school holidays. “There were some nice things to do,” he says, pausing for comic effect. “There were also some less nice things to do.”

Dendoncker considers how difficult it was to move to Anderlecht when he was 14. “I came from a small place,” he says. “I think a lot of English people know about it from the war. It’s famous for cheese as well but I’m not really into cheese. Anyway, I came from a small town and went to the capital. That was huge because the mentality is different in Brussels.

“It was a big cultural change. I was homesick. I called my parents three times a day just to hear their voices. I cried a lot. I’d never been away from home before but I think that made me.”

It took a while to understand the shy new kid at Anderlecht. “It was even the way I talk,” Dendoncker says. “We have a very hard accent to understand. When I started to talk in school in Brussels they were laughing. I adapted. I tried to speak in a more understandable way.”

It was just as much of a wrench for his parents to let him move to the big city but they knew it was for the best. Dendoncker’s father gave up a possible football career to work on the farm and he was happy for his three sons to have a ball at their feet. Dendoncker’s older brother, Andres, has played at the lower level in Belgium and his younger brother, Lars, is at Club Brugge’s academy.

“We had some land with maize to feed the pigs,” Dendoncker says. “My father made a small football pitch and me and my brothers would play there. People told my father he was crazy because he would lose a lot of corn. He said: ‘I’m doing it for my children.’ We were there all day.”

Dendoncker is close to his roots but he does not lack ambition. He played alongside Youri Tielemans for Anderlecht and wanted to leave after winning the league. But whereas Tielemans landed a big move to Monaco, Dendoncker saw a transfer to West Ham break down in January 2018.

Now Tielemans is closer to hand in the east Midlands after joining Leicester on loan and Dendoncker plans to meet his friend for dinner soon. Perhaps they will reminisce about being part of the Belgium squad who finished third at the World Cup.

“We expected more because when you get to a semi-final you want to go through,” Dendoncker says. “France played really well. But it was good to win the [play-off] game against England. Finishing third was the best Belgium has had in its history.”

The Guardian Sport



Guardiola Says Man City Successor Cannot Be ‘Copy and Paste’

Manchester City coach Pep Guardiola lifts the English Premier League trophy after the English Premier League soccer match between Brighton and Manchester City at the AMEX Stadium in Brighton, England, Sunday, May 12, 2019. (AP)
Manchester City coach Pep Guardiola lifts the English Premier League trophy after the English Premier League soccer match between Brighton and Manchester City at the AMEX Stadium in Brighton, England, Sunday, May 12, 2019. (AP)
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Guardiola Says Man City Successor Cannot Be ‘Copy and Paste’

Manchester City coach Pep Guardiola lifts the English Premier League trophy after the English Premier League soccer match between Brighton and Manchester City at the AMEX Stadium in Brighton, England, Sunday, May 12, 2019. (AP)
Manchester City coach Pep Guardiola lifts the English Premier League trophy after the English Premier League soccer match between Brighton and Manchester City at the AMEX Stadium in Brighton, England, Sunday, May 12, 2019. (AP)

Departing Manchester City manager ‌Pep Guardiola said he hoped his successor can be true to themselves, warning that any attempt to find a carbon copy of him would likely backfire.

Guardiola, who led City to six Premier League titles, a Champions League triumph and the Club World Cup, will leave at the end of the season after a decade in charge.

Italian Enzo Maresca, who has previously ‌coached Chelsea ‌and Leicester City and also ‌worked ⁠under Guardiola as ⁠an assistant at City, is reported to be the leading candidate for the top job at the Manchester club.

Asked if City's administration had sought his advice on the next manager, Guardiola told reporters on Friday: "It doesn't work to ⁠copy and paste in this kind ‌of job.

"You have to ‌be unique, natural and yourself and the new ‌manager will be himself," the Spaniard added, speaking ‌ahead of City's final league game of the season at home against Aston Villa.

"The moment it starts to be a copy of another one... Everyone ‌is everyone. It has to be like that. And that's why everything ⁠is ⁠going to be good."


Former F1 Champion Alain Prost Reportedly Injured as Police Investigate Robbery at Family Home

(FILES) Retired French F1 racing driver and Renault special advisor Alain Prost arrives to attend the funeral of late French racing driver Anthoine Hubert into Chartres' cathedral, on September 10, 2019. (Photo by JEAN-FRANCOIS MONIER / AFP)
(FILES) Retired French F1 racing driver and Renault special advisor Alain Prost arrives to attend the funeral of late French racing driver Anthoine Hubert into Chartres' cathedral, on September 10, 2019. (Photo by JEAN-FRANCOIS MONIER / AFP)
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Former F1 Champion Alain Prost Reportedly Injured as Police Investigate Robbery at Family Home

(FILES) Retired French F1 racing driver and Renault special advisor Alain Prost arrives to attend the funeral of late French racing driver Anthoine Hubert into Chartres' cathedral, on September 10, 2019. (Photo by JEAN-FRANCOIS MONIER / AFP)
(FILES) Retired French F1 racing driver and Renault special advisor Alain Prost arrives to attend the funeral of late French racing driver Anthoine Hubert into Chartres' cathedral, on September 10, 2019. (Photo by JEAN-FRANCOIS MONIER / AFP)

Swiss police are investigating an alleged robbery amid reports that four-time Formula 1 world champion Alain Prost was injured during a home invasion.

Swiss tabloid Blick reported late Friday that the 71-year-old Prost sustained a head injury from intruders who forced his son to open a safe during the incident Tuesday morning.

“The perpetrators entered the residence while the occupants were present, threatened them, and forced one family member to open a safe before fleeing with the stolen goods,” the public prosecutor’s office said in a statement. “Despite the extensive search operation launched, the perpetrators have not yet been apprehended at this stage,” The AP news reported.

The police, who did not name the victim, said “several” balaclava-wearing intruders “broke into the house. Once inside, they threatened the occupants and inflicted minor head injuries upon one family member, under circumstances that remain to be established. The perpetrators then forced another family member to open a safe before making their escape with stolen items, a precise inventory of which is currently being compiled.”

Blick reported that Prost, who won four world championships between 1985-1993, was “visibly shaken by this brutal intrusion” and that he's left the home in Nyon beside Lake Geneva in the Swiss canton of Vaud.


Spurs Sweat over Premier League Survival as Salah, Guardiola Say Goodbye

25 April 2026, United Kingdom, Liverpool: Liverpool's Mohamed Salah applauds the fans as he is substituted during the English Premier League soccer match between Liverpool and Crystal Palace at Anfield. Photo: Peter Byrne/PA Wire/dpa
25 April 2026, United Kingdom, Liverpool: Liverpool's Mohamed Salah applauds the fans as he is substituted during the English Premier League soccer match between Liverpool and Crystal Palace at Anfield. Photo: Peter Byrne/PA Wire/dpa
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Spurs Sweat over Premier League Survival as Salah, Guardiola Say Goodbye

25 April 2026, United Kingdom, Liverpool: Liverpool's Mohamed Salah applauds the fans as he is substituted during the English Premier League soccer match between Liverpool and Crystal Palace at Anfield. Photo: Peter Byrne/PA Wire/dpa
25 April 2026, United Kingdom, Liverpool: Liverpool's Mohamed Salah applauds the fans as he is substituted during the English Premier League soccer match between Liverpool and Crystal Palace at Anfield. Photo: Peter Byrne/PA Wire/dpa

Tottenham must avoid defeat against Everton on Sunday to guarantee their place in the Premier League next season as Pep Guardiola and Mohamed Salah prepare for emotional farewells.

Liverpool and Bournemouth could both secure places in the Champions League, while European football is also on the line for Brighton, Brentford, Chelsea and Sunderland.

Spurs 'dignity' at stake

According to AFP, this time last year Tottenham fans were basking in the glow of a first trophy for 17 years after beating Manchester United to lift the Europa League.

Head coach Roberto De Zerbi believes the visit of Everton dwarfs the importance of that victory, with Premier League survival at stake.

"There is something more important than the trophy and the bonus," he said. "There is the future of the club, there is the history of the club, there is the pride of the players, there is the pride of the families of the players.

"There is the dignity of every one of us."

A point will be enough to secure survival and relegate West Ham due to Tottenham's vastly superior goal difference.

But Spurs have already lost 10 of their 18 home league games this season and another defeat would open the door to Nuno Espirito Santo's Hammers, if they can beat Leeds.

Battle for Europe

Liverpool should ensure a terrible season does not end on a fresh low note by securing a top-five finish in Mohamed Salah's farewell to Anfield.

Finishing in the top five would ensure Champions League football next season -- a consolation prize after a shocking title defence.

Egypt international Salah criticised Liverpool's performances under Arne Slot this season after last week's 4-2 defeat at Aston Villa.

"I want to see Liverpool go back to being the heavy metal attacking team that opponents fear and back to being a team that wins trophies," he said in a social media post, pointedly referring to the football played under Slot's predecessor Jurgen Klopp.

"Qualifying to next season's Champions League is the bare minimum and I will do everything I can to make that happen," he added.

Liverpool, who host Brentford, have a three-point lead and a six-goal cushion on goal difference over sixth-placed Bournemouth.

Sixth could be enough to qualify for the Champions League if Liverpool win and leapfrog Aston Villa, who travel to Manchester City, into fifth spot.

As it stands, the sixth and seventh-placed teams would go into the Europa League and the eighth would qualify for the Conference League, AFP reported.

Brighton would be guaranteed at least Europa League football with victory over Manchester United.

Sunderland host Chelsea with a chance of qualifying for continental competition for the first time in more than half a century.

Premier League greats depart

Mohamed Salah's outburst gives Arne Slot a tough decision to make on whether to start the 33-year-old, who has only recently returned from a hamstring injury.

The already unpopular coach risks infuriating the Liverpool fans even further if he does not give the man they christened "The Egyptian King" one last run out in front of the Kop.

With increasing speculation over his future, Slot can ill afford to let any personal issues with Salah get in the way of finishing the season on a high.

Liverpool have failed to win any of the nine league games that Salah has not started in 2026.

At the Etihad, Guardiola is set for a rousing send-off after amassing 20 trophies in his decade in charge, including six Premier League titles and City's only Champions League.

"It's been the experience of my life," said the Catalan after announcing his departure on Friday.