Moise Kean’s Huge Talent Can Light up Premier League Stage With Everton

 Moise Kean became the youngest player ever to appear for Juventus when he made his debut at 16 and scored twice on his first Serie A start earlier this year. Photograph: Daniele Badolato/Juventus via Getty Images
Moise Kean became the youngest player ever to appear for Juventus when he made his debut at 16 and scored twice on his first Serie A start earlier this year. Photograph: Daniele Badolato/Juventus via Getty Images
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Moise Kean’s Huge Talent Can Light up Premier League Stage With Everton

 Moise Kean became the youngest player ever to appear for Juventus when he made his debut at 16 and scored twice on his first Serie A start earlier this year. Photograph: Daniele Badolato/Juventus via Getty Images
Moise Kean became the youngest player ever to appear for Juventus when he made his debut at 16 and scored twice on his first Serie A start earlier this year. Photograph: Daniele Badolato/Juventus via Getty Images

Moise Kean has some very specific career objectives. “I dream of scoring in a Champions League final,” he once told the newspaper Tuttosport. “With my head. Against a team from Spain.”

A move from Juventus to Everton would seem to take him further away from such ambitions. The Bianconeri have played in two of the past five Champions League finals, and signed Cristiano Ronaldo last summer precisely to help them conquer Europe. Everton have not played in the continent’s top club competition in almost half a century, barring a qualifying-round defeat by Villarreal in 2005.

Sometimes, though, the most important thing is just to be out on the pitch. Kean played in 17 matches for Juventus last season, yet he started only six. Too few for a 19-year-old who contemplated quitting football altogether in his younger years, out of frustration at having his minutes restricted. His mother’s relentless work schedule meant he was always getting dropped off at his local team’s training sessions midway through.

Both have been rewarded for persisting. Kean’s mother, Isabelle, is Ivorian but Moise was born in Vercelli, in northern Italy, before being spotted by scouts from Torino and brought into their academy system. Juventus lured him away from their city rivals at 14. On the day he signed his first professional contract, Kean called his mum and told her she could stop working and come to live with him.

It was apparent already that he had a special talent. Kean was averaging close to a goal per game for Juventus’ youth sides even when placed with kids three or four years older. He became the youngest player to appear for their first team when he made his debut at 16, and soon after that became the first person born in the 2000s to appear in a Champions League match.

Itching for more opportunities, he went on loan to Verona for 2017-18. A tally of four goals in 20 appearances looks modest but his season was disrupted by injury, and that was still enough to make him joint-top scorer in a team relegated by early May.

It was Ronaldo’s signing that persuaded him to return to Juventus last summer, instead of seeking another move away. “During training, I try to watch everything he does, from the way he carries himself on the pitch to his desire to play, to train, and to always be ready,” Kean would explain. “You should not underestimate the benefits of training with a great champion. I observe and then I try to apply what I’ve learned.”

Finally, this spring, Kean got his chance to put those lessons into action. He scored the goal that knocked Bologna out of the Coppa Italia, then marked his first Serie A start for Juventus with a double against Udinese. Kean might have had a hat-trick, but the penalty he won was given to Emre Can.

Ronaldo, watching from the dugout, was seen imitating Kean’s stepovers after the second goal. When the Portuguese got injured on international duty later that month, Kean scored in all three games that Ronaldo missed to keep Juventus on track for their eighth consecutive Serie A title.

Kean’s physical gifts are obvious. He stands close to 6ft, with a muscular build and acceleration that few defenders can live with. Yet different traits mark him apart: the courage to take on an opponent when travelling at top speed and the quickness of thought to understand when he has them off-balance and know which shoulder to attack. He is a solid finisher and can play through the middle but looks most at home cutting in from the flank.

There is a mischievousness in his approach which can stray into occasional over-indulgence, but it is married to a robust work ethic. The two threads come together in stories he tells of his childhood, when he would steal footballs from his local priest when that was the only way to get a game.

Kean has been compared to Mario Balotelli, and it is true that as youth player at Juventus he once celebrated a goal by revealing a T-shirt with the familiar message ‘Why Always Me’. The pair share a friendship, as well as some unpleasant life experiences. Each has been racially abused in their home country for the colour of their skin.

Yet they are different personalities with markedly different playing styles. Kean has made mistakes of his own – he was sent home from an Italy Under-19 training camp in 2017 with Gianluca Scamacca amid reports of a practical joke gone awry, and he was left out of Italy’s Under-21 side for their European Championship game against Belgium this summer after showing up late for a team meeting – but so have a great many other young players.

And Kean has excelled while representing his country as well. He scored three goals across the semi-final and final as Italy fell just short in the Under-19 Euros last year. Kean marked his first start for the senior national team, this March, by becoming the youngest player to score for them in a competitive game – helping to deliver a 2-0 win over Finland – then followed up with a further goal against Liechtenstein three days later.

“Yes we Kean,” screamed the front pages of Italy’s sporting newspapers on the morning after the win over Finland – echoing Barack Obama’s famous slogan. It is too soon to know whether a teenager with 17 top-flight starts can live up to the high hopes being piled upon him. Yet it is easy to see why his presence would breed enthusiasm for Everton’s Premier League campaign.

The Guardian Sport



Injuries and Retirements Rush Germany into a New Phase of Post-Euro 2024 Rebuild

Bayer Leverkusen's German midfielder #10 Florian Wirtz reacts during the German first division Bundesliga football match between Bayer 04 Leverkusen and Holstein Kiel in Leverkusen, western Germany on October 5, 2024. (AFP) /
Bayer Leverkusen's German midfielder #10 Florian Wirtz reacts during the German first division Bundesliga football match between Bayer 04 Leverkusen and Holstein Kiel in Leverkusen, western Germany on October 5, 2024. (AFP) /
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Injuries and Retirements Rush Germany into a New Phase of Post-Euro 2024 Rebuild

Bayer Leverkusen's German midfielder #10 Florian Wirtz reacts during the German first division Bundesliga football match between Bayer 04 Leverkusen and Holstein Kiel in Leverkusen, western Germany on October 5, 2024. (AFP) /
Bayer Leverkusen's German midfielder #10 Florian Wirtz reacts during the German first division Bundesliga football match between Bayer 04 Leverkusen and Holstein Kiel in Leverkusen, western Germany on October 5, 2024. (AFP) /

Florian Wirtz is only 21 and he's already one of the most experienced players in a new-look Germany team.

As Germany switches focus to the 2026 World Cup, injuries, retirements and a short-term focus on Euro 2024 have left it with a Nations League squad that lacks international experience but isn't especially young either.

Wirtz, the star attacking midfielder from Bayer Leverkusen, is the second youngest player in the squad but also the fifth most experienced player on 25 caps, as Germany prepares to play Bosnia-Herzegovina on Friday and the Netherlands on Monday.

None of the three goalkeepers in the squad — Oliver Baumann, Alexander Nübel and Oliver Blaswich — have ever played for Germany. With Barcelona's Marc-André ter Stegen injured for months to come, one of them will have to step up.

Six of coach Julian Nagelsmann’s preferred players were unavailable with injuries as of Tuesday; Leipzig left back David Raum the latest to drop out. New faces such as Jamie Leweling, Jonny Burkardt and Tim Kleindienst are Bundesliga regulars but untested at international level.

“Though it's a shame that this time we have to do without some injured regulars who contributed through the home Euros in the summer, we're very much looking forward to seeing our new players in the team environment and in training,” coach Julian Nagelsmann said on Monday in remarks reported by dpa.

Even before Bayern's Jamal Musiala, Arsenal's Kai Havertz and West Ham's Niclas Füllkrug all dropped out injured, Germany's squad was looking threadbare after a spate of high-profile retirements following the run to the quarterfinals at Euro 2024.

Toni Kroos, Manuel Neuer, Ilkay Gündogan and Thomas Müller called time on Germany after Euro 2024, taking a combined 451 caps' worth of experience with them.

There's a wider effect, too, from the pressure Germany felt to succeed when it hosted Euro 2024.

Short-term thinking was Germany's official policy when Nagelsmann was appointed last year on a contract that ran only through to Euro 2024, and he focused on getting a misfiring group of experienced players to gel again. Nagelsmann later extended his stay through to the 2026 World Cup.

Germany can usually count on Musiala and Wirtz, two of the brightest young talents in world football, but other young players once hyped as Germany's future have yet to break through.

Borussia Dortmund's Karim Adeyemi has lacked consistency and had injury problems. Striker Youssoufa Moukoko and defender Armel Bella-Kotchap were Adeyemi's teammates at the 2022 World Cup but haven't been selected since. Progress seems to have stalled for 21-year-old forward Maximilian Beier since he joined Dortmund this season, too.

One player who'll be expected to perform against Bosnia-Herzegovina and the Netherlands is Bayern forward Serge Gnabry, back in the team after 11 months away.

In a sign of how much things have changed, Gnabry's 22 international goals mean he's scored more for Germany than everyone else in the squad put together.