Preparing Players for Life After Football Should Begin Before the Final Whistle

 David Villa is seeing out his last playing days in Japan with Vissel Kobe and will concentrate on a football club he has founded in New York City. Photograph: Zhizhao Wu/Getty Images
David Villa is seeing out his last playing days in Japan with Vissel Kobe and will concentrate on a football club he has founded in New York City. Photograph: Zhizhao Wu/Getty Images
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Preparing Players for Life After Football Should Begin Before the Final Whistle

 David Villa is seeing out his last playing days in Japan with Vissel Kobe and will concentrate on a football club he has founded in New York City. Photograph: Zhizhao Wu/Getty Images
David Villa is seeing out his last playing days in Japan with Vissel Kobe and will concentrate on a football club he has founded in New York City. Photograph: Zhizhao Wu/Getty Images

“Iprefer to leave football before football leaves me,” David Villa said this week. Spain’s all-time top scorer once claimed he would play until he was 55 if he could. In the end he will make it to 38. For the past six seasons Villa has signed annual deals, delaying the inevitable, competitive as ever, but no more: he has announced his retirement. Over 19 years he has scored 390 goals and played 716 games; he has four left. Five, if Vissel Kobe reach the Japanese cup final. And then he will lead a new football club, founded in Queens, New York.

Villa has prepared for retirement. “There are things I couldn’t give time to before; I can now,” he said. “It’s going to be fun, that’s the most important thing.” He has things to do for sure. And that, the former player, coach and director Jorge Valdano tells the Observer, is vital. “If I gave one piece of advice to a player retiring tomorrow, I’d say: ‘When you wake up, have something to do,’” he says. “Something, anything. It doesn’t matter what. Anything that helps you feel useful. Because the worst thing is the void.”

Some days Damian Duff would go and play, alone. “I feel a bit of a weirdo doing it [but] I went to the local Astropark for a little five-a-side, a kickabout on my own,” he told Graham Hunter’s Big Interview. “I’ll go and kick the ball against the wall for 10 minutes. Get my dose.” Zinedine Zidane said after retiring: “I miss the adrenaline but not the rest,” yet the advisory role he had was already starting to feel empty, which is why he coached.

Eric Cantona retired at 30. “I was young [enough] to return to play and I didn’t want to,” he says. “To avoid that temptation, I didn’t watch football for years. It’s like a drug and a dealer: if your dealer’s next to you, it’s harder. Sport is a drug. Your body misses the adrenaline. Physiologically it’s difficult to stop, then it becomes psychologically very difficult.” Is there another drug? “Yes, having another passion.”

For Cantona that was acting but it could not be as big as football – “an obsession” – and some never find anything else. “Some players, when they no longer play, feel they don’t exist,” he says.

It is not only football that leaves you; it is everything, a part of you. Valdano says: “Footballers never talk about the end of their careers, for the same reason human beings don’t talk about death: it frightens them."

Retirement from any job can provoke loss, a lack of identity. Elite sport exacerbates that, so complete is the dedication, and unlike many jobs football is one workers love – “you play a game for living, which is a way of prolonging your childhood‚” Valdano says – and which constructs a community perhaps no occupation can match. It is a world in which players do little for themselves, and one that ends early, with years ahead of them. For some it is sudden, a shock. Often they are unprepared.

It is said that sportspeople die twice, the first time on retirement. And that death is the harder, the Brazilian footballer Falcão once remarked, because it is the one you have to live with for the rest of your life.

“I was trying to process the fact that I was never going to play again and I couldn’t,” Clarke Carlisle explains in his documentary on mental health. “Because that was me, I was Clarke The Footballer. I couldn’t see the reason anybody would be proud of me. I’m going to take all these pills and kill myself because now without football they’re going to see me for what I am – and that was nothing. I sat on the bench, popped the pills and waited for it to happen. What a fucking idiot.”

Quite apart from the physical impact – a FifPro study found that 34% of former players over 40 have osteoarthritis – there is a mental issue. A 2018 State of Sport survey found half of former professional athletes have mental wellbeing concerns, retirement bringing a sense of “loss” and “regret”. “It’s not unusual for players to speak of feelings of mourning and grief,” said Simon Taylor from the Professional Players’ Federation.

Other research suggested that two fifths of footballers were bankrupt within five years and a third had divorced inside a year. “There can be a loss of material resources but perhaps hardest are the symbolic resources,” says Dr David Lavallee from Abertay University. “The stronger and more exclusive the identification with the role of footballer, the greater risk of retirement-related problems.”

FifPro has developed a health programme to help players adapt. The PFA has a 24-hour helpline and more than a hundred counsellors and a mental health action plan through which 438 players accessed therapy last year. The PFA welfare officer, Michael Bennett, a former player, says the stats can be shocking. “The perception is of a Premier League player with money, who shouldn’t have issues, but it’s a fallacy,” he says. “There’s a structure they lose and self-identity is the big issue. You leave the game and ask: ‘Who am I?’”

Steve Nicol’s experience tentatively suggests emotional security in economic insecurity. He kept playing, went down the divisions, segued into coaching – because he had to. “I was lucky: I never really left a ‘dressing room’,” he says. Bennett adds: “That community element is big: the thing players always say they miss is team spirit. It’s like you live in a big house with others where you have everything, then one day they kick you out. You don’t know what to do. You’re afraid, alone.”

The shock can be dislocating; it is a whole new world out there, which they have never been prepared for. “The thing that can diminish the impact is to change the paradigm,” Valdano says. “Clubs need to prepare the footballer for retirement before he begins his career, and that means studies. But in football everything can wait except Sunday’s game.”

Bennett adds: “Some clubs are fantastic, some aren’t. At the PFA we run four transitional events each year, inviting players to participate. They write CVs, learn transferable skills, work with companies. Rather than retirement, as such, it’s transition [out of the game]: some transition at 16, 18, 21, 27, later. We do workshops at clubs with the U18s, the U23s and the senior squad. It’s called ‘take control’: it’s down to them, too. If you worked at Zara, would they look after you after they left? They wouldn’t. But football clubs are asked to do that. That’s what the PFA is for.”

Many clubs discreetly assist former footballers. Liverpool have a forum for former players and Spurs employ them throughout the club, guiding them into new lives and providing roles. There is an alma mater ethos at Spurs’ academy aimed at preparing players not only for football but for life after football, echoing Valdano’s idea.

At Madrid Valdano moved youth-teamers into a boarding school, keen to educate them for the “real world”. Now he is setting up an online university course. The first class addresses this issue, one that has long occupied his thoughts, encapsulated in his perception that there are two types of players the game cares too little for: future footballers and former footballers. He is calling the session The Day After. And that day is just the start; thousands more follow. “I’m a bit old for football but I’m young for life,” David Villa said.

The Guardian Sport



Mbappe Can Launch Madrid Career in First Clasico

Kylian Mbappe is yet to look fully at home at Real Madrid since his arrival from PSG - AFP
Kylian Mbappe is yet to look fully at home at Real Madrid since his arrival from PSG - AFP
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Mbappe Can Launch Madrid Career in First Clasico

Kylian Mbappe is yet to look fully at home at Real Madrid since his arrival from PSG - AFP
Kylian Mbappe is yet to look fully at home at Real Madrid since his arrival from PSG - AFP

Kylian Mbappe's start at Real Madrid has been satisfactory, his performances neither spectacular nor underwhelming, but Saturday's La Liga Clasico offers the French superstar a springboard to kick on from.

The derby clash against league leaders Barcelona is the kind of fixture where contributing to a victory can bank him both credit and time, as he continues to adapt to life in the Spanish capital following his move in June from Paris Saint-Germain, AFP reported.

Mbappe completed a "dream" switch to Madrid from PSG after years of failed attempts by the Spanish champions to lure him to La Liga.

The 25-year-old forward has scored eight times in 13 matches across all competitions but does not seem fully at home in the team, as coach Carlo Ancelotti continues to search for the best way to accommodate him.

Should he score against Barcelona and help Real Madrid match the Catalans' all-time tally of 43 consecutive La Liga matches without defeat, everything will feel easier for the striker.

"We are satisfied with him, because he's scored goals," Ancelotti told reporters Friday.

"I think he is gradually getting closer to his best level, but we are in no hurry, neither the staff nor him.

"Obviously, he will continue to improve, because he has all the qualities to do so."

Jude Bellingham created the blueprint for Mbappe last season, netting twice on his Clasico debut to snatch Madrid the game, and also scored a last-minute Bernabeu winner in the second league clash against Barcelona.

"(In Mbappe) we have a striker that can score 30, 35, 40 goals," said Ancelotti, as he took goalscoring responsibilities away from Bellingham, who is playing deeper in midfield this season.

The coach also said this week he would rather Mbappe "scores goals than presses", again highlighting his hopes that the Frenchman will increase his attacking output.

Mbappe has six goals in La Liga -- by contrast Barcelona striker Robert Lewandowski leads the scoring charts with 12, with the Catalans holding a three-point lead over Madrid at the top.

In midweek Real Madrid came from two goals down to thrash Borussia Dortmund 5-2 in the Champions League but Mbappe was not on the scoresheet.

The forward did help create a goal for Antonio Rudiger and looked sharp, but it was his strike partner Vinicius Junior who did the damage with a stunning hat-trick.

Mbappe, who said earlier in the season he would like to score 50 goals for Madrid, could not find the net in the kind of devastating Champions League comeback which made Madrid such an appealing destination.

The past few weeks have been problematic for the forward away from the pitch.

According to reports in Sweden, Mbappe is the subject of a rape investigation following a visit to Stockholm earlier this month, although Swedish authorities have not named him.

Mbappe has dismissed the reports as "fake news" and his lawyer told AFP the player would sue for libel.

He is involved in a wrangle with PSG over 55 million euros ($59.5 million) of back pay which the French club is refusing to pay, while he drew criticism for not appearing in France's recent Nations League games after recovering from a thigh injury.

The Clasico will not make Mbappe's problems go away but a dazzling performance would put his name back in the headlines for the right reasons.

Mbappe starts in the middle for Madrid although often drifts to his favoured left side, swapping positions with Vinicius.

"How Mbappe arrives at the Clasico -- much ado about nothing," ran a headline in Barcelona-based newspaper Mundo Deportivo on Friday.

The forward can shut mouths in Catalonia if he adds to his tally of six goals in four matches against Barcelona, all in the Champions League for PSG.

If in the past the Clasico was watched by more than half a billion viewers, hooked by Madrid great Cristiano Ronaldo's battles with Barcelona icon Lionel Messi, perhaps Mbappe and Barca's teen star Lamine Yamal will come to define the next era of the clash.

For now Mbappe would settle for a good performance and result to paper over the cracks while he continues to settle at Madrid, and Madrid's team settles around him.