The Enigma of Memphis Depay, a Man Who Dares You to Misunderstand Him

Memphis Depay in Champions League action for Lyon; in France he is known as their captain and talisman. Photograph: Jan Woitas/dpa-Zentralbild/DPA/PA Images
Memphis Depay in Champions League action for Lyon; in France he is known as their captain and talisman. Photograph: Jan Woitas/dpa-Zentralbild/DPA/PA Images
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The Enigma of Memphis Depay, a Man Who Dares You to Misunderstand Him

Memphis Depay in Champions League action for Lyon; in France he is known as their captain and talisman. Photograph: Jan Woitas/dpa-Zentralbild/DPA/PA Images
Memphis Depay in Champions League action for Lyon; in France he is known as their captain and talisman. Photograph: Jan Woitas/dpa-Zentralbild/DPA/PA Images

The longer you spend exploring the strange and spellbinding world of Memphis Depay, the brilliant 26-year-old Lyon forward, the more you find and the less you understand.

Does it matter, for example, that he is partial to the odd cigar, and keeps several boxes in the house? That he has almost 10 million Instagram followers, films rap videos in his spare time, gets his hair cut every week? That during lockdown, he earned the wrath of animal rights groups by posing for photographs with a baby liger? That he failed at Manchester United?

In other words: which of the multitude of extraordinary tales swirling around Depay are relevant, and which are just noise?

Often we like to compartmentalize the actions of footballers into the “on-field” and the “off-field”: the essential and the extraneous, the part that matters, and the part that doesn’t. But this is a distinction that is harder to make for Depay, a man whose feats and foibles seem to spring from the same howling instinct: an urge to express himself.

You can see it everywhere: from the flair and risk in his game to the brassy social media persona, from his rhymes (sample lyric: “Catch a vibe in Paris, young king living lavish, back in Lyon going savage, they be waiting for hat-tricks”) to his deadly finishing. There’s a story from one of his early outings with the Dutch national team, when he humiliates Robin van Persie with a flamboyant stepover during a training game. “Who do you think you are?” a furious van Persie screams at the young winger. “You’re nothing!”

Later that day, Depay is sitting in his hotel room, distraught and despondent, when there’s a knock on the door. “I was sitting on the loo,” Depay remembers in his autobiography, Heart of a Lion (yes: he’s written a book, and a compulsively honest one at that, despite its vaguely Partridge-esque tone). “Although I wasn’t actually finished, I quickly wiped my bum, ran out of the bathroom, opened the door, and sure enough: Robin. He’d come to apologize.” The reader is left to speculate whether their rapprochement was sealed with a handshake.

This is the enigma of Depay, a man who through his many complexities and contradictions, his heartfelt no-filter delivery, almost dares you to misunderstand him. In the Netherlands they know him as the brazen tearaway whose talent may finally be catching up with his prodigious ego. In France they know him as Lyon’s captain and talisman, dragging a maladjusted club to their first Champions League quarter-final in a decade. In England, meanwhile, Depay is still best remembered as the “United reject”, a misfiring winger who encapsulated the wasteful anemia of the Louis van Gaal years.

Depay arrived at United from PSV in 2015, the same summer Van Persie left: a symbol of renewal and rebirth, inheriting the No 7 shirt worn by Best, Cantona, Ronaldo. But Van Gaal’s stilted, structured machine offered little scope for expression, and as he drifted out of first-team contention under José Mourinho, life took on a darker hue. Isolated from his entourage and his mother, he would spend his days confined to the mansion he had rented from Phil Neville, his nights driving listlessly around the Manchester countryside. One day, returning home from another game he had watched from the stands, he finally snapped. Out of nowhere he started screaming, lashing out, hurling objects around his kitchen in a blind rage.

It was the wake-up call he needed. Adrift, alone, stripped not just of his professional dignity but his simple enjoyment of the game, Depay left United in early 2017, resolving to choose his next move with utmost care. He hired an analytics company called SciSports to find him a club that matched his specifications: a quick attacking style, the freedom to roam without too many defensive duties, and a vacancy at left-wing. Lyon fitted the bill, and in a freer attacking role the goals have begun to flow: 53 in 135 games, forming productive partnerships first with Nabil Fekir and more recently Moussa Dembélé and Bertrand Traoré.

A cruciate injury in December threatened to derail his season, putting him out of Euro 2020 into the bargain. In his absence Lyon struggled, limping to seventh place in Ligue 1. But the pandemic has come to Depay’s rescue, giving him time to regain fitness and return to Rudi Garcia’s side as the attacking spearhead in a 3-5-2 formation. It was his goal that eliminated Juventus in the last 16, an outrageous Panenka penalty that sealed victory on away goals. “Playing with him and without him,” Garcia observes, “are not the same thing.” On Saturday night they face Manchester City in the quarter-finals.

Perhaps in Depay’s jarring fall and stirring rise lies a salutary antidote to a game of sharp, sweeping judgments. It’s easy to forget that he was 21 when he arrived at United and 22 when he left: written off, sold for scrap, assailed by snide jibes about his spending, his lifestyle and appearance. To this day his affectations and side hustles, his ostentatious displays of wealth, his unswerving determination to do whatever the hell he wants, continue to make him a magnet for criticism. And if, as rumored, he eventually joins one of Europe’s biggest clubs, you wonder how his fierce individuality and brazen expressiveness will fit into a sport becoming ever more rigidly systematized at its elite end.

But zoom out a little and the real story here is one of overwhelming triumph against the odds. After being abandoned by his father, he and his mother were subjected to prolonged abuse by his new step-family. The most harrowing passages of his book are those where he lucidly recalls the beatings he received, the breaking glass, the doors being kicked down. “I started to find it almost normal to get hit,” he writes. He dealt soft drugs and was expelled from multiple schools. Bullied into silence, he sought expression through other outlets. Music allowed him to articulate his emotions in a way real life could not. And football would be his helicopter out of misery.

And so, when you have come this far, why stop now? Why limit yourself to Lyon, to football, to one career, to one view of the world? Depay wants it all. He wants to exalt the glory of God and help the deaf and blind children of Ghana, and he wants to pose on his yacht in a £20,000 jacket. He wants the lion tattoo on his back and the real thing on his shoulder. He wants the Champions League, the big move, the accolades, the money in the bank, the album, the book, the film, the fame. It all matters. Or nothing does.

(The Guardian)



Leverkusen Sign Former Real Madrid Defender Vazquez

12 December 2023, Berlin: Real Madrid's Lucas Vazquez in action during the 2023 UEFA Champions League Group C soccer match between 1. FC Union Berlin and Real Madrid at the Olympic stadium in Berlin. (dpa)
12 December 2023, Berlin: Real Madrid's Lucas Vazquez in action during the 2023 UEFA Champions League Group C soccer match between 1. FC Union Berlin and Real Madrid at the Olympic stadium in Berlin. (dpa)
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Leverkusen Sign Former Real Madrid Defender Vazquez

12 December 2023, Berlin: Real Madrid's Lucas Vazquez in action during the 2023 UEFA Champions League Group C soccer match between 1. FC Union Berlin and Real Madrid at the Olympic stadium in Berlin. (dpa)
12 December 2023, Berlin: Real Madrid's Lucas Vazquez in action during the 2023 UEFA Champions League Group C soccer match between 1. FC Union Berlin and Real Madrid at the Olympic stadium in Berlin. (dpa)

Former Real Madrid right back Lucas Vazquez has joined Bayer Leverkusen until 2027, the German club announced on Tuesday.

The five-time Champions League winner joins on a free transfer, having been a free agent since his Madrid contract expired in the summer.

The 34-year-old completed a medical in Madrid and is in line to play in Leverkusen's next match, away at Werder Bremen on Saturday.

In a statement, Vazquez said he was "looking forward to continuing my career at Leverkusen".

Vazquez revealed former Leverkusen coach and current Real manager Xabi Alonso and one-time Leverkusen player Dani Carvajal, who is now at Madrid, helped convince him to join the German side.

"With Lucas Vazquez we are signing an extremely experienced player who has won everything there was to win with Real Madrid over the past ten years," said Leverkusen sporting director Simon Rolfes, adding the newcomer would become "a pillar" of the side.

Leverkusen were looking for a right-back after Jeremie Frimpong's move to Liverpool at the end of last season.

Other than a short stint at Espanyol, Vazquez spent his entire career with Real Madrid, winning four La Liga titles.

Trent Alexander-Arnold's arrival at Real meant Vazquez fell lower in the pecking order at right back, but the nine-time capped Spanish player wanted to continue his career.

Unbeaten domestic double winners two seasons ago, Leverkusen have undergone a complete rebuild this summer, with several key players leaving the club.

Florian Wirtz, Granit Xhaka and Frimpong have all left for the Premier League, Jonathan Tah joined league rivals Bayern Munich and coach Xabi Alonso moved to Real Madrid.


Gordon Sorry for Reckless Tackle on Van Dijk and Says His ‘Intentions Were Pure’ 

Newcastle's Anthony Gordon checks on Liverpool's Virgil van Dijk during the Premier League soccer match between Newcastle and Liverpool in Newcastle, England, Monday, Aug. 25, 2025. (AP)
Newcastle's Anthony Gordon checks on Liverpool's Virgil van Dijk during the Premier League soccer match between Newcastle and Liverpool in Newcastle, England, Monday, Aug. 25, 2025. (AP)
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Gordon Sorry for Reckless Tackle on Van Dijk and Says His ‘Intentions Were Pure’ 

Newcastle's Anthony Gordon checks on Liverpool's Virgil van Dijk during the Premier League soccer match between Newcastle and Liverpool in Newcastle, England, Monday, Aug. 25, 2025. (AP)
Newcastle's Anthony Gordon checks on Liverpool's Virgil van Dijk during the Premier League soccer match between Newcastle and Liverpool in Newcastle, England, Monday, Aug. 25, 2025. (AP)

Newcastle forward Anthony Gordon has apologized to Virgil van Dijk for a reckless challenge on the Liverpool captain that earned a red card, saying he was “trying to create energy” in a wild Premier League game between the teams.

A fired-up Gordon sprinted toward Van Dijk and lunged into the center back with an out-of-control tackle that left a visible scrape down Van Dijk's right calf and the Netherlands international in a heap on the ground with his sock down to his ankle.

Having initially been given a yellow card, Gordon saw the punishment upgraded to a red card following a VAR review. The score was 1-0 to Liverpool at the time and the visitors ran out a 3-2 winner Monday thanks to a goal in the 10th minute of stoppage time by 16-year-old substitute Rio Ngumoha.

Gordon took to Instagram on Tuesday to say sorry for the tackle and that his “intentions were pure.”

“I was just trying to create energy in the game and I mistimed the tackle,” Gordon said. “I also want to apologize to Virgil. I would never intend to tackle somebody like this on purpose. We spoke after and he knows that.”

Van Dijk and Gordon talked to each other while referee Simon Hooper viewed the incident on a pitch-side monitor before awarding a red card.

“I said to him if that’s not a sending-off, I don’t understand football,” Van Dijk said. “Unfortunately, these things happen in football. If he meant it or not, it happened. We move on.”

For Gordon, it was a second red card in six months.

“I'll be back and better, the same as every other setback I've ever faced,” he wrote.

Gordon will be suspended for the next three domestic games.

He has been filling in as Newcastle's striker in the absence of Alexander Isak, who has said he wants to leave the club and isn't training with the main squad at the moment amid reported interest from Liverpool. It meant there was a hostile atmosphere at St. James' Park during Monday's game.


Slot Hails Liverpool’s Mentality After Win at Newcastle 

Rio Ngumoha of Liverpool celebrates with Liverpool manager Arne Slot after the English Premier League soccer match between Newcastle United and Liverpool FC, in Newcastle, Britain, 25 August 2025. (EPA)
Rio Ngumoha of Liverpool celebrates with Liverpool manager Arne Slot after the English Premier League soccer match between Newcastle United and Liverpool FC, in Newcastle, Britain, 25 August 2025. (EPA)
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Slot Hails Liverpool’s Mentality After Win at Newcastle 

Rio Ngumoha of Liverpool celebrates with Liverpool manager Arne Slot after the English Premier League soccer match between Newcastle United and Liverpool FC, in Newcastle, Britain, 25 August 2025. (EPA)
Rio Ngumoha of Liverpool celebrates with Liverpool manager Arne Slot after the English Premier League soccer match between Newcastle United and Liverpool FC, in Newcastle, Britain, 25 August 2025. (EPA)

Liverpool manager Arne Slot praised his players' mental fortitude after their 3-2 victory at Newcastle United on Monday, saying his team had shown the kind of mentality needed to get results in difficult places.

With the match unfolding in the shadow of Newcastle's dispute with striker Alexander Isak, who was reportedly the subject of a 110 million pounds ($148.60 million) bid from Liverpool this month, the Premier League champions endured a roller-coaster evening at a white-hot St James' Park.

Liverpool squandered a two-goal lead against a Newcastle side reduced to 10 men following Anthony Gordon's first-half red card, but were rescued by a 100th-minute winner from 16-year-old Rio Ngumoha.

"Winning away at Newcastle then you definitely need to have quality, especially in an atmosphere like this," the Dutchman told reporters. "Not football quality because that's not what we showed today — apart from the last goal we scored.

"That looked a little bit like what I see on a daily basis on the training ground. But to have the mentality to fight here in such a hostile stadium, that is definitely something you also need if you want to compete in the end.

"Winning is something else but at least competing you definitely need to have this mentality — and that's what we showed."