The Everton midfielder has long been a closed book but the reveal of past troubles kicked open the window to his soul

Dele Alli smiles, his features soften and there is a nervous little laugh. He does this a lot. It is one of his defence mechanisms, a way of pushing back at all the hurt. He knows that now.

Gary Neville is interviewing him for The Overlap and has just asked about his childhood. “I think there were a few incidents that can give you a kind of brief understanding,” Dele says, and there is a pause, an internal struggle – of the type he has wrestled with throughout his life. And then Dele kicks open the window to his soul.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Two young boys in the heart of LA gangland: Merrick Morton’s best photograph

‘I’ve taken shots of people pointing their guns at me – and…

Dan Wootton leaves GB News to set up own ‘independent platform’

Suspended broadcaster accused Ofcom of censorship after watchdog ruled his show had…

The New Covid Vacation? Moving Abroad

THE COVID-19 pandemic squashed countless dreams around the world. But it also…

Contest launched to decipher Herculaneum scrolls using 3D X-ray software

Global research teams who can improve AI and accelerate decoding could win…