Kevin-prince boateng

18 min read

“I left Portsmouth to join Milan – do you know what I thought? ‘You f**king idiot. If you hadn’t been so lazy as a youngster…’”

Interview Paul Wilkes

YOU ASK THE QUESTIONS

CLUBS 2005-07 Hertha Berlin 2007-09 Tottenham 2009 Borussia Dortmund (loan) 2009-10 Portsmouth 2010-13 Milan 2013-15 Schalke 2016 Milan 2016-17 Las Palmas 2017-18 Eintracht Frankfurt 2018-19 Sassuolo 2019 Barcelona (loan) 2019-20 Fiorentina 2020 Besiktas (loan) 2020-21 Monza 2021- Hertha Berlin
COUNTRY 2010-14 Ghana

K evin-Prince Boateng arrives for his interview with FourFourTwo having just played one of his Hertha team-mates at table tennis. “Did you win?” we ask. “Of course,” he replies, wearing a wry smile. That natural self-confidence hasn’t dimmed in his final season as a professional.

At 35 years of age, Boateng feels he still has another chapter to write in his story. That’s not to say he has regrets, however, after a playing career that’s taken the midfielder to a dozen clubs across Europe’s four biggest leagues, from the giants of Barcelona and Milan to a pair of hipsters’ favourites in Sassuolo and Las Palmas. Now it ends where it all began as a seven-year-old, in the blue half of Berlin.

Boateng has been drawn to some of football’s most colourful characters in his time, be it Harry Redknapp or Mario Balotelli, but he has no interest whatsoever in rehashing the same old lines and anecdotes from interviews immemorial. Tales of misdemeanours, spending sprees and infamous nights out as a brash, young player represent just a small fraction of his remarkable career in the game.

Today, the former Tottenham and Portsmouth upstart appears fully at ease with himself, declaring himself very impressed by the St George’s Park facilities in Staffordshire – this is his first visit – and remaining relaxed even when a hot espresso nearly lands in his lap. Crisis averted, he is in good spirits to tackle your questions…

How would you describe your early career in the youth setups at Hertha Berlin [below] and Germany? I saw you in the 2005 European Under-19 Championship in Northern Ireland, and you were brilliant.

sunsetsinmyhair, via Instagram Without wanting to sound arrogant, I was without doubt one of the biggest talents in Europe. But I was lazy! I just let my talent do the work. Achilles was perfect but he had a bad Achilles, and I was great but a lazy little boy! That’s the biggest regret from my youth days: I didn’t push myself, or have anyone to push me. I’ve had a brilliant career but I definitely could have done more, on the bigger stage, for a longer time. But I learned a lot and now I can give





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