Covjek je rek'o kako jest (iz Guardian:
Benoît Assou-Ekotto: 'I play for the money. Football's not my
passion'
If there is one thing guaranteed to vex Benoît Assou-Ekotto, it is
hypocrisy. The trouble is, as the Tottenham Hotspur defender
acknowledges, his working environment, the parallel universe that is
the Premier League,
is bogged down in the stuff. It is evident in so many areas but the one
that he chooses to highlight involves the interviews that players give
to television. Assou-Ekotto has seen it time and time again. Players
that he knows to express one view in private, usually strident and
expletive-laden, switch to bland when the camera rolls.
"I say:
'Come on, you have two personalities?'" Assou-Ekotto says. "I can't
listen to people when they speak like that. I know that they lie, and I
hate lies. Me, I am not like that. I am honest all of the time, although
the truth is not always good to say."
Assou-Ekotto is the
top-level footballer who cuts through the hypocrisy to break what his
peers may consider as taboos. The Premier League, he feels, is a shallow
and bizarre world, in which friendships are transitory and the
hangers-on, particularly the kiss-and-tell girls, are dangerous. He says
what plenty of people think. But it is when he discusses his motivation
for being a professional that his honesty hits home. To him, football
is little more than a job and the driving force has always been the
money.
"If I play football with my friends back in France, I can
love football," he says. "But if I come to England, where I knew nobody
and I didn't speak English … why did I come here? For a job. A career is
only 10, 15 years. It's only a job. Yes, it's a good, good job and I
don't say that I hate football but it's not my passion.
"I arrive
in the morning at the training ground at 10.30 and I start to be
professional. I finish at one o'clock and I don't play football
afterwards. When I am at work, I do my job 100%. But after, I am like a
tourist in London. I have my Oyster card and I take the tube. I eat.
"I
don't understand why everybody lies. The president of my former club
Lens, Gervais Martel, said I left because I got more money in England,
that I didn't care about the shirt. I said: 'Is there one player in the
world who signs for a club and says, Oh, I love your shirt?' Your shirt
is red. I love it. He doesn't care. The first thing that you speak about
is the money.
"Martel said I go to England for the money but why
do players come to his club? Because they look nice? All people,
everyone, when they go to a job, it's for the money. So I don't
understand why, when I said I play for the money, people were shocked.
Oh, he's a mercenary. Every player is like that."
Assou-Ekotto
describes life in the Premier League as following the plot lines to a
film. "You read the paper, it's like a movie," he says. The 26-year-old
is referring to the more scurrilous stories on the news pages. "Very
bizarre … only in England. That's why football is not my passion because
when you are professional, the world of football is not good. There are
people around you only because you play football; the girls, the same. I
have my girlfriend, who I met when I was 18, 19, and I do not want to
lose her because when you are a footballer it's not good to meet a new
girl at 26."
What of his relationship with Tottenham team-mates?
"I have a good feeling with [Aaron] Lennon and [Jermain] Defoe, more
these two players but I have a feeling with everybody. I have a problem
with nobody. But I have nobody on the phone, except [Adel] Taarabt, who
is on loan at QPR and I know from Lens. I only call him. I don't call
footballers in my team. I don't believe in friendships in football."
Assou-Ekotto's
father, David, introduced him to the game. He had come from Cameroon to France as a 16-year-old to
play professionally for Nice and when later he became the coach of
Roclincourt & Beaurin, an amateur team, Assou-Ekotto followed them
every weekend. It was as much the fear, however, of a modestly paid life
within the four walls of an office that drove him to make the
sacrifices to become a footballer.
"I knew for a fact that I
didn't like school and I also knew that I didn't want to work in an
office where I would be paid €1,500-a-month and, at the end of my
career, be able to buy a little suburban apartment or something," he
says. "Where it became definitive for me was at 16, when I was expelled
from school because I was no longer paying attention. I had nothing to
fall back on and this forms part of my attitude to football. I give it
my very best, being as efficient and professional as possible, because
it's all that I have."
Assou-Ekotto argues that his attitude to
the job ought not to concern Tottenham's fans because he always switches
on his total commitment in matches and training. "Whatever attitude you
bring to it, it doesn't matter as long as you are 100% professional,
the coach can say: 'He is good enough,' and you are prepared to lose a
tooth or an eye for the club, which I am," he says.
Assou-Ekotto
has thrived under Harry Redknapp but things were more difficult under
previous Tottenham managers Martin Jol and Juande Ramos, with whom he
had problems. He also lost any respect for Damien Comolli, the club's
ex-sporting director, who brought him from Lens in June 2006.
"Comolli,
oh la la, la la," Assou-Ekotto says, having let out a long, low
whistle. "I have one simple rule; try to be a man all your life. I said
to Comolli that I had a problem with Jol but he said it was all in my
head. But then, after Jol left, he said: 'Yes, there was a problem.' Try
to be a man!
"With Jol, he had a hierarchy within the team,
everybody didn't have the same starting point. He also said to me that I
didn't smile a lot. Ramos was always picking little fights. He told me
that I was too aggressive in training. I said, 'We don't do tennis, we
play football. You think that we are in Spain but we are in England, my
friend'.
"With Harry, it's cool. We don't speak a lot and he
doesn't care if I smile or if I know who the next team we play is. If I
do my job well, it's OK. He is doing simple things that the previous two
managers couldn't even think of. He is straightforward and he doesn't
play games."
Assou-Ekotto is beginning to look ahead to the World
Cup finals with Cameroon. Although he was born in France and has a
French mother, there has never been any issue over his allegiance. Like
many young people in France born to an immigrant parent or parents, he
feels that "the country does not want us to be part of this new France.
So we identify ourselves more with our roots.
"Me playing for
Cameroon was a natural and normal thing. I have no feeling for the
France national team; it just doesn't exist. When people ask of my
generation in France, 'Where are you from?', they will reply Morocco,
Algeria, Cameroon or wherever. But what has amazed me in England is that
when I ask the same question of people like Lennon and Defoe, they'll
say: 'I'm English.' That's one of the things that I love about life
here."
Before South Africa Assou-Ekotto is on the brink of history
with Tottenham. They entertain Bolton Wanderers this afternoon, with a
place in next season's Champions League within their grasp. "It would be
good for the team, the club and the supporters … they'd enjoy it," he
says. "But for me, it would be just another set of games. When we play
Liverpool and Chelsea, it's like the Champions League anyway so for me
…"
Assou-Ekotto shrugs. It is only a job.
“Kam hit this tight end SO HARD, I swear I saw that TE’s soul leave Qwest Field right on that 35 yard line.”