Scouting

What happens when The Next Big Thing doesn't work out?

In his book, Ryan Baldi investigates the reasons why players tipped for the top don't fulfil their potential

1:00pm on Thursday 26th March 2020
By
Ryan Baldi

Ryan Baldi’s book The Next Big Thing: How Football’s Wonderkids Lose Their Way tells the stories of 15 footballers who were tipped on for the top as youngsters yet were unable to fulfil their potential.

Through exclusive interviews and insight from team-mates, coaches and expert journalists, The Next Big Thing explores the various pitfalls young footballers face.

We’ve picked out extracts on three of the players featured in The Next Big Thing to see some of the ways a promising young career can be derailed.

The Next Big Thing is on sale now – pick up a copy here.

ANDY VAN DER MEYDE

A prodigious winger emerging from Ajax’s revered academy in the late 90s and early 2000s, Van der Meyde was quick, skilful and produced a reliable end product.

Signed by Inter Milan in 2003, the Dutch international’s career and life soon began to tailspin. By the time he joined Everton in 2005, he was injury prone, out of shape and unmotivated. He retired from football at 29, after making 10 appearances for the Toffees in four years, before remaining in Liverpool on a year-long drink and drugs binge.

In this extract, Van der Meyde tells Baldi about how his marriage fell apart when his then-wife hired a private detective to uncover his affair with an exotic dancer he’d met shortly after signing for Everton.

“I woke up one morning to my phone ringing. It was my wife. She said, ‘How’s your new girlfriend?’ I said, ‘What are you talking about?’ She told me exactly what my girlfriend was wearing at that moment. I said, ‘You’re right. How the fuck do you know?’”

The detective was stood watching from an opposite apartment block, looking into the window of Van der Meyde’s secret love hideout and describing the scene to his wife.

“I thought, ‘Ok, I’ve been caught, I have to accept the consequences.’”

There were to be no second chances, no reparations or reconciliation; trust had been broken beyond repair. Van der Meyde and his wife had met in Holland. While he was a homebody with no great desire for broadening his horizons beyond the walls of the Amsterdam Arena, she, harbouring ambitions of becoming an air stewardess, could not wait to flee the country for pastures new. She’d loved Italy, the Milan life, and resolved to return with their two young children upon learning of her husband’s infidelity.

“That was the worst thing I’ve ever done in my life: I left my kids,” Van der Meyde says, instantly transported back to that moment of regret, eyes welling as he pictures the scene. “I was a real bastard.

“I was thinking, ‘What have I done?’ I was holding them before they got in the car to go to the airport, they were only three and five years old. I was crying and they were looking at me. I still remember that look: ‘Why are you crying?’

“I drove home saying, ‘What the fuck have I done?’ But the strange thing was, I was also in love with the other girl – if you’re in love, you do strange things. I left my kids for somebody else. It was my own fault. For the kids, it was such a shame.”

BEN THORNLEY

The forgotten man of the Class of ’92, many believed Thornley was the standout talent of Manchester United’s famous FA Youth Cup-winning side.

A goal-scoring winger with the habit of saving his best performances for when his team most needed him, Thornley was tipped to be an Old Trafford star.

But a catastrophic knee injury – suffered in a reserve match days before he was due to feature in an FA Cup semi-final at Wembley for United’s first team – prevented him from fulfilling his potential.

In this except from The Next Big Thing, Thorney remembers the difficult dark days of his recovery, spent in the dank physio room of United’s old training ground, the Cliff, as his Youth Cup colleagues rose to stardom.

“When all the lads are coming back for pre-season training and it’s nice outside, you’re stuck in this gym. It gets to you mentally, it’s not just physically. Because you’ll have weeks where you think, ‘Brilliant, I’m not that far away.’ Then you’ll come in the following Monday and just feel like shit: you can’t do anything, you can’t lift anything and you can’t move. It aches and you feel like you’re three stone over weight.

“You’re there first thing in the morning, doing double session because you’ve got a terrible injury and there’s loads and loads of different stuff you could be doing. Boring exercises. I have to show that I’m being professional about it. I can’t be disappearing with a cruciate knee ligament injury and having not played for a few months and not due to play for a few more. I can’t be coming in at ten o’clock and leaving and half past 12 when I’ve had my dinner. I need to be coming in at half eight in the morning, when the physio is arriving, getting on with my stuff.

“It was [difficult to stay positive], but the people that I was friends with at the time and the club that I was at, I couldn’t have been in a better place. I had mates there: I had Gaz [Gary Neville], I had Becks [David Beckham], I Had Keith Gillespie and Sav [Robbie Savage]. They were all close friends. Even though I obviously wasn’t training, they never excluded me from anything that was going on outside of training. If they went for a game of snooker, I’d always get asked; if they went for a few drinks, I’d always get asked; if they went for something to eat or to the cinema or to watch a game, I would always get asked. It wasn’t the case that I was out of sight, out of mind. And that helped.

“When you’re in that gym, that’s how it feels at times, because there’s literally no one else there and the sun’s shining outside – it was the one time you wanted it to piss down in pre-season so you weren’t that hot. You were stuck in a gym indoors, but you knew that you had to be.”

GIULIANO MAIORANA

Plucked from non-league obscurity with 10th-tier Histon in 1988, teenage winger Maiorana was thrust straight into the Manchester United first team. Despite a dazzling performance against soon-to-be champions Arsenal, the skilful left-footer felt ostracised by Sir Alex Ferguson and was banished to the reserves before a serious knee injury effectively ended his top-level career.

In this extract from The Next Big Thing, Maiorana details the harsh treatment Ferguson subjected him to.

“Once, when we beat Leicester [reserves] 4-1 – I’d scored one, set one up and hit the post – [Leicester manager] David Pleat gave me a pat on the back after the game: ‘Fucking superb tonight, son. Brilliant.’ I walked into the changing room and everyone was saying the same. Ferguson walked in: ‘Well done, boys. Everyone can have the day off tomorrow, except you, Maiorana. You’re going to come in and run your fucking bollocks off.’ [Reserve-team manager] Brian Whitehouse looked at Ferguson and just turned around; he was gutted. Darren Ferguson had his head in his hands.

“And other things happened, at dos and events. I was wearing an £800 suit, which I’d got cheap from the shop I used to work at, and a pair of £140 shoes, which I’d got cheap as well. I had a waistcoat on, a shirt. I was stood talking to somebody when Ferguson walked past and said, ‘Look at the state of you. You’ve always got to be fucking different.’ I said to Darren, ‘What the fuck is up with your dad?’ And there was a YTS player sat there with a blazer on, with a polo shirt and no tie, but he didn’t say anything to him.

“How can they treat youngsters like that? If you don’t like somebody, be a gentleman about it: shake his hand and say, ‘Sorry, we don’t want you here.’ Don’t do what they did to me. It’s morally wrong.”

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