This is why we need to enjoy Rayan Cherki for what he is. His football is joyous - full of risk, imagination and that street learned instinct you just don’t see much of anymore in today's game. He plays like a kid still trying to nutmeg his mates with a tennis ball on his local boggy park, not someone drilled endlessly on a pristine academy pitch, or under the glare of tactics boards and video analysis. That kind of creativity feels so rare nowadays, and it’s why watching him is such good fun!
That’s the bigger point really. Academies produce great athletes and technically polished players, but the downside is that we lose a lot of that raw unpredictability. Cherki feels like a throwback, and someone who plays with freedom, who tries things simply because he can. And in a football culture that often crushes that kind of expression, it makes him stand out even more because players like him have become rarer and rarer.
Of course, people will debate whether he’ll "make it," hit certain numbers, or reach the levels expected of him. But maybe that’s missing the point. Players like Cherki remind us that football isn’t just about goal involvements, efficiency or end product – it’s about expression, imagination, and moments that make you smile whilst watching the game. However his career unfolds, we should just appreciate that he brings a bit of joy back into the modern game. And for all his flaws, the Joy he brings with those flicks and tricks is enough to make me believe Football's soul is still alive, like it was in the 90's, early 2000's.