The Curious Case of Dele Alli | Emotional Overlap interview (p 19)

Interview with Dele

Its honest and frank and might answer a few questions.......

As ever,you never know whats happening in a persons head or behind closed doors.

Fair play to Neville for his handling of it too.


That leg touch is fucking creepy. Hope they guy gets better, all that shit to have lived through and the added crap of social media attacking him, must be awful.
 
That leg touch is fucking creepy. Hope they guy gets better, all that shit to have lived through and the added crap of social media attacking him, must be awful.

Explains a lot

Never been a fan but can empathise on some if what he's said , having attempted to end my life twice , once tour in that place its a hard crawl back out

Amount of shit they must deal with day in day out , no one knows what's going on in someone's head

Reminds me of a time when I had lost my sister, I was only 23 , a week after she had died I had to go into town, as I walked up the high street a big issue seller shouted " smile you miserable sod "

Literally every once of me wanted to batter him....
 
Credit to him for openly talking about his struggles, even if it was apparently forced by the gutter press. That wouldn’t have been easy.

I will say, though, based on things I have read, seen, and heard about his behaviour over the last few years, I think a few may be giving him a bit too much leniency. That is not to say empathy is in order for the hardships he has endured or that they don’t in some way explain some of his behaviour. As others have said—and I have I stated many times—you never know what is going on in another person’s head. Mental illness can cause all manner of oddities when observing from the outside. And he should be given support in his attempts to gain control and better his life.

But that doesn’t excuse a person of all responsibility for their decisions and actions.

He and I had a somewhat similar childhood, unfortunately, but had obviously different paths in adulthood that lead to different issues. We both have mental health disorders (and attempted suicide), though, I have been able to avoid addiction, apart from some behaviours with OCD. Who knows if that would have been the case had I been suddenly thrust in to the world of global celebrity. And I now have a progressive, degenerative disease that means I struggle to move and may see me pass before my son reaches an age where he’ll remember me at all. I will admit I have suicidal ideations often now, for fairly obvious reasons.

And I know many other people that have had childhoods similar to mine and his—and who also struggle with mental health issues and severe disease in adulthood—that have lead relatively upstanding lives. And a few that have done some very questionable things (my father being one of them, to put it mildly). Most didn’t have to endure the perils of fame, mind, so that is something to consider.

But, ultimately, we shouldn’t use a person’s mental health and tough upbringing to absolve them of agency and responsibility. That is similar to the crazies in the US that blame gun violence solely on mental health. It devalues the efforts of those that have struggled with similar challenges and haven’t acted in negative or dangerous ways.

I genuinely hope he is now on a path of healing, is able to find more peace in his life and profession, and manages to right the ship. He is deserving of support for those efforts and he definitely has mine. But he is still responsible for everything he has done and will do, as all adults are, regardless of the possible explanations.

So I will reserve judgment on whether he becomes someone I will admire.

I hope he does. Though, I may not be around to see it.
 
More goals and assists at that age when he was at spurs than Scholes, Lampard, Gerrard etc.

Over 60 goals and 60 assists in 260 or so games. He was probably assisting and scoring at a better rate than the likes of Foden and Grealish do now, if you want to compare English players.

So there was a hell of a lot more to him than that. I think people quickly forget what he was doing and what he should have gone on to do. I mean the reason he is still a talking ng point even before this interview is because he was very good.

He did have a nasty streak but I guess having the upbringing he did, some footballer on a pitch isn't going to intimidate you very much. But you're right, he definitely did have a nasty streak too in the sense he could be borderline dangerous and there's no excuse for that.
But again it just stats with not much more to it. He cannot dictate the game compared to the likes of Yaya Toure, Kevin De Brune, Lampard, Gerrard and Scholes. His nasty streak went un-punished for nearly of his Spurs career. Good luck for getting his life back on track but maybe it is for the best to get away from Professional Football and concentrate on getting that help.
 
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I think he's in good hands with Sean Dyche. Not a fan of his tactics, but his players all seem to think he's a really solid person and if he really wants his career back on track, he'll end up fit and working incredbly hard and his talent should shine through.

I wonder what Pep makes of it all, IIRC his daughter was dating Dele Alli for a while.
José was far out of his depth to deal with any of it.
 
Credit to him for openly talking about his struggles, even if it was apparently forced by the gutter press. That wouldn’t have been easy.

I will say, though, based on things I have read, seen, and heard about his behaviour over the last few years, I think a few may be giving him a bit too much leniency. That is not to say empathy is in order for the hardships he has endured or that they don’t in some way explain some of his behaviour. As others have said—and I have I stated many times—you never know what is going on in another person’s head. Mental illness can cause all manner of oddities when observing from the outside. And he should be given support in his attempts to gain control and better his life.

But that doesn’t excuse a person of all responsibility for their decisions and actions.

He and I had a somewhat similar childhood, unfortunately, but had obviously different paths in adulthood that lead to different issues. We both have mental health disorders (and attempted suicide), though, I have been able to avoid addiction, apart from some behaviours with OCD. Who knows if that would have been the case had I been suddenly thrust in to the world of global celebrity. And I now have a progressive, degenerative disease that means I struggle to move and may see me pass before my son reaches an age where he’ll remember me at all. I will admit I have suicidal ideations often now, for fairly obvious reasons.

And I know many other people that have had childhoods similar to mine and his—and who also struggle with mental health issues and severe disease in adulthood—that have lead relatively upstanding lives. And a few that have done some very questionable things (my father being one of them, to put it mildly). Most didn’t have to endure the perils of fame, mind, so that is something to consider.

But, ultimately, we shouldn’t use a person’s mental health and tough upbringing to absolve them of agency and responsibility. That is similar to the crazies in the US that blame gun violence solely on mental health. It devalues the efforts of those that have struggled with similar challenges and haven’t acted in negative or dangerous ways.

I genuinely hope he is now on a path of healing, is able to find more peace in his life and profession, and manages to right the ship. He is deserving of support for those efforts and he definitely has mine. But he is still responsible for everything he has done and will do, as all adults are, regardless of the possible explanations.

So I will reserve judgment on whether he becomes someone I will admire.

I hope he does. Though, I may not be around to see it.

Jesus Christ, man. Best of luck with everything you are going through.
 
Feel sorry for him for what he's done through, still think he's a snide little **** though tbh.
 
As an Everton fan I agree with the posters saying they are unsure if we will take the risk in playing him, most Everton fans agree with this.

£10m doesnt sound like much but we are already in hot water and just escaped relegation. Our budget is very limited again due to the PL finance rules and part of the reason Coady wasnt bought at £4m was due to cost. Every £1m we have needs to be spent wisely.

I'd love us to support him and by all accounts we have, he said the club has been amazing in his interview and he will always be grateful. However im unsure if we can take a £10m risk.

I would hope we can negotiate something with Spurs as if we dont play him due to the fee and he leaves for nothing at the end of the season, everybody has lost out. Him sitting on the bench helps nobody and is the worst potential outcome
 
But again it just stats with not much more to it. He cannot dictate the game compared to the likes of Yaya Toure, Kevin De Brune, Lampard, Gerrard and Scholes. His nasty streak went un-punished for nearly of his Spurs career. Good luck for getting his life back on track but maybe it for the best to get away from Professional Football and concentrate on getting that help.

To be fair, his decline started at about 22-23 years old, we never really saw if he could go on to dictate the game like they did as they got more experienced. Kevin de bruyne couldn't even get a game at Chelsea at that age, so you need time and experience to learn and show that you can run games.

Yeah stats don't tell a full picture, but they were more impressive than most of theirs at that stage, and he was getting a lot of assists which shows he had plenty to his game. So had he gained more general game experience, he may have become what you claimed he wasn't.

In my opinion, he had the ability to be a top player and for a few years he showed it on the pitch.
 

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