Craig Bellamy: ‘I loved living in Brussels … it gave me freedom and allowed me to breathe'
The last of Craig Bellamy's 78 Wales caps came in Brussels in October 2013 and although that 1-1 draw concluded an underwhelming World Cup qualifying campaign, the Belgian capital is where he considers his coaching career achieved liftoff. He spent a little more than two years working at Anderlecht alongside his former Manchester City teammate Vincent Kompany, first as the under-21 coach and then as Kompany's assistant, a springboard that has led him to representing his country at the King Baudouin Stadium for another qualifier, this time as a manager.
It is a city Bellamy remembers fondly, despite leaving Anderlecht in September 2021, before the end of his contract, to return to Cardiff to deal with depression after struggling being away from his family. 'I loved living in Brussels,' he says. 'It gave me a good step back. I was completely unrecognisable – no one had a clue who I was, which was nice. I enjoyed that peace.
Advertisement
Related: Wales brush aside Liechtenstein to maintain Bellamy's unbeaten reign
'Even at the club, I think they had to Google or YouTube me to know who I was. It gave me freedom, it allowed me to breathe. I always wanted to go abroad. I should've done it as a player but I refused a few times. I looked back when I finished and thought: 'Maybe I should've done that.''
He lived in an apartment on Avenue Louise, a popular thoroughfare in the south of Brussels and home to boutique brands and trendy eateries, a few miles from Anderlecht, a club that has long prided itself on developing players where its motto – In Youth We Trust – is not an empty slogan. Some days he and Kompany would arrive at 7.30am and at 8pm still be moving mannequins and talking patterns under the floodlights.
He loved the back and forth, though Bellamy tells a time where he did not speak to Kompany for 'a day and a half' because he felt Kompany called up too many youngsters for his first team. Romelu Lukaku and Youri Tielemans, both of whom will probably be playing for Belgium on Monday, and Kompany, are among the club's most celebrated alumni.
Advertisement
Another player likely to feature is the winger Jérémy Doku, now of City, who Bellamy first coached as a 16-year-old at Anderlecht. 'He could lose you in a phone booth,' Bellamy says. 'I have never had to apologise to so many under-21 coaches that a 17-year-old was playing – that's how good he was. It's like it wasn't fair.
Related: 'People think I have disappeared': Joe Morrell raring to go after 492 days out
'We can all spot ability, but I loved him as a person and still do. He could test you, but I loved that. He taught me more about how to be a coach than a lot of players. Because you have to understand the background they [players] are from, the culture they are from. His drive was insane, which I loved. Great kid. I played a small part, a tiny part of his development.'
He also worked with Zeno Debast, who joined Sporting Lisbon from Anderlecht last year. Bellamy rejected interest as a player from Juventus, Marseille, Valencia, Ajax and Feyenoord but, he says, his time in Belgium with Kompany gave him a priceless education in coaching, which accelerated his development as a manager.
Advertisement
'That was where I learned football,' he says. 'I came across so many good people. It was a very different place … different languages, you go 20 minutes there, a different language, 20 minutes there, different language, different culture, different way of doing things, different governments.
'I found that with all the players, too; players from different regions spoke different languages. They all had completely different backgrounds and that is where you learn coaching. They all have different mentalities, drives and cultures.'
The last time Bellamy was in Belgium was two years ago for a pre-season friendly with Burnley, where he also worked as an assistant to Kompany. Connor Roberts, the dependable Wales full-back, was part of that side. After this visit, Bellamy will return for a wedding next weekend, by which point, if things go to plan, Wales will be 10 games unbeaten under the 45-year-old.
For Kompany, a return to Anderlecht as a player-coach after 11 years at City, was the first step on a journey that has taken him to Bayern Munich, where he won the Bundesliga in his first season.
Advertisement
Bellamy's reputation as a coach is also growing. He is a compelling orator and his house rules, so to speak, have further endeared him to supporters: no swapping shirts, for starters. Not allowing the Wales crest to touch the floor is another. Before the 3-0 victory against Liechtenstein on Friday, he referenced the 1984 film The Karate Kid. 'Does he do karate straight away? No, it's Mr Miyagi who decides. It's wax on, wax off. He paints the fence. He teaches him all these rules before he can do karate, so that he has the discipline.
'It's about basics, habits. If you don't have that intensity without the ball, if your body language is poor and you're waving your hands, it's the wrong team for you. This is not your team.'
Bellamy's final action in a Wales shirt was a typically heart-on-sleeve performance under Chris Coleman. That night a 16-year-old Harry Wilson, arguably the most important player in Bellamy's squad, entered as a substitute to become the youngest player capped by his country. Kevin De Bruyne and Lukaku remain from their opponents that day and although Belgium have won one of their past eight matches, they are eighth in the Fifa rankings and surely pose Wales's greatest threat in Group J.
Regardless of how things are going at the King Baudouin Stadium, there is one thing Bellamy will not ask of his players: feign injury to waste time, a tactic he felt North Macedonia used to their advantage in March. 'We have viewers, we have a responsibility,' he says. 'Even if I'm getting my ass kicked, I ain't doing it.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Arsenal need to build a squad. Signing a striker won't mean the end of Merino or Havertz
This summer feels like the time for Arsenal to shift the emphasis of their squad building. Much of Mikel Arteta's focus in recent years has been on strengthening Arsenal's foundations. That can be seen in the number of players signed in positions that require specific skill sets, whether physical or tactical. Goalkeeper and full-back are the most obvious examples, but the physical profile of midfield signings in the past two summers is another indicator. Advertisement Attention will now turn to addressing what is missing in attack. A centre-forward is the main addition to be expected, but finding better support options out wide is also a necessity. With midfielder Martin Zubimendi expected to join this summer, important players from recent seasons, such as Kai Havertz, Mikel Merino and even Gabriel Martinelli, could see their roles change. Merino and Havertz's minutes may take a hit next season should Arsenal sign Zubimendi and a new centre-forward. Merino, like Havertz, was signed to play in midfield but proved most useful at centre-forward, with six of his nine goals coming from that position. He will return to midfield with Havertz back fit after a three-month hamstring injury. Despite the injury, the Germany international scored 15 goals last season but can expect fresh competition for his starting spot. Considering both are relatively new signings who have improved with time, that might seem harsh, but it is a necessary reality as Arteta looks to develop his side. Compare the two benches when Arsenal met Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League semi-final first leg. Arteta could only call on two players of starting quality, one squad option who could leave, five who will depart this month and two youth players who have stayed. PSG, on the other hand, could and did turn to Goncalo Ramos, Bradley Barcola and Warren Zaire-Emery. They also had Presnel Kimpembe, Lee Kang-in and Lucas Hernandez available. While players recovered from injury, Arteta had to fill his bench with players who are unlikely to feature frequently in the coming seasons. Before Arsenal were in title races, the 2021-22 season saw Mika Biereth, Omari Hutchinson, Salah-Eddine Oulad-M'hand and Charlie Patino regularly feature on the bench without coming off it. That situation cannot repeat itself for much longer. Advertisement If Arsenal have the opportunity to turn to Merino or Havertz from the bench, it will mean their squad has improved. Both players would prefer starting roles, but being ready to make an impact when needed would be better than running themselves into the ground and suffering serious muscle injuries, as Havertz and Bukayo Saka did this season. Opinions may differ but one assessment former striker Thierry Henry made on The Overlap podcast felt particularly poignant. 'The most important thing is for the team to win,' he said when comparing his spell at Barcelona to his time at Arsenal. 'If that goes through me, that goes through me. If that goes through someone else, it goes through someone else. At the end of the day, we were all celebrating the treble. 'That was the beauty of that (treble-winning) team of Manchester United. In the Champions League final, Dwight Yorke and Andy Cole didn't score. On the way, they scored a lot (eight and four in Europe), but then Teddy Sheringham and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer scored in the final. This is how you win important trophies.' Of the backup options, Leandro Trossard has displayed those reliable qualities. He played 56 of 58 available games last season, more than any other Arsenal player — although he only started two-thirds (37) of those. Having more options like him cannot hurt. Henry's point about supposed bench players can also be seen in both the past and present of successful Arsenal teams. While the former France forward scored 24 league goals to win his first Premier League title with Arsenal in 2001-02, he did not score the goal that secured the silverware. He was at home watching with a bruised knee as Sylvain Wiltord scored the only goal in a 1-0 win at Old Trafford in the penultimate game of the season. Of course, Arsenal playing with two strikers made a difference then, but Wiltord's numbers were not dissimilar to those of Dennis Bergkamp. He started 23 league games and scored 10 goals, whereas the Dutchman started 22 league games and scored nine goals. Henry started 31 league games that season, so the role as his support option differed from game to game. Advertisement For a more direct comparison, you can look at the front line of Arsenal's women's team in recent season. Stina Blackstenius was signed in January 2022 in a move that signalled the beginning of the end for Vivianne Miedema at the club. The following season, 2022-23, she started 20 league games. Arsenal still reinforced their attack by signing Alessia Russo, who has grown into her role as the first-choice option up front, winning the Football Writers' Association Player of the Year this season with 20 goals in all competitions, but it was Blackstenius who replaced her to offer something different and score the winner in the Champions League final. Arteta has not had the same luxury in attack, partially because of injuries but the way his squad has been built is also a factor. This summer offers an opportunity to get closer to that by improving the depth of Arsenal's attacking quality, but without discounting those who have helped them reach this position. Arteta has not been shy to upgrade on loved squad members before, but often those players have been left by the wayside without a route back. In goal, that pipeline can be seen in the evolution from Bernd Leno to Aaron Ramsdale and then David Raya. At left-back, it has been just as evident with the movement from Kieran Tierney to Oleksandr Zinchenko and now Myles Lewis-Skelly. Once their starting spot has been lost, they have struggled for minutes. They then leave to better their own careers. Emile Smith Rowe is another prime example, going from a player who helped transform Arsenal under Arteta to one who struggled to get meaningful minutes before moving to Fulham last summer. There should be opportunities for Merino, Havertz and Martinelli to make an impact on Arsenal's season, even if they are not starting every game. Rather than taking a binary view on what certain signings could mean for existing players, there needs to be an understanding that it is hard to predict what might happen across a season. Injuries and unavailability, plus the sheer number of matches, mean there will be opportunities. Whoever enters the building this summer, Arsenal's front line needs quality additions while maintaining and improving the existing options.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Benfica struggling to meet financial demands of a João Félix deal — report
Benfica are said to be interested in bringing back João Félix, preferably before the start of the Club World Cup, but in an entirely expected development, they are struggling to meet the financial demands of this proposition — even though both player and club are pushing hard for the reunion (and Chelsea are more than willing to make it happen, for a reasonable price). According to A Bola, Benfica initially asked for a loan, but Chelsea are adamant about authorizing only a permanent move. We have asked for €30m to make that happen. Benfica are willing to go as high as €25m, so the gap in valuation is certainly not huge — though €25m would be the third highest transfer fee paid in Benfica history, so it's already a considerable investment for them. However, the bigger hindrance is the salary. Félix is rumored to be earning around €8m per year, which is twice as much as Benfica's wage structure allows. So if he truly wants this reunion to happen, he will have to take a significant pay cut. More from Thibaut Courtois wins Premier League Golden Glove What is your favorite memory of Chelsea's Champions League final victory in Munich? Nathan Ake, Kurt Zouma receive surprise national team call-ups Chelsea to continue building around Eden Hazard Chelsea 4-3 Watford, Premier League: Tactical Analysis Chelsea 'making progress' on €90m Romelu Lukaku — reports Conte wants six new signings at Chelsea for next season's Premier League and Champions League title push Sign in to access your portfolio


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Club World Cup team guide – Juventus: A returning hero, the son of a legend, and a splash of pink
The 36-time Italian champions may not be at the peak of their powers, but have found a little more coherency since appointing Igor Tudor as head coach in March. The former Juventus defender will be aiming to add to the Old Lady's sprawling honours list, although the Turin side are not among the favourites… Follow the Club World Cup on The Athletic this summer… Not as good as they'd like to be after committing to spend a quarter of a billion (gross) on players last summer. Juventus fired Thiago Motta seven months into his first season as head coach, then last week parted with managing director of football Cristiano Giuntoli after achieving the absolute minimum; a fourth-place finish and Champions League qualification. It is now five years since Juventus last won Serie A and, unless something drastic happens, the drought could last long enough to match the nine-year barren run the club endured between the late '80s and early '90s. As the eighth-best eligible ranked team in the UEFA rankings. Former Super League partners Barcelona did Juventus a favour in spring 2024, knocking Napoli out of the Champions League in the round of 16 and therefore making it impossible for them to overtake Juventus in the rankings. Napoli owner Aurelio De Laurentiis was not happy and threatened to appeal because Juventus were serving a one-year ban from European competition at the time Barcelona knocked his own club out of the Champions League and the running for the Club World Cup. Soporific under Motta. Juventus drew 16 league games, the joint most in Europe's top five leagues with Osasuna in La Liga. There was little of the positional fluidity and slick football that had previously characterised his Bologna side. Instead, Juventus passed, passed and passed their fans to sleep. An injury crisis did not help Motta, nor did playing square pegs in round holes. His replacement Tudor has set the team up more coherently. Juventus have become more direct and aggressive in the Atalanta-esque system Tudor adopted to great success with Hellas Verona. Tudor was a member of those great Juventus teams from the turn of the century. The Croat was part of a defence featuring Gigi Buffon, Lilian Thuram and later Fabio Cannavaro. It was up to them to keep their end of the bargain and protect Juventus' goal while Zinedine Zidane, Alessandro Del Piero and then Pavel Nedved went up the other end and scored. A big personality, he played under Marcello Lippi and Carlo Ancelotti. This is his second spell at Juventus in a coaching role. He served as an assistant under Andrea Pirlo but struck out on his own at Verona, Marseille and Lazio where he proved more credible and successful. Gleison Bremer should have a higher profile. The Brazilian looks like the best centre-back in Serie A on his day and Juventus' season deteriorated after he ruptured his anterior cruciate ligament in October. Juventus' big names, Dusan Vlahovic, Nico Gonzalez and Teun Koopmeiners, are big in Italy, not elsewhere and did not perform to their ability this year, which is why Khephren Thuram is the player to follow. Son of Juventus legend and World Cup winner Lilian, his driving runs from midfield were increasingly hard for opponents to stop once he settled into his first Serie A campaign. Juventus' Next Gen team, an under-23 side registered in Italy's third division, has bridged the gap between youth team and first team football. While it's a shame that sacked sporting director Giuntoli decided to cash in on the work of his forebears, profiting on Dean Huijsen, Matias Soule, Samuel Iling-Junior and Enzo Barrenechea, the star of the Next Gen scheme, Kenan Yildiz, is still at the club. Juventus' decision to give him the prestigious No 10 shirt shows how much they believe in the 20-year-old Turk, who was involved in 15 goals this season. They have one about only ever thinking about the team, how watching Juventus makes them a child again (a 'bambino') and defending the colours is their destiny (their 'destino'). Inter. That's why the Derby d'Italia in Serie A is between them and not Juventus and Milan. It is Italy's most poisonous rivalry. Inter fans long believed Juventus won things at their expense, taking refuge for their own shortcomings in conspiracies. When the Calciopoli scandal relegated Juventus in 2006, Inter not only felt vindicated, they benefited. One of the two titles revoked from Juventus was controversially assigned to Inter, who also signed Patrick Vieira and Zlatan Ibrahimovic from them. Nearly 20 years later, the hatred remains undiminished. Juventus originally played in pink before, in 1903, the team's first foreign player, a Brit by the name of Gordon Thomas Savage, brought some Notts County shirts back to Italy with him. Juventus changed colours and style, and have worn black and white stripes ever since, with some variations. The jersey Juventus will don at the Club World Cup incorporates pink into the default colour scheme made possible by Savage. Even though Juventus sold Huijsen, Soule et al a year ago, this team is in keeping with the true meaning of the club's name. It is based around youth and shows Juventus are moving with the times. Much has been made recently of how young Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain are at the moment, and Juventus are no different. The average age of their team this season is 24 and 288 days. (All kick-offs ET/BST) (Top photos: Image Photo Agency, Marco Bertorello/Getty; design: Kelsea Petersen/The Athletic)