Marcel Desailly: One-on-One

You were born in Ghana, but came over to France when you were four. Had you already developed an interest in football or was this something you picked up in France?
Paul Bailey, Tunbridge Wells
I was a kid of four when we moved to France. My father was a diplomat and he thought I would be a student for a long time, deep in my studies. He tried to keep me away from sports in general. I discovered football naturally at school and I got hooked, for better or for worse. For better for me, but maybe for worse as far as my father was concerned [Laughs].


When you came to France, your parents changed you name from Odenke Abbey to Marcel Desailly. What were the reasons for this?
Andy Bishop, Market Harborough
My parents didn’t really change my name. Odenke is my Ghanaian name – my biological father is from Ghana. And my adoptive father gave me his name, Desailly. The Odenke is still there, I never actually changed my name even if Desailly has become the name people know me by.

Who were your heroes growing up?
Carl Lymna-Dennis, Peterborough
Diego Armando Maradona! And Bernd Schuster, strangely. The blond German – I used to like him. Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson the two basketball heroes. And then there were Nantes players I looked up to when I was coming up through the ranks, legendary Canaries like Loic Amisse – ah, the calf muscles of Amisse! Maxime Bossis, too, The Giraffe! Tremendous.

Your father-in-law was a French diplomat. How did your parents feel about you going into football? When you were starting out, would have preferred you to follow an academic path?
Josh Martin, via e-mail
My father always used to say: “why do you want to play football? What do you think you’re going to get out of football? There’s nothing in football! You’d be better off looking for a proper job rather than running around after your egg!” He used to call the ball an egg! I still regret that he never came to see me at training or anything. Maybe that’s why I didn’t want to try to become a manager or anything straight after my playing career. I wanted to succeed in other areas first. Maybe because of what my father used to say to me.
 
You were at Nantes six years before Marseille signed you. Why did it take so long for the big clubs to take notice of you?
Joel Green, Lincoln
Because, for a start, at the time we respected our contracts much more. Bosman hadn’t yet happened and it was difficult to imagine young players moving abroad as easily as they do today. And Nantes also had a policy of holding on to their best players for as long as possible. Indeed, I might well have stayed longer at Nantes but the club had a few financial worries and were obliged to sell me.

But maybe it was because I wasn’t such an exceptional player, either. I was a good young player, with a lot of potential, but I hadn’t yet got into the France side because I was barred by the likes of Casoni, Basile Boli, Franck Silvestre, who were a bit better than me. Which meant I hadn’t quite proved my worth to the big clubs like Marseille, Bordeaux or PSG.

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