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The Keita Updater

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I've seen him. He looks good for Soton. Like Lovren did.
OR he’s a commanding gigantic CB with pace and skills. Is there anything else in common, apart from a team they play(ed) for, that has any relevance?
Charlie Adam was shit in midfield for Liverpool. Steven Gerrard was boss. Or was SG shit because Adam was shit? Or was Adam great because SG was? Deeeeep.
 
Two Bayern Munich fans' opinions on Keita's latest sending off :

Rather unfair yesterday, he got at least as good as he gave. Second yellow was justified for tactical foul, but with the same measure for all players, Bayern should have gotten a lot more cards, Thiago probably even a red too.


Bayern players kicked him many many times and got away with it. He lost his cool, fouled thiago in a way that forced the refs hands (who was atrocious) and got a yellow. The second one is a (small) but very stupid tactical foul. Ref can't do much again and has to send him off. The ref was extremely inconsistent and created most of the hectic. Yet opposition players will probably continue to wind him up.
 
He's still the top ranked player in the BL this season. He's been brilliant, and I cant wait to see him play for us next season.
 
He's still the top ranked player in the BL this season. He's been brilliant, and I cant wait to see him play for us next season.

Top ranked by whom? Not in Kicker's top 10 currently (although not far behind the leaders).
 
German prosecutors have accused Leipzig midfielder Naby Keita of submitting a fake driver's license, according to a report in Bild.

Keita, who will move to Liverpool after this season, could face a "six-figure" fine after trying on two occasions to use counterfeit Guinean driving licenses to obtain one in Germany.

"Both documents were identified as complete forgeries," a court official told Bild.

Keita is also being investigated for driving without a license, Bild reported.

So is everyone still confident that he's 22 ?
 
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He's going to turn up on a zimmer frame next summer

I hope someone gets him the latest kit when he arrives

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Hmmm.... beginning to worry about this purchase a year out idea. Next week Keita might be linked to a terror plot

Africans in German footy have form

Nizar ben Abdelaziz Trabelsi (born 2 July 1970) is a Tunisian former professional footballer. In 2003, he was convicted as terrorist and sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment for his association with Al-Qaida, and for plotting to attack US targets including American soldiers stationed at the Belgian airbase Kleine Brogel Air Base.[1]


Nizar Trabelsi
Personal information
Full name
Nizar ben Abdelaziz Trabelsi
Date of birth 2 July 1970 (age 47)
Playing position Midfielder
Senior career*
Years
Team Apps (Gls)
1989–1990
Fortuna Düsseldorf
1992 Wuppertaler SV
1992 1. FC Wülfrath
1993 SV 09/35 Wermelskirchen
1993–1994 VfR Neuss
 
Africans in German footy have form

Nizar ben Abdelaziz Trabelsi (born 2 July 1970) is a Tunisian former professional footballer. In 2003, he was convicted as terrorist and sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment for his association with Al-Qaida, and for plotting to attack US targets including American soldiers stationed at the Belgian airbase Kleine Brogel Air Base.[1]


Nizar Trabelsi
Personal information
Full name
Nizar ben Abdelaziz Trabelsi
Date of birth 2 July 1970 (age 47)
Playing position Midfielder
Senior career*
Years
Team Apps (Gls)
1989–1990
Fortuna Düsseldorf
1992 Wuppertaler SV
1992 1. FC Wülfrath
1993 SV 09/35 Wermelskirchen
1993–1994 VfR Neuss


47 on paper, but what's his African footballer age? Could be a Moneyball signing right here
 
Naby Keita not allowed to join Liverpool early, say RB Leipzig

By Joe Shread

Last Updated: 08/11/17 3:49pm

skysports-naby-keita-rb-leipzig_4061311.jpg

Naby Keita is joining Liverpool in the summer, but Leipzig say they won't allow him to move early
Naby Keita won't be allowed to join Liverpool early ahead of his transfer to Anfield in the summer, according to RB Leipzig sporting director Ralf Rangnick.
Liverpool agreed a fee of at least £48m with the German club to sign Keita at the end of the season, but there were suggestions that they may try and persuade Leipzig to allow the midfielder to join them in January.
skysports-keita-rb-leipzig-liverpool_4138532.jpg

Keita's discipline this season has been a concern, and he received three red cards in a seven game spell
Rangnick, though, has dismissed that idea. Speaking to Leipziger Volkszeitung, he said: "Even if we should not reach the knockout stages of the Champions League, it would make no sense to allow Naby to join Liverpool earlier.

"We want to qualify for Europe again and we need Naby for that."
Despite his obvious importance to Leipzig, Keita has had his fair share of disciplinary problems this season, both on and off the pitch.
ralf-rangnick-rb-leipzig_3796772.jpg

Ralf Rangnick is the sporting director at RB Leipzig, and managed the club during the 2015-16 season

He has been sent off three times already - twice for his club and once for Guinea, his international side - and is also appealing a six-figure fine that he was ordered to pay by a court for using a forged driver's license.
Speaking about Keita's fine, Rangnick said: "We will, of course, support Naby."
He also had praise for the 22-year-old, saying: "Naby's easy-going. It's hard not to get on well with him. Naby trains well, plays well, is always on time. He's popular in the team."
 
Naby Keita not allowed to join Liverpool early, say RB Leipzig

By Joe Shread

Last Updated: 08/11/17 3:49pm

skysports-naby-keita-rb-leipzig_4061311.jpg

Naby Keita is joining Liverpool in the summer, but Leipzig say they won't allow him to move early
Naby Keita won't be allowed to join Liverpool early ahead of his transfer to Anfield in the summer, according to RB Leipzig sporting director Ralf Rangnick.
Liverpool agreed a fee of at least £48m with the German club to sign Keita at the end of the season, but there were suggestions that they may try and persuade Leipzig to allow the midfielder to join them in January.
skysports-keita-rb-leipzig-liverpool_4138532.jpg

Keita's discipline this season has been a concern, and he received three red cards in a seven game spell
Rangnick, though, has dismissed that idea. Speaking to Leipziger Volkszeitung, he said: "Even if we should not reach the knockout stages of the Champions League, it would make no sense to allow Naby to join Liverpool earlier.

"We want to qualify for Europe again and we need Naby for that."
Despite his obvious importance to Leipzig, Keita has had his fair share of disciplinary problems this season, both on and off the pitch.
ralf-rangnick-rb-leipzig_3796772.jpg

Ralf Rangnick is the sporting director at RB Leipzig, and managed the club during the 2015-16 season

He has been sent off three times already - twice for his club and once for Guinea, his international side - and is also appealing a six-figure fine that he was ordered to pay by a court for using a forged driver's license.
Speaking about Keita's fine, Rangnick said: "We will, of course, support Naby."
He also had praise for the 22-year-old, saying: "Naby's easy-going. It's hard not to get on well with him. Naby trains well, plays well, is always on time. He's popular in the team."

Is it just me or did he announce that and then blow a raspberry at us?
 
Very good read this.



Naby Keita's story

From dodging cars on the streets of Guinea to the fast lane of Europe's elite

By Melissa Reddy


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The makeshift ball is magnetised to his bare feet as he turns away from two markers, darting towards stones that serve as the goal. The handed-down kit which drowns his tout petitframe gets tugged from behind, but he shrugs that off and speeds on.
Then comes the real challenge. The kid, who has yet to hit double figures in age, feels a heavy hit to his back and first ensures possession is still secure, before getting a shot off. A young Naby Keita has scored, and as he celebrates, he quickly scans the car that impeded him in the build-up.
“This was a normal kind of game,” the midfielder exclusively tells Goal as he retraces his football-centric childhood in Koleya, an area of Guinea capital’s Conakry.
“We would play anywhere there was open space, which was often on the street and we would have to dodge the cars!
“I was bumped so many times, but I kept going because I never wanted to lose possession. Nothing could separate me from the ball and I learnt so much from my experiences on the street.
“We played with whatever we could and I would have nothing on my feet, or sometimes, play with old, damaged shoes,” Keita continued after breaking into the 2017 Goal 50, which ranks the 50 best players in the world of the past year and will be revealed in full on Tuesday November 14.
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“I didn’t have boots and treasured football shirts that were given to me. All that has helped me be better prepared for anything now as a professional and I’m also not scared of anything on the pitch.
“I was quite small and so I had to fight for everything: the chance to play, for the ball, to get respect and that’s why not even cars could stop me. It’s where the aggression in my game, which is so important for my position, comes from.”


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Conakry’s own le roi de la rue (King of the Street) is now the most expensive African footballer in history. Liverpool activated a £48 million clause in the RB Leipzig lynchpin’s contract this summer as well as paying a premium to secure his services from July 1, 2018. The move has been mapped out since the idea of turning professional was crystallised in his mind as a teenager, but his ascension to the top of the game began as a toddler.
As soon as Keita could walk his mother, Miriam Camara, would have to confiscate items from his feet. “She has told me that anything that would fall from the table, whether it was a bottle of water or an orange, I would dribble with it,” he says, his words punctuated with laughter.
“Whatever was on the floor that I could kick, I would entertain myself with it. No matter where she would take me, I would do this.”
His father, Sekou Keita, believes Naby’s destiny was decided even before then. “My dad told me that as a baby, I loved the ball - to look at it, to touch it. I always wanted it around me.”
Despite both feeling it was inevitable their son would want to pursue a career in football, the 22-year-old’s parents tried to direct him towards a different path. “They wanted me to study,” Keita recalls. “They felt education was the most important and more stable, but there was nothing else for me but football.
“They tried and tried, but they could see where my head and my heart was. Everyone in the community would say to them that I’m the best player in Conakry and, eventually, my parents told me they know I’ve got a special gift so they will fully support my dream.”
At 12, the dynamo was already being advised by local scouts that he should head for Europe, but it was too much for someone so young to process. “I was not mentally ready yet for such a big step,” Keita explains. “About two years later, I would watch a lot of Ligue 1, Champions League and Premier League games on TV and I knew I wanted to be playing at that level.
"It was impossible to do that at home, so it was clear that I would have to test myself in Europe. I was determined to become a footballer, not only because I loved the game, but so I could provide for my family.”
And so at 16, flooded with enthusiasm but unsure of what to expect, he ventured to France for trials. “My parents were terrified. They didn’t want me to go so far away and they were worried about how I would adapt to these new surroundings,” Keita admits.
“It was more difficult than I could have imagined as everything except the language was different. I was used to playing football with my friends, but now I was with strangers that wanted to mostly keep to themselves.”
He moved back and forth between Conakry and Western Europe, where rejection from Lorient amongst others at these showcases slowly ate into his conviction.
“I did wonder if I would ever make it. It was such a tough time,” Keita says. “You have your dream within touching distance, then it falls through and you have to start from the beginning again.”
The most jarring thing about this period wasn’t being in an unfamiliar place, clashing with a contrasting culture, or the dissimilar people he was coming into contact with, but the completely alien way football was interpreted.
“I was never exposed to the professional side of the game,” Keita explains. “I didn’t grow up in an academy, everything I knew was from the street. I would get the ball, I would run with it, show some skill to beat a player and score.
“During these trials, coaches were asking me to do things I’d never heard of! They were using football terms that I couldn’t understand and giving instructions that I had no clue about. I didn’t know about tactics and when I was rejected that is what I was told.”
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It was only six years ago when Keita received that crushing feedback, and yet now, you would struggle to find a midfielder as astute and effective as him both offensively and defensively. Schalke director Christian Heidel aptly exclaimed that Leipzig possess a “12th player” because "Naby is like two, this boy is incomprehensible”.
He can tackle, take on defenders, intercept, switch the play, transition quickly, dissect or nullify the opposition, dictate his side’s tempo; a unique, valuable combination.
Le Mans had been the first club to rank Keita’s potential higher than his rawness, but they were unable to recruit him at 18 as they were on the brink of bankruptcy. However, one of their employees recommended the “rough diamond” to FC Istres’ sporting director at the time, Frederic Arpinon, who did his due diligence and spoke to scouts that watched Keita’s performance at a tournament in Marseille, organised by former Celtic defender Bobo Balde. The reviews prompted the club in the south of France to sharply arrange a trial, in which Naby made an instant impression.
Istres offered him a three-year deal and in November 2013, Keita thanked them with a goal and assist in a luminary debut display in the 4-2 victory over Nimes.
“I had waited so long, had so many setbacks and when I got my first chance, I wanted to prove I belonged in Europe,” he says as he recalls the game.
“My parents were still very worried about me. I had to call them six times a day and tell them everything that was happening!” Keita chuckles.

Arpinon swiftly figured it would be tough to keep the aptitude of their new acquisition hidden, and while Ligue 1 teams were scared to gamble on the little player with a large ceiling, Gerard Houllier was convinced he’d take off at Red Bull Salzburg.
Then the Head of Global Football for the energy drink’s stable of clubs, and now still an advisor, the former Liverpool manager discussed Keita with Ralf Rangnick, who was the sporting director for the Austrian outfit before assuming the same role at Leipzig.
The pair watched the Guinea international represent his country in a friendly against Mali on May 25, 2014 in France and Houllier sold him on Salzburg’s commitment to development.
That summer, Keita signed a five-year contract at Die Roten Bullen, where Sadio Mane provided valuable guidance before moving to Southampton.
“At first, I wasn’t starting and it was very frustrating,” Keita reveals. “I didn’t like it and it made the settling-in period harder. But Sadio said: ‘My little brother, stay calm. Your chance will come and when it does, you will make the most of it.’
“He helped me with everything - the language, making friends, understanding the club and the city. And, of course, he was right. Once I was put into the team, I showed my qualities and everything went much smoother.
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“Salzburg improved me as a player and I learnt so much there, I got a really tactical education. Sadio was important for me, he still is! To me, he’s my big brother. He really likes to learn new things, to improve and to push himself and we are the same in this way. He’s a good example for me.”

Mane, three years Keita’s senior and also represented by Arena11 sports group, still feels protective over the Guinean and watches his games at every opportunity - either live or via highlights.
“He is a really special player and is like family to me,” the Liverpool speedster says. “We were close at Salzburg and still keep in touch. I enjoy watching him and look forward to helping him again when he comes next year.
“He asked me about Liverpool and I told him this is an amazing club with talented players, a great manager and lots of ambition. The city and the people are really nice and he will feel at home here.”
Next summer will not mark the first time Keita pulls on a Liverpool kit.
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“When I was around 11 or 12, my friends and I were choosing which shirts we would get for our team. Because my father nicknamed me Deco as he thought I played like him, I wanted us to get the Barcelona strip - they were my favourite.
“All my friends were Liverpool supporters, though, and I really liked the club too so we decided on them. I don’t think any of them or I could really imagine that I would grow up to actually wear a real Liverpool shirt and represent the real Liverpool!”
Beyond his kickabout group, there was one prominent person constantly referencing Keita’s next club.
“My father is a huge fan!,” he reveals. “As far back as I can remember, he has been talking about them. Before I even knew what Liverpool was as a kid, he was mad about them.
“Of course, when he found out about their interest and when the deal for next season was done, he was delighted. He wanted to speak about Istanbul, Steven Gerrard and every other big game or player of the club.”

Keita, however, is not thinking about lining up under Jurgen Klopp just yet. “I have a lot still to achieve in this campaign with Leipzig and my focus is all on them,” he says. “The club have been good for me and I’ve grown so much with them. The move from Salzburg to Leipzig was great for me and I have gone up another level. Last season was special for us, we played great football and finished second in the Bundesliga to give us our first taste of Champions League.
“I used to watch Xabi Alonso in the Champions League and Premier League when I was in Guinea and last season I got to play against him in midfield before he retired. When I think about things like this, it reminds me of how blessed I am, but also of how hard I’ve worked and far I’ve come. But this is only the start, I am never satisfied, I never get comfortable.”
When the CAF African Footballer of the Year nominee returns home, he is greeted with more reminders of his achievements as well as greater inspiration to push on.
“When I go back to Conakry, there are still children playing on the street without shoes, dodging the cars. I always buy boots when I’m back for as many kids as I can because I know how much it can mean to have something so simple. There's so much skill and talent in Guinea, it fills me with pride.”
Not everything is exactly the same during the homecoming. “I wanted to be Deco, Titi Camara or Pascal Feindouno when I was young, and now there are kids with my name on the back of their shirts! That is such a big motivation for me and I hope I continue to show them that with courage and determination, they can achieve anything.
“It doesn’t matter how poor you are, or where you’re from, if you are willing to make sacrifices, willing to work hard and to never stop fighting for your dreams, you can make them happen.”

So much has altered in Keita’s life so quickly, but there are always the constants. “My mother is here, she comes every three months to visit and stays with me for a while,” he says.
“Now she doesn’t have to shout at me for kicking everything around, but she is still my rock. I am nothing without my family, and no matter what happens, I will never forget where I am from.”
From being the one to watch in the Bundesliga last season, Keita is now seemingly the one to target. Leipzig coach Ralph Hasenhuttl has no concern over the three red cards the No.8 received within a 39-day period recently, stating his player is “often provoked.” That he is now targeted signifies Keita’s swelling status and how significant the opposition believe him to be.
His influence is unlikely to be tempered anytime soon. “I want to win. I plan to only get better and stronger. This is just the start for me,” Keita says with a knowing smile. “I’ve come this far, so what is the point of not targeting the very top?”
 
Fucking hell. Those photographs of him were taken on a camera that is at the very least 20 years old. And he looks at the very least 20 years old in them. I'm no mathematician, but if he's less than 40 it's about the best we can hope for.
 
Things like that are always good to see, but I'm mainly looking forward to the extra steel he'll also bring to the more gritty side of our midfield play. That to me is where he's needed most urgently, and I'd have said the same even before last night. 😡
 
You know when you just get one of those feelings? I reckon this fella is going to be awesome for us I really do. With that being said I had the same the same “sense” about Salif Diao so my gut feelings do come with a ryder.
 
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