Samuele Dalla Bona,Sonny Pike,Benoit Pedretti,Kerlon,Vicente,Fabio Rochemback
that Sonny Pike story could be the saddest story in football history
YouTube - Fantasy Football League - Sonny Pike
Whatever happened to Sonny Pike?
I find child prodigies fascinating. They seem to fall into (roughly) four categories:
The Potential Fulfillers (Rooney, Ronnie O'Sullivan, Sachin Tendulkar)
The Almost Great (Joe Cole)
The Disappointer (Xavier Portillo, Ivan de La Pena, Anthony Le Tallec)
The 'Crash & Burner'
Perhaps the most interesting group, is the last group where the youngster just crashes out of the game. Some include Nii Lamptey (another note, I promise), Sebastian Deisler, Owen Price, Cherno Samba etc but a British one that springs to mind is Sonny Pike.
I remember Pike appearing on Blue Peter when I was in my early teens. Apparently, the buzz was so great there was also a BBC TV documentary about him. This, remember, was around the time that Ajax were going great guns in the Champions League - that great team of Davids, Blind, George, Kanu, Kluivert, Overmars et al. Sonny Pike was a British boy, perhaps a year younger than myself, who had been signed up by Ajax aged 7.
Now everyone knows that Ajax have, arguably, the greatest youth development structure in the world and they were miles ahead of everyone in this field during the mid-1990s. For a British boy, remembering European concerns over British technique and tactical awareness, to be picked up at 7 is an astonishing tale.
He was lauded, in his early teens, as the next Best. People who saw him suggested that he was the best British teenager ever to kick a ball. However, during his teens, he spiralled into depression and eventually left the professional game. A bit of googling says that he is studying in Dundee, coaching the odd team here and there and playing fives. A sad tale - I do hope that he's happier now, doing whatever it is he is doing.
Part of this, I suppose, is down to development - Owen Price kept Rooney out of the England boys team but Rooney has developed into a better player. Players develop in different ways - the best player at 12 or 15 isn't necessarily the best player at 21 or 25 (look also at the number of schoolboy internationals who don't go onto play for the national team, whereas there are many who don't excel at schoolboy level but do play for their national team). Price, according to tittle-tattle, is now playing in Sweden.
People develop at different times in different ways. Also, what we look for in a very young child playing football is vastly different to the things we look for in a professional footballer - professionalism, attitude, tactical awareness, reading of the game - whereas technique and ability on the ball are the things we tend to look for in younger footballers.
The pressure of being a footballer effects each person differently and one must imagine that the pressure of being a young genius, being tipped to be 'the next Best' in Pike's case, as almost unbearable. How we look after these youngsters is crucial... for the game but more importantly for them.