Aaron Lennon

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Right wing back may have worked for him. His defensive work was the best part of his game in his latter time at the club.

Agree with the guy who said he had the best first touch. Absolutely incredible at times. The start of the Tottenham revolution started with Lennon. One of my absolute favourites.
was always great at tackling back and chasing back. He had to - Charlie Veruka at Right Back, loved him to bits but I think I had more pace.

Was very sad and not a little angry to see him go.
 
I always thought that when he didn't play, we lacked balance, even when he wasn't particularly productive. He worked his socks off and I would always wish him well.
 

The first thing you notice as Aaron Lennon walks into a room at Burnley’s training ground is the smile. There is a broad grin etched on his face as he warmly greets the handful of reporters present and it quickly becomes apparent that he is enjoying his football again and, moreover, relishing life again.

It is just over a year since Lennon was detained under the Mental Health Act. Police had been called to the side of a busy thoroughfare close to the M602 motorway near Salford Royal Hospital, on the outskirts of Manchester city centre, after receiving reports about a man in a precarious situation.

Officers arrived on the scene to discover Lennon in a distressed state and were believed to have spent the next 20 minutes negotiating with the England international, then with Everton. He was eventually taken to hospital for assessment and the start of care for what the Merseyside club later described as a “stress-related illness”.

“I was in a dark, dark place for a long time and now just waking up every day and getting excited to come to training again and enjoying each day again is massive for me,” Lennon says. Is that a liberating feeling? “Yes, it is. It’s hard to put into words. The turnaround from this time last year is massive.”

This is the first time Lennon has spoken publicly since the incident, news of which prompted an outpouring of support from the wider football community, not least from those players, such as Stan Collymore, who have had their own mental health issues.

Mental Health Awareness Week commences on Monday and Lennon’s story is a sobering reminder that, no matter a person’s wealth or profile, depression does not discriminate. A detailed study by FifPro, the international players’ union, in 2015 found that 38 per cent of current players, and 35 per cent of retired footballers, had suffered with depression and/or anxiety at some stage.

After a decade in North London with Tottenham, Lennon left for Everton, initially on loan, in February 2015 after finding himself on the periphery at White Hart Lane. Under Roberto Martinez at Everton, he played fairly regularly but opportunities became increasingly scarce for the winger once Ronald Koeman took charge at Goodison Park. At the time of being detained, he had not played for Everton for 2½ months.

“Probably for the last four or five years, I was not enjoying my football but for the period since joining Burnley [in January], I am really enjoying it again,” Lennon said. “I wouldn’t have said that I’d fallen out of love with football, but I’ve been through long periods of not being involved in the squads.

“You start getting to that stage where you don’t actually feel like a footballer. You train throughout the week and you’re not involved at the weekend, then it becomes difficult. So that was tough.”

For the time being at least, Lennon is reluctant to talk in any detail about the events of that bleak Sunday afternoon on April 30 when his battle with depression peaked, but he explains that, for as long as four or five years before then, he had not been enjoying his football.

Now 31, it is easy to forget Lennon has been playing at the top level for 15 years. For a time, he was the youngest player to appear in the Premier League when he made his debut for his hometown club, Leeds United, aged just 16 and 129 days as a substitute in a 2-1 defeat to Spurs in August 2003. He has had to cope with pressure from an early age but it was not playing, rather than the pressure of playing, that ate away at him.

“For me, not playing at the end of the week, you’re going home not a happy person and you’re not enjoying it,” he said. “There’s a lot of talk about footballers not caring but I don’t think there are many footballers who don’t get picked at the weekend, go home and are not bothered.”

On New Year’s Eve, a few weeks before his transfer to Burnley, Lennon posted a long message on Twitter thanking all those who had helped a difficult 2017 “end in such a special way” and paid tribute to friends, family, fans, Everton, “everyone at all the hospitals” and, in particular, staff at the Priory clinic.

“With all your help I’ve managed to get myself in a great place and loving each day like you should, also learning so much about myself and learning how important the mind is and what I need to do to look after it,” he tweeted. There are still people he wants to thank in person for their care.

“The football world has been brilliant to me, especially what I went through and the difficult times,” he said. “There are a lot of people I still need to thank and will thank.”

Moving to Sean Dyche’s upwardly mobile Burnley – who will be playing European football next season – has played its part in helping Lennon’s state of mind.

His only regret is the transfer failed to materialise sooner.

“It’s one of the best decisions I’ve made football wise,” he said. “I’ve enjoyed every moment since I got here.

“It nearly happened in the summer. It was really close and I wish it had because I ended up not playing much football at Everton. Thankfully the manager came in again for me.”

Lennon was part of the England squad at the 2006 and 2010 World Cups. Jermain Defoe’s recollection this week of being so bored during the 2010 tournament that he spent a night watching Wayne Rooney’s wedding on DVD resonated with Lennon.

“It doesn’t surprise me,” he recalled. “There were some long days in the hotel. There were a lot of computer games played, some read books but, after a couple of weeks, you are climbing the walls. The pressures are immense. At the time it is difficult to enjoy.”

Lennon is asked if he holds any hope of forcing his way back into the England reckoning one day.

“I’ve not thought about it,” he says. “If it happened, great, but honestly just playing week in, week out again is, for me, brilliant.”

That is a triumph in itself.
 

The first thing you notice as Aaron Lennon walks into a room at Burnley’s training ground is the smile. There is a broad grin etched on his face as he warmly greets the handful of reporters present and it quickly becomes apparent that he is enjoying his football again and, moreover, relishing life again.

It is just over a year since Lennon was detained under the Mental Health Act. Police had been called to the side of a busy thoroughfare close to the M602 motorway near Salford Royal Hospital, on the outskirts of Manchester city centre, after receiving reports about a man in a precarious situation.

Officers arrived on the scene to discover Lennon in a distressed state and were believed to have spent the next 20 minutes negotiating with the England international, then with Everton. He was eventually taken to hospital for assessment and the start of care for what the Merseyside club later described as a “stress-related illness”.

“I was in a dark, dark place for a long time and now just waking up every day and getting excited to come to training again and enjoying each day again is massive for me,” Lennon says. Is that a liberating feeling? “Yes, it is. It’s hard to put into words. The turnaround from this time last year is massive.”

This is the first time Lennon has spoken publicly since the incident, news of which prompted an outpouring of support from the wider football community, not least from those players, such as Stan Collymore, who have had their own mental health issues.

Mental Health Awareness Week commences on Monday and Lennon’s story is a sobering reminder that, no matter a person’s wealth or profile, depression does not discriminate. A detailed study by FifPro, the international players’ union, in 2015 found that 38 per cent of current players, and 35 per cent of retired footballers, had suffered with depression and/or anxiety at some stage.

After a decade in North London with Tottenham, Lennon left for Everton, initially on loan, in February 2015 after finding himself on the periphery at White Hart Lane. Under Roberto Martinez at Everton, he played fairly regularly but opportunities became increasingly scarce for the winger once Ronald Koeman took charge at Goodison Park. At the time of being detained, he had not played for Everton for 2½ months.

“Probably for the last four or five years, I was not enjoying my football but for the period since joining Burnley [in January], I am really enjoying it again,” Lennon said. “I wouldn’t have said that I’d fallen out of love with football, but I’ve been through long periods of not being involved in the squads.

“You start getting to that stage where you don’t actually feel like a footballer. You train throughout the week and you’re not involved at the weekend, then it becomes difficult. So that was tough.”

For the time being at least, Lennon is reluctant to talk in any detail about the events of that bleak Sunday afternoon on April 30 when his battle with depression peaked, but he explains that, for as long as four or five years before then, he had not been enjoying his football.

Now 31, it is easy to forget Lennon has been playing at the top level for 15 years. For a time, he was the youngest player to appear in the Premier League when he made his debut for his hometown club, Leeds United, aged just 16 and 129 days as a substitute in a 2-1 defeat to Spurs in August 2003. He has had to cope with pressure from an early age but it was not playing, rather than the pressure of playing, that ate away at him.

“For me, not playing at the end of the week, you’re going home not a happy person and you’re not enjoying it,” he said. “There’s a lot of talk about footballers not caring but I don’t think there are many footballers who don’t get picked at the weekend, go home and are not bothered.”

On New Year’s Eve, a few weeks before his transfer to Burnley, Lennon posted a long message on Twitter thanking all those who had helped a difficult 2017 “end in such a special way” and paid tribute to friends, family, fans, Everton, “everyone at all the hospitals” and, in particular, staff at the Priory clinic.

“With all your help I’ve managed to get myself in a great place and loving each day like you should, also learning so much about myself and learning how important the mind is and what I need to do to look after it,” he tweeted. There are still people he wants to thank in person for their care.

“The football world has been brilliant to me, especially what I went through and the difficult times,” he said. “There are a lot of people I still need to thank and will thank.”

Moving to Sean Dyche’s upwardly mobile Burnley – who will be playing European football next season – has played its part in helping Lennon’s state of mind.

His only regret is the transfer failed to materialise sooner.

“It’s one of the best decisions I’ve made football wise,” he said. “I’ve enjoyed every moment since I got here.

“It nearly happened in the summer. It was really close and I wish it had because I ended up not playing much football at Everton. Thankfully the manager came in again for me.”

Lennon was part of the England squad at the 2006 and 2010 World Cups. Jermain Defoe’s recollection this week of being so bored during the 2010 tournament that he spent a night watching Wayne Rooney’s wedding on DVD resonated with Lennon.

“It doesn’t surprise me,” he recalled. “There were some long days in the hotel. There were a lot of computer games played, some read books but, after a couple of weeks, you are climbing the walls. The pressures are immense. At the time it is difficult to enjoy.”

Lennon is asked if he holds any hope of forcing his way back into the England reckoning one day.

“I’ve not thought about it,” he says. “If it happened, great, but honestly just playing week in, week out again is, for me, brilliant.”

That is a triumph in itself.

Great read
 

The first thing you notice as Aaron Lennon walks into a room at Burnley’s training ground is the smile. There is a broad grin etched on his face as he warmly greets the handful of reporters present and it quickly becomes apparent that he is enjoying his football again and, moreover, relishing life again.

It is just over a year since Lennon was detained under the Mental Health Act. Police had been called to the side of a busy thoroughfare close to the M602 motorway near Salford Royal Hospital, on the outskirts of Manchester city centre, after receiving reports about a man in a precarious situation.

Officers arrived on the scene to discover Lennon in a distressed state and were believed to have spent the next 20 minutes negotiating with the England international, then with Everton. He was eventually taken to hospital for assessment and the start of care for what the Merseyside club later described as a “stress-related illness”.

“I was in a dark, dark place for a long time and now just waking up every day and getting excited to come to training again and enjoying each day again is massive for me,” Lennon says. Is that a liberating feeling? “Yes, it is. It’s hard to put into words. The turnaround from this time last year is massive.”

This is the first time Lennon has spoken publicly since the incident, news of which prompted an outpouring of support from the wider football community, not least from those players, such as Stan Collymore, who have had their own mental health issues.

Mental Health Awareness Week commences on Monday and Lennon’s story is a sobering reminder that, no matter a person’s wealth or profile, depression does not discriminate. A detailed study by FifPro, the international players’ union, in 2015 found that 38 per cent of current players, and 35 per cent of retired footballers, had suffered with depression and/or anxiety at some stage.

After a decade in North London with Tottenham, Lennon left for Everton, initially on loan, in February 2015 after finding himself on the periphery at White Hart Lane. Under Roberto Martinez at Everton, he played fairly regularly but opportunities became increasingly scarce for the winger once Ronald Koeman took charge at Goodison Park. At the time of being detained, he had not played for Everton for 2½ months.

“Probably for the last four or five years, I was not enjoying my football but for the period since joining Burnley [in January], I am really enjoying it again,” Lennon said. “I wouldn’t have said that I’d fallen out of love with football, but I’ve been through long periods of not being involved in the squads.

“You start getting to that stage where you don’t actually feel like a footballer. You train throughout the week and you’re not involved at the weekend, then it becomes difficult. So that was tough.”

For the time being at least, Lennon is reluctant to talk in any detail about the events of that bleak Sunday afternoon on April 30 when his battle with depression peaked, but he explains that, for as long as four or five years before then, he had not been enjoying his football.

Now 31, it is easy to forget Lennon has been playing at the top level for 15 years. For a time, he was the youngest player to appear in the Premier League when he made his debut for his hometown club, Leeds United, aged just 16 and 129 days as a substitute in a 2-1 defeat to Spurs in August 2003. He has had to cope with pressure from an early age but it was not playing, rather than the pressure of playing, that ate away at him.

“For me, not playing at the end of the week, you’re going home not a happy person and you’re not enjoying it,” he said. “There’s a lot of talk about footballers not caring but I don’t think there are many footballers who don’t get picked at the weekend, go home and are not bothered.”

On New Year’s Eve, a few weeks before his transfer to Burnley, Lennon posted a long message on Twitter thanking all those who had helped a difficult 2017 “end in such a special way” and paid tribute to friends, family, fans, Everton, “everyone at all the hospitals” and, in particular, staff at the Priory clinic.

“With all your help I’ve managed to get myself in a great place and loving each day like you should, also learning so much about myself and learning how important the mind is and what I need to do to look after it,” he tweeted. There are still people he wants to thank in person for their care.

“The football world has been brilliant to me, especially what I went through and the difficult times,” he said. “There are a lot of people I still need to thank and will thank.”

Moving to Sean Dyche’s upwardly mobile Burnley – who will be playing European football next season – has played its part in helping Lennon’s state of mind.

His only regret is the transfer failed to materialise sooner.

“It’s one of the best decisions I’ve made football wise,” he said. “I’ve enjoyed every moment since I got here.

“It nearly happened in the summer. It was really close and I wish it had because I ended up not playing much football at Everton. Thankfully the manager came in again for me.”

Lennon was part of the England squad at the 2006 and 2010 World Cups. Jermain Defoe’s recollection this week of being so bored during the 2010 tournament that he spent a night watching Wayne Rooney’s wedding on DVD resonated with Lennon.

“It doesn’t surprise me,” he recalled. “There were some long days in the hotel. There were a lot of computer games played, some read books but, after a couple of weeks, you are climbing the walls. The pressures are immense. At the time it is difficult to enjoy.”

Lennon is asked if he holds any hope of forcing his way back into the England reckoning one day.

“I’ve not thought about it,” he says. “If it happened, great, but honestly just playing week in, week out again is, for me, brilliant.”

That is a triumph in itself.

I just hope Zoloft isn't a banned substance.
 
An incredible player to watch in his prime. So many memorable goals and assists. Making a mockery of Milan’s defending was probably my highlight. Love a bit of Azza.
 
The reception he got when he came back with Burnley was something, it's funny how his quiet loyalty to the club shone through. Dare I say there is much more real affection from him than for the other wing genius on the left.
 
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Reading through some of the comments has made me remember how very good he was for us tbh. Phenomenal at a time. I guess it's just because a lot of the recent 'success' has been without him
 
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