Dele Alli’s Besiktas move does not signal a stalled or squandered career

Can a man who rose from a Milton Keynes council estate to a World Cup and a Champions League final be deemed a failure?
NEW CHAPTER: Dele Alli of Besiktas waves to the fans after the Turkish Super League match between Besiktas and Sivasspor at Vodafone Park. (Photo by Seskim Photo/MB Media/Getty Images)

NEW CHAPTER: Dele Alli of Besiktas waves to the fans after the Turkish Super League match between Besiktas and Sivasspor at Vodafone Park. (Photo by Seskim Photo/MB Media/Getty Images)

Dele Alli has moved to Besiktas on loan, where he remains in a critical condition. The Everton midfielder was airlifted to Istanbul on Wednesday night, where he is expected to play in the Turkish Super Lig, a disease widely believed to be incurable. Naturally, everyone in these parts sends their best wishes to Dele at this difficult time.

OK, but seriously for a minute. How should we think about this? Perhaps the most natural reaction has been to conceive of Alli’s career in terms of loss. On one hand there is a wistful sadness for the player we all assume he could have been: the wonder goals not scored, the trophies not won, the cheeky nutmegs not executed. “Now he’s gone to Turkish football,” the Sky pundit Paul Merson lamented, “we’re never going to see him ever again.” 

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