
Dimitri Payet has said that the burden of bailing out France’s misfiring attack at Euro 2016 has yet to affect him.
With
forwards Olivier Giroud, Antoine Griezmann and Anthony Martial managing
just one goal in three games between them, France have had to rely
heavily on Payet.
But as the expectation level grows, the attacking midfielder said he is staying as relaxed as possible.
“It
would be stupid to ruin it all by putting
myself under pressure for no reason,” he said. “I want to enjoy myself on the pitch.”
myself under pressure for no reason,” he said. “I want to enjoy myself on the pitch.”
Payet has
made his mark at Euro 2016 with spectacular late goals against Romania
and Albania, compensating for missed chances from Giroud, Griezmann and
Martial.
“We need to kill games off … We’ve got to start putting
them away,” Payet said, adding that he still sees “Germany and Spain” as
the tournament favorites.
“[They] are a bit above the rest,” he said. “They have the potential to go all the way.”
In
the 0-0 draw with Switzerland on Wednesday, Payet almost won the match
late on when he hit the crossbar with a cleanly-struck volley.
Coach Didier Deschamps recently said he wanted to “freeze [Payet] in ice,” indicating how he needs him injury-free.
Payet
will be France’s key player in the last 16 of the tournament on Sunday
against one of the third-place finishers from Groups C, D or E.
“People believe in me and they expect things from me; which counts a lot,” Payet said. “I think I can still improve.”
Payet’s 22 caps for France are spread over six years, underlining how the 29-year-old was often considered too inconsistent.
The
West Ham player credits his late rise to the Premier League — he joined
from Marseille last year — but not because of its famed attacking
football.
“A lot of the physical contact is right on the limit,”
he said. “You’re playing against a big European club every couple of
weeks and you have to be ready, so I think the level of the Premier
League prepared me for international standards.”
When he steps out
onto the pitch at Stade de Lyon on Sunday, he said it will feel
particularly rewarding because he once feared he would never play in
France — let alone for the national team.
After failing a trial
with unheralded Le Havre in 2003, he took the 11-hour flight home to the
French Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean.
“When I went back, I’d
given up on playing again in France,” Payet said. “I didn’t think I’d
be here today, but I was lucky enough to get a second chance.”
Nantes gave him that, signing him for the 2005-06 season, but the teenager played only three games as a substitute.
He scored four league goals for Nantes the following campaign.
But
it was only four seasons later that his scoring talent started to
become evident, as he netted 13 league goals in a season for
Saint-Etienne. He got his first international call up in 2010 and,
following a spell with Lille alongside Chelsea star Eden Hazard, joined
Marseille in 2013.
But in his two seasons there, Payet gave only fleeting glimpses of the player he is now.
“I’ve come a long way and I want to make the most of it now,” Payet said.
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