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Lamine Yamal ‘had what other kids didn’t,’ says his former Barcelona youth team coach

(CNN) — At just 19, soccer superstar Lamine Yamal has won more than most players ever do in their entire careers. He’s already a three-time La Liga winner for Barcelona, a European champion with Spain and now, he’s one game away from adding a World Cup to his trophy cabinet.

It’s an incredible success rate for the youngster, and it’s a rise through the ranks that’s surprised even those who were first to see the youngster’s talent.

Speaking to CNN Sports, Barcelona youth team coach Marc Serra explained what stood out about the prodigy during a trial game he watched over a decade ago, which was organized by Barça to identify the best talent in the country.

“He came here, and in that very first time of meeting, we saw that he had things that made him stand out from the others, and we decided to bring him in,” Serra says.

“What we saw was that he did things uniquely or differently and, more importantly, it looked like no one had taught him any of that. He basically had just started playing and he was just born with it.

“It was in his genes, or he learned it in the streets, but – whatever it was – he had what other kids didn’t.”

Yamal first arrived at the Catalan giant aged 7, having previously played for his local club La Torreta. He was one of several young boys who joined the club’s famed La Masía academy – a soccer school which has raised some of the best players in recent times, including Lionel Messi.

Serra, who is now Barcelona’s under-7s coordinator, was Yamal’s coach when he was around 10 or 11.

He saw firsthand how much magic the young kid had in his boots, but never predicted he would ever take the sport by storm at such a young age.

In 2023, eight years on from that trial match, Yamal made his debut for the Barcelona first team aged just 15 years, 9 months and 16 days – becoming the youngest player to represent the club in over a century.

But he didn’t just turn up once, he took the opportunity by the scruff of the neck and ran with it. He quickly became the focal point for the team’s attack and made an equally large splash with the national team.

He has since become one of the best players on the planet, able to dominate games with his pace, his trickery and an eye for the spectacular. His passing, in addition to his long-range shooting ability, is possibly his greatest strength. He’s able to create chances out of seemingly nothing, a trait he possessed from the very start of his career.

“He did things on the pitch that to me, as a coach, it was very difficult to believe a 10 or 11-year-old could do,” Serra says, distinctly remembering Yamal’s ability to pass with the outside of his boot.

“Passes that you wouldn’t see, plays that you wouldn’t think of. In the end, he knew more than you. He dreams up things that the rest of us can’t.”

But the fact that he’s been able to translate that ability onto the senior stage, against seasoned professionals, is remarkable even for Serra. Yamal has such a presence on the pitch that it’s easy to forget he’s just a teenager. And he’s so well established that it’s barely believable that he’s still got time to get better.

Bravery combined with skill

Serra puts Yamal’s rapid rise partly down to his mentality. Remembering the young attacker as a “nice” and “happy” boy, the youth team coach also recalls how things changed when he stepped onto the pitch.

He became a competitor, totally fearless and ready to play against whatever the opposition had to throw at him.

“The few times you had to push Lamine a bit were in easier matches or more routine ones,” Serra says.

“But when the hour of truth came – big matches, tournaments – you would say to yourself, he won’t let you down here, you knew he would be at his level. I think he likes challenges.

“I feel lucky to have had him close to me. I think that players like Lamine, of which there are very few, we don’t have much to do with it.

“Simply, we’ve tried to accompany him, tried not to ruin what he is, let him keep flowing and I think in a lot of ways, it’s us who can learn from him.”

The new Messi?

Due to his attacking flair and rise through La Masía, comparisons to Messi began early. In an incredible twist of fate, a then-20-year-old Messi was actually photographed holding Yamal as a baby back in 2007.

But Yamal doesn’t seem phased by the weighty comparison – content on being the best version of himself, and not worrying about what the rest of the world says.

Serra urges that it’s still too early to predict just how far the Spaniard can go in the sport, but says he just might be able to join Messi as, who he thinks, the greatest player in history.

“The important thing is he plays like he is,” Serra added. “That he keeps enjoying himself like he has been until now.

“If he manages to be at that level and to keep growing from now until 12 or 13 years from now, we’ll be talking about Lamine as one of the best ever.

“But he’s still young, we also shouldn’t put too much pressure on him. We just have to let him do what he likes on the pitch, to enjoy himself, because if that’s what happens, I’m sure he will keep getting better.”

World Cup concerns

Yamal is one of the key figures for La Roja at the World Cup, where he’s helped Spain to the final.

But the youngster was a slight injury concern heading into the group stages, after missing the end of Barcelona’s club season with a hamstring injury.

He didn’t feature in any of Spain’s warm-up matches before kickoff in North America, but Yamal’s been able to slowly build himself up to near 100%. There are hopes that he can now shine brightest on the biggest stage of all to help La Roja claim its second ever World Cup.

“The bigger the challenge, the better he gets and the better it goes for him,” Serra says.

“Every day though, Lamine is adding new things. He’s getting better. I don’t think that his potential has been reached. Every day, he’s growing and that’s perhaps what’s most impressive. You don’t see a ceiling to his talent.”

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Ukraine’s deep strikes mean ‘significant change’ for war, former Russian PM says

Former Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov attends a march in memory of Russian opposition leader and former Deputy Prime Minister Boris Nemtsov on March 1, 2015 in Moscow, Russia. (Sasha Mordovets/Getty Images)(LONDON) -- Once one of the most powerful men in Russia, Mikhail Kasyanov now lives in exile in Latvia, his name on a list of "extremists and terrorists" that the Kremlin alleges are trying to overthrow the state.Kasyanov first served as Russia's finance minister before being elevated to prime minister under President Vladimir Putin from May 2000 to February 2004 -- the early years of Putin's time in office when the future strongman was embedding his control and beginning to formulate his vision of a revitalized Russia.Putin's decades-long project culminated in the February 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine, a gambit now in its fifth year. Kasyanov told ABC News last week that the campaign has achieved none of Putin's goals and could yet prove an existential challenge to the Kremlin regime.In recent months, Kasyanov told ABC News on the sidelines of the Chatham House think tank conference in London, "the overall sentiment, overall attitude, to Putin started to change."Among the factors applying more pressure to the Kremlin are expanding Ukrainian long-range drone strikes on Russia's oil production, refining and export facilities -- plus on the capital Moscow and the so-called "second capital" St. Petersburg -- apparent public concern about spreading fuel shortages, troubling macro-economic indicators and new restrictions on internet usage, Kasyanov said.Putin, Kasyanov said, built his image around providing both stability and security. "There is nothing on this -- no stability and no security," he said, adding, "The situation now has started to change in the minds of people -- not only the ruling group, but also just the middle class, who in fact, could in any country be a driving force for any changes."That middle class is a key constituency for the Kremlin. Concentrated in Russia's largest cities, analysts have watched keenly for any hint of dissent from this social strata.Putin's continued refusal to order a general mobilization despite Russia's enormous battlefield losses and reported manpower strains have been interpreted by some analysts as a tacit acknowledgement that the Kremlin does not want to risk urban, middle class ire. "Putin is very much concerned about this," Kasyanov suggested.In cities like Moscow, St. Petersburg and Yekaterinburg, Kasyanov said, it had until recently been possible to continue as if "nothing is happening.""But, in the spring and now, of course, Ukraine changed their attitude. They have an advantage in long-range missiles and they have an advantage in drones," Kasyanov said."Gradually, they moved the war from being an 'accident' somewhere, an emergency case somewhere in the corner of Russia, to Russia -- even to Moscow. And that is quite a significant change."'He needs pressure'Kayanov said Western powers should seek to exploit the growing pressure on Putin and force him back to the negotiating table with genuine concessions, not the same maximalist demands the Kremlin has long made of Ukraine."It could happen by the end of the year if consistent pressure continues," Kasyanov said. Russia's growing budget deficit -- which as of last month reached 2.5% of GDP, according to preliminary Finance Ministry data -- could prove a particular pain point, he added.So too might international sanctions on -- and long-range Ukrainian drone attacks on -- Russia's vital oil industry, Kasyanov added. "By the end of the year, he will face a big problem," Kasyanov said of Putin.Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov this week acknowledged some economic strains, telling reporters that Russia's rate of growth is currently "insufficient." But Peskov said the problems facing the country were not critical, but rather a reflection of the "rather dire state" of the global economy.On the diplomatic front, Kasyanov said Moscow has largely failed to convert apparent diplomatic openings with Washington -- for example its success at Putin's summit with President Donald Trump in Anchorage in August 2025."What Putin wanted was to divide the transatlantic unity, dreaming of what they call the 'Anchorage spirit,'" Kasyanov said, referring to the U.S.-Russian understanding that Moscow said was reached at the Alaska summit, which was widely interpreted as a diplomatic coup for the Kremlin.Broadly, Kasyanov suggested that Washington had a "wrong understanding of the whole problem." He added, "All those years, it was a useless undertaking trying to give a carrot to Putin. Because they don't understand what the Putin regime is about."The negotiations, Kasyanov suggested, were interpreted by the Kremlin "as a demonstration of weakness." Nonetheless, both Moscow and Kyiv have acknowledged that the current conflict can only end with a diplomatic settlement.Trump has repeatedly said he is the only Western leader capable of pressuring Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to agree a deal to end the fighting. This week, Trump told Fox News he believes that Putin is "ready to make a deal," possibly "soon.""I tell him the same thing all the time. I don't want to go into great detail, but I say: 'Vladimir, it's time for you to stop. It's time for this war to end,'" Trump said. "It takes two to tango. But I think he's ready to make a deal," Trump added.Earlier this month, Trump told ABC News of a potential deal, "We're getting much closer than people realize, and President Putin wants it to end."But for all the Russian maneuvers and White House criticism directed toward Kyiv, Western funds and weapons have continued to flow into Ukrainian hands.Last week, during a warm face-to-face meeting with Zelenskyy, Trump said Ukraine would be allowed to produce key Patriot surface-to-air system interceptors."That is, I think, creating a shock in Moscow," Kasyanov said of the resolute Western backing of Ukraine.Life after PutinPutin dismissed Kasyanov and his cabinet in early 2004, weeks before that year's presidential election. In the years that followed, Kasyanov became a prominent opposition figure, faced fraud charges -- which he denied -- and was blocked from standing as a candidate in Russia's 2008 presidential election.After Putin launched his full-scale invasion of Ukraine In 2022, Kasyanov left Russia. He now leads the People's Freedom Party from Riga -- "temporarily," according to his business card.Kasyanov, 68, said he has no concrete political ambitions in a post-Putin Russia. Rather, he suggested that the best case scenario would be a "long process" of political normalization and eventual democratization.A years-long "gray period," he said, could see Putin's successors allow "imitation" or "quasi" elections and the return of a true political opposition, which Kasyanov hopes will eventually give way to a genuine vote that draws real legitimacy from the population."If Putin stays in power, it means there will be another period in which Russia will represent a threat and there will continue to be some kind of negotiations and preparations for some kind of revanche, as we saw in previous years," Kasyanov said.For the time being, Kasyanov said he expects Putin to simultaneously seek to "destroy unity" within Europe and within the transatlantic system and seek negotiations.On the domestic front, Putin will continue to keep a tight grip on the narrative, Kasyanov said, lionizing Russian achievements in the war like the retention of Crimea, further territorial gains in southern and eastern Ukraine and a supposed defeat of NATO.In the long term, Kasyanov said he still hopes for Putin to leave the scene, one way or another. But he doubts Putin will be overthrown from the inside."I don't think there will be a coup, because there are no such people. All those people inside who were capable, with strength, disappeared," Kasyanov said. There are, he added, people in Russia who are "ready for changes, but they are not ready to fight, because they immediately will be in jail.""When the situation starts to change, some of us could come back to participate in quasi-elections, which will happen not in two years after Putin, maybe in three years, maybe in four years. And at that time, real change could start," he said."I hope my country will be a normal European state," Kasyanov said. "We'll see."Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.
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