Danny Drinkwater: Former England Midfielder And Premier League Winner Retires
Former England midfielder Danny Drinkwater has retired from football after becoming frustrated "in limbo".
Drinkwater,
now 33, helped Leicester City win the Premier League in 2016 and joined Chelsea
for £35m a year later.
He left
Stamford Bridge when his contract expired in June 2022, having made little
impact, and has not played since.
"I
think I've been in limbo for too long," said Drinkwater, who started his
career at Manchester United.
He told
the High Performance podcast there had been no opportunities at a level
that might tempt him back into action.
"I've
been wanting to play but not getting the opportunity to play at a standard or a
level where I felt valued," Drinkwater said.
"I've
never been really obsessed with football, I've just loved it. The idea of me
dropping down is fine but it's the idea of not playing to my worth."
Drinkwater
came through the academy at United but signed for Leicester in 2012 before
making a senior appearance for Sir Alex Ferguson's side.
He helped
Leicester win promotion to the Premier League in 2014 and was part of Claudio
Ranieri's 2016 title-winning squad.
Following
his success under Ranieri, who he called "Grandad", Drinkwater earned
his first of three England caps but was not selected by Roy Hodgson for Euro
2016.
He signed
for Chelsea for £35m in 2017 and made 22 appearances in his debut season.
Overall,
though, he failed to make a significant impression at the club and had loan
spells at Burnley, Aston Villa, Turkish club Kasimpasa and Reading.
Speaking
about his time at Chelsea, Drinkwater - who previously said he would be open
to a move to Saudi Arabia - said: "As a whole it was garbage, but if
you break it down I had some really good times."
Drinkwater
had off-field problems too - a drink-driving ban, being involved in a
nightclub altercation and headbutting team-mate Jota while on loan at
Villa.
"Anyone
who thinks earning a good amount of money will solve all of your problems is
not true at all," Drinkwater said.
"Mental
health is more important than physical. It was the darkest I'd ever felt and it
was like I was drowning and forgotten how to swim."
From BBC Sports
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