Hatem Ben Arfa says he has come back from hell after
returning to form at Nice following a troubled end to his
Newcastle United career.
Nice winger Hatem Ben Arfa has spoken out on his enforced
exile to the reserves during his time at Newcastle United,
describing the period as "hell".
Following an initial loan spell, Ben Arfa was signed on a
permanent deal by Newcastle in January 2011 and quickly
became a fans' favourite at St James' Park.
However, his Newcastle career came to a bitter end, a fall-out
with then manager Alan Pardew leading to the Frenchman being
banished to the reserves.
A loan move to Hull City followed in September 2014, but his
spell at the KC Stadium was brief as Ben Arfa fell out of favour
with boss Steve Bruce, with Newcastle then terminating his
contract in January this year.
Ben Arfa joined up with Nice that month, only to see his
contract cancelled as it was ruled he was ineligible to play for
the Ligue 1 club having already featured for Newcastle's
reserves and the Hull first team in the 2014-15 season.
But Ben Arfa was re-signed by Nice in June and has earned a
recall to the France squad for this month's friendlies with
Germany and England courtesy of a run of form in which he has
scored seven goals in 14 games.
Asked about the final months of his Newcastle career, Ben Arfa
told France Football: "It was a very, very difficult period. The
worst of my career.
"It was a hell at Newcastle. There, on the first day back in
August 2014, I was placed directly with the reserves – a terrible
humiliation.
"Weeks passed and I was always with these young 16, 17-year-
olds away from the pros. I did not understand. They made it a
nightmare. It was full of little cheap shots. And when I believed I
had got out by signing in Nice, they were forbidden to hire me.
"I had the feeling of being locked in a dark room without a door,
or in an endless tunnel. I saw hell and especially no solution to
my problems.
"At that time, I was wrong, I did not see any light. I was a
prisoner. I told myself every day to not let go. I tried to convince
myself that the light was coming back, I was going to find the
right path.
"By signing this summer with Nice, I really felt out of hell. In
fact, that's it – I've come back from hell. "
returning to form at Nice following a troubled end to his
Newcastle United career.
Nice winger Hatem Ben Arfa has spoken out on his enforced
exile to the reserves during his time at Newcastle United,
describing the period as "hell".
Following an initial loan spell, Ben Arfa was signed on a
permanent deal by Newcastle in January 2011 and quickly
became a fans' favourite at St James' Park.
However, his Newcastle career came to a bitter end, a fall-out
with then manager Alan Pardew leading to the Frenchman being
banished to the reserves.
A loan move to Hull City followed in September 2014, but his
spell at the KC Stadium was brief as Ben Arfa fell out of favour
with boss Steve Bruce, with Newcastle then terminating his
contract in January this year.
Ben Arfa joined up with Nice that month, only to see his
contract cancelled as it was ruled he was ineligible to play for
the Ligue 1 club having already featured for Newcastle's
reserves and the Hull first team in the 2014-15 season.
But Ben Arfa was re-signed by Nice in June and has earned a
recall to the France squad for this month's friendlies with
Germany and England courtesy of a run of form in which he has
scored seven goals in 14 games.
Asked about the final months of his Newcastle career, Ben Arfa
told France Football: "It was a very, very difficult period. The
worst of my career.
"It was a hell at Newcastle. There, on the first day back in
August 2014, I was placed directly with the reserves – a terrible
humiliation.
"Weeks passed and I was always with these young 16, 17-year-
olds away from the pros. I did not understand. They made it a
nightmare. It was full of little cheap shots. And when I believed I
had got out by signing in Nice, they were forbidden to hire me.
"I had the feeling of being locked in a dark room without a door,
or in an endless tunnel. I saw hell and especially no solution to
my problems.
"At that time, I was wrong, I did not see any light. I was a
prisoner. I told myself every day to not let go. I tried to convince
myself that the light was coming back, I was going to find the
right path.
"By signing this summer with Nice, I really felt out of hell. In
fact, that's it – I've come back from hell. "


No comments:
Post a Comment