The competition to make it as a footballer is as fierce as ever, with 99 percent of those signed to a Premier League academy at the age of nine never going on to enjoy a professional career. Alexander-Arnold has heard a host of heart-breaking stories from kids and families who have struggled with mental health issues due to the cutthroat nature of the sport, and is now determined to help teenagers find work after football. “I’m fortunate because I look back and think every single sacrifice I made was worth it,” said the Liverpool star. “I’m one of very, very, very, very few players with the privilege to say that. But everybody else that I played with, around 15/16 other kids, probably couldn’t. How can that be fair? People here, for example, know that someone trains and plays for Liverpool [when you’re a kid]. It becomes who you are and it defines you. I remember walking down the street with people saying: ‘You’re [at] Liverpool academy, you’re this, that.’ I was fine with it. When you are known as that and you were that, you’re proud of it. But when that gets stripped away from you, you don’t know who you are. Because you’ve given everything and sacrificed everything for it. It’s almost like an identity crisis.”