I will come back stronger than ever, says banned Evra

Patrice Evra says he wants to be a better player than what he was before. Photo: Claude Paris/AP

Patrice Evra says he wants to be a better player than what he was before. Photo: Claude Paris/AP

Published Nov 13, 2017

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PARIS – Patrice Evra has vowed to come back “stronger than ever” in his first public message since leaving Marseille and being hit with a season-long European football ban for kung-fu kicking a supporter.

Evra – who was sent off after attacking the Marseille fan ahead of the Ligue 1 side’s 1-0 Europa League defeat to Vitoria Guimaraes on November 2 – made the promise while pulling a Jeep in a light-hearted Instagram post filmed in Dubai by former Arsenal and Chelsea striker Nicolas Anelka, who Evra nicknamed “Spielberg” in the post.

“I swear to God I will come back stronger than ever,” said the former France and Manchester United left back.

“Sometimes life you can feel really heavy but you always have to keep smiling, and of course keep loving this game.” 

The 36-year-old’s ban only applies to Uefa club competitions, meaning that he could still play in a domestic league should a club approach him.

Evra, who has won five Premier titles, two Serie A championships and the Champions League, parted ways with Marseille on Saturday almost immediately after being banned from European competition and fined €10 000.

I just feel blessed 🙏🏼happy #monday don’t be lazy 😴 why you have to worry when you got the support and the strength from soo many human beings♥️🙈♥️ thank you soo much Keep smiling only positive energy on Patrice Instagram I love this game hahahaahah special thanks @coachmeddydubai and Spielberg aka @nicolasanelka_official #ilovethisgame #positivevibes #love @beapandaofficial #motivation #future #car

A post shared by Patrice Evra (@patrice.evra) on Nov 13, 2017 at 2:34am PST

Evra lashed out in response to a group of supporters that had gone pitch-side to berate him for what they considered sub-par displays on the south coast of France.

On Sunday, Marseille goalkeeper Steve Mandanda backed his former teammate, saying that Evra was a “true friend and a good guy”, while France coach Didier Deschamps described his punishment as “heavy”. 

The club’s American owner Frank McCourt blamed both player and fans for the incident, calling it “unacceptable behaviour” and “not something we can tolerate at “Marseille”.

Evra’s dismissal from Marseille also came after supporters unfurled a huge banner before their home match with Caen last week that read: “We don’t want you in our colours anymore. Evra get lost.”

AFP

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