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Confession. I’m a Manchester City fan. Another confession. Kevin De Bruyne is my favourite player. In 30 years of journalism, ❤️ I’ve never interviewed a City player. Don’t meet your heroes, they say. The whole thing is discombobulating. De Bruyne – ❤️ one of the world’s great players – has agreed to a rare interview. But there’s a caveat. If you talk ❤️ to me, he says, you also talk to my wife, my kids, you do it at our home and you ❤️ get to know us all. Usually, it’s the opposite – you don’t talk to my family, you don’t come to ❤️ my home, it’s all about the work rather than the private life. Strange. We meet a few weeks before the start ❤️ of the World Cup. He’s beginning to think about it. But in typical De Bruyne fashion he dispenses with diplomacy ❤️ and tells it as it is. No, he’s not happy about it being in Qatar. Yes, it is a distraction ❤️ from the Premier League. No, he doesn’t think Belgium have much chance of winning. Now he’s out there hoping to prove ❤️ himself wrong. At his best on the pitch, virtually everything is channelled through him. Often he will start a move by ❤️ winning the ball and running with it in the same movement. Though he plays in the centre, he sets up ❤️ goals by overlapping on the wing to put in crosses of such pace, swerve and accuracy that they are impossible ❤️ to defend. And while goal-scoring isn’t his main thing (he prefers to assist), last season, when he scored four goals ❤️ against Wolves, commentator Alistair Mann quivered: “Kevin, stop it! I’m running out of superlatives for you!” In 2024, De Bruyne became ❤️ the first City men’s player to win the prestigious PFA Player of the Year, and won it again the following ❤️ season. In September, he was named the world’s best passer in the video game Fifa 23. Earlier this month, the ❤️ game Football Manager 2024 ranked him the greatest player in the world. De Bruyne doesn’t run with the football pack. We ❤️ never see him out getting into trouble. In fact, we pretty much never see him. Which makes today even stranger. ❤️ But it also makes a kind of sense. “Away from football, it’s all about family,” he says. “This is my ❤️ life.” Michèle Lacroix, AKA Mrs De Bruyne, greets me at the door. She apologises for still being in her bathrobe, shows ❤️ me in and makes coffee. The house is everything you’d expect: huge driveway, extension the size of a small hotel, ❤️ artworks galore, carpets like quicksand. Coco, the white-grey cat, is so perfectly coordinated, you wonder whether she came with the ❤️ furnishings. Yet it’s also homely. Toys spill out of the playroom and De Bruyne’s office obviously doubled up as the ❤️ home-schoolroom in the pandemic (one wall is plastered with spelling tests). De Bruyne is nowhere to be seen, so Lacroix introduces ❤️ me to Coco, the three children and her mother. We chat and drink, and it’s only after a while that ❤️ I realise De Bruyne is also now in the kitchen. He is wearing a brown tracksuit, has a wispy gingerish ❤️ beard and bears more than a passing resemblance to his cartoon compatriot Tintin. He glides through his house like a ❤️ ghost: if he hadn’t shaken my hand and introduced himself, I probably wouldn’t have registered his presence. He floats off ❤️ to the fridge, takes out slices of white Hovis, makes himself a mustard sandwich, heats up green soup and starts ❤️ eating. All without a murmur. De Bruyne is a paradox. He is both famously shy and famously outspoken. A number ❤️ of stories shape the mythology around him. The first is that at eight he turns to his father and says ❤️ he wants to leave his club, KVV Drongen, because the training sessions at Ghent, another local club, are better. Second, ❤️ now playing for Ghent, he gets so enraged when told off for not helping to clear up the pitch that ❤️ he grabs one of the posts and refuses to let go. Three adults try to pull him away but fail, ❤️ and his coach, Frank De Leyn, has to stay with him because De Bruyne tells him he is planning to ❤️ hold on all night. I compare my pay to a singer at a concert. Yeah, it’s a lot of money, but ❤️ is it too much? It’s not a popular answer, but no Fast forward a few years for another classic tale: De ❤️ Bruyne is on the verge of the first team at rival Belgian club Genk, living there with a foster family ❤️ during the week, when they decide, two years in, that they don’t want him to live with them any more ❤️ because he doesn’t fit in; he’s too quiet. Finally, there is the time, aged just 20, when he gives a ❤️ half-time interview ripping into his Genk teammates for shirking: “I’m ashamed of them. I suggest that those who don’t have ❤️ a desire to play just leave,” he says at the time. His management team are also here today and he’s talking ❤️ to them in a quiet, flat voice. It’s so understated you almost tune out. Then you hear what he’s saying. ❤️ Asked if Belgium can win the World Cup, he says, “No chance, we’re too old.” It’s only seven months ago ❤️ that Belgium were ranked No 1 in the world. De Bruyne says that because the tournament is being played in ❤️ Qatar in mid-season, it doesn’t feel like a real World Cup. One of his reps says it must be a ❤️ dream playing with Erling Haaland, the extraordinarily prolific striker at City. “Ach, it’s like any forward.” Even he thinks his ❤️ response is underwhelming. “He is so quick, though,” he adds. He finishes his soup, cuts up some blackberries and grapes for ❤️ baby Suri, who is sitting in her highchair having her hair primped for the photoshoot. He says his childhood was ❤️ so different from that of his children. His father worked in a factory painting trains, his mother was a housewife, ❤️ and he describes his background as “lower-middle class”. What was he like at school? “I was OK. Smart enough to ❤️ know how much I needed to do and to finish it. I left at 18 with a diploma.” I ask why ❤️ so many European footballers seem better educated than their British counterparts. Perhaps the difference is languages, he says. “There are ❤️ a lot of people from different countries who speak two or three languages, where English players usually only speak English. ❤️ I come from a country where by 13 you are studying Dutch, French and English.” With languages, perhaps comes wisdom ❤️ and humility – an ability to put yourself in the shoes of others, a knowledge that your way is not ❤️ the only way. He smiles. The Belgian way was never going to be the only way, he says. “Everybody in ❤️ Belgium always watches English TV anyway!” I tell him I recently watched footage of him playing as a young boy and ❤️ his style has hardly changed. Even if you blocked out his face, it could only be De Bruyne. “I know!” ❤️ He takes out his phone and compares two photographs. “This is from a couple of months ago when I scored ❤️ against Bournemouth. Look at the way I kick the ball. And this is a picture of me shooting when I ❤️ was a kid. Identical! Same technique!” Taking on Wales in the Uefa Nations League in September. Photograph: Yves Herman/Reuters Are Mason, six, ❤️ and Rome, almost four, promising footballers? “No,” he says. “They don’t play.” Are they not interested? “I don’t know,” he ❤️ says, as if he’s never considered it. “They like to go to the football. My oldest plays piano a bit ❤️ and likes to run. He’s a good runner.” I ask about the famous stories. Did you really cling to the goalpost ❤️ and refuse to budge? “I think the stories are a bit made up.” So it’s not true? “I don’t remember ❤️ it. It could be true!” Does it sound like him ? He grins. “I was a little bit stubborn, yeah. ❤️ I let most things go, but when I do say something I am outspoken. I know now when you speak ❤️ as a teenager or a kid to an adult with an opinion, people don’t like it … even if it’s ❤️ true.” Was that the case when you suggested your Genk teammates were not trying? De Bruyne pinkens. He often flushes like ❤️ this – when he’s embarrassed, when he’s upset on the pitch and when he’s made one of his superhuman runs. ❤️ “Yes! The problem is the fans like that and other people like that, but the team doesn’t.” A hairdresser is here ❤️ to give everyone a trim before the photoshoot. While it’s De Bruyne’s turn, I chat to Lacroix. She’s a model, ❤️ a social influencer (with more than 350,000 Instagram followers) and she recently started a Flemish podcast called Secret Society with ❤️ a few Belgian girlfriends. Her parents are physiotherapists and she wanted to be a doctor when she was at school. ❤️ “I never thought my life would look like this. Getting a degree was my main goal then.” When she was ❤️ 17 and De Bruyne was 21, they started dating. Apart from it being her husband’s career, she has no interest ❤️ in football and certainly had no ambition to be a footballer’s wife. Can she see what makes him a special ❤️ player? “I don’t know a lot about football, but I think he sees things before the others maybe. He’s always ❤️ one step ahead?” She’s encouraging Suri to finish her fruit. “Everyone thinks she’s called Surrey,” she says. “‘Ello, Surrey!’” She does ❤️ a good impression of a cockney. Rome is building a racetrack on his mini computer. He shows me how to ❤️ do it, but I can’t keep up. Mason asks for a go of my tape recorder. “I’m going to interview ❤️ you. What’s it like working for media? What’s your favourite colour?” De Bruyne emerges from his haircut looking pleased with himself. ❤️ “I’m like 24 now! I could be a model!” We head back into his office and he and Lacroix sit ❤️ together on the sofa. I ask her how life has changed since they got together. For starters, she says, they ❤️ weren’t living anywhere like here. Back then he was just making a name for himself and they could pretty much ❤️ do what they wanted socially. “Football-wise, it’s got better and better. But then we could do more normal stuff. On ❤️ a city trip, say, maybe two or three people would come up to us. Now we’re more isolated. So you ❤️ do more things at home with friends. Kevin has grown more open because we’re in such an intimate circle, always ❤️ with the same group. He’s more comfortable with who he is.” “I’m more open-minded to life,” De Bruyne says. “When I ❤️ was younger, it was just football. Now I have a family, life is different.” In fact, he says, it’s remarkably ❤️ similar to many other working people – he drops the kids off on his way to work, trains, comes home, ❤️ family meal with the kids, helps with the homework, watches telly. Because I’m a foreigner living here, I’m still OK. When ❤️ you’re an English player, the attention flows from everywhere He admits there is one way their life is noticeably different from ❤️ the rest of ours – they spend more money on stuff. This is partly because they can and partly because ❤️ they pay extra to buy their privacy. “We have to live our life in a more secluded way. Often, if ❤️ we go on a tour it will be a private tour, and most of the time this stuff is more ❤️ expensive and more individual.” Lacroix says this is not a choice. When she and the kids go out without De Bruyne, ❤️ they can do whatever they want. But with him it’s a different story. “Yesterday we thought we’d try going to ❤️ the fair and Kevin made at least 100 pictures. Maybe 150. And the kids had to wait all the time, ❤️ and it wasn’t enjoyable for them. At one point security came up and we thought they’d help, then they said, ❤️ ‘Can we have a picture?’” She laughs. She’s not asking for sympathy, she says. In so many ways it’s a wonderful, ❤️ privileged life. But it isn’t without problems. “When I’ve been driving to the club lately,” De Bruyne says, “there have ❤️ been people driving next to me and filming. People have followed me.” After games, Lacroix adds, “People just jump in front ❤️ of the car so you can’t drive. Then the one next to them goes for a picture so you can’t ❤️ go anywhere.” Top footballers get paid ludicrous salaries and are idolised by their supporters. De Bruyne is City’s best-paid player, earning ❤️ an estimated £385,000 a week – £20m a year. In 2024, he cut ties with his long-term agent, Patrick De ❤️ Koster, after he was arrested on suspicion of fraud. The investigation was reportedly triggered by complaints from De Bruyne himself. ❤️ Last year, he negotiated his own contract extension using data analysts to prove his worth to the club. All the money ❤️ and worship must change you, I say. “I don’t necessarily think it’s the money, it’s the attention. If you go ❤️ from no attention to wherever you go people give you attention, then that changes you. You either take everything in ❤️ or block everything out. Some people like all the attention, but after a while it becomes so much you get ❤️ eaten up by it. Then if you push it out you seem arrogant. It’s a thin line you have to ❤️ walk.” In terms of attention, he says, it’s harder for the top English players: “Because I’m a foreigner living here, I’m ❤️ still OK. When you’re an English player, the attention flows from everywhere. It would be too much for me.” ‘Elite sport ❤️ is brutal.’ Photograph: David Yeo/The Guardian Does he think he gets paid too much? “No. I compare it to a singer ❤️ at a concert and 60,000 people come. I look at it logically. There are millions of people watching the football ❤️ on TV, there’s 60,000 watching the games, the income of a club is £500-£600m. Yeah, it’s a lot of money, ❤️ but is it too much? If the club can afford it, it’s not too much. It’s not a popular answer, ❤️ but that’s how I see it.” How hard is it for them to relate to people struggling with the cost of ❤️ living crisis? “We are really close to our family and friends, and most of them have normal jobs, so we ❤️ know the struggles,” Lacroix says. She looks at De Bruyne and asks him to translate an expression. “We stay with our ❤️ feet on the ground,” he says. “It’s easier for us to understand, but it will be harder for the kids ❤️ because they’re used to a certain lifestyle. They go to a private school and there are people from similar backgrounds. ❤️ They understand when we go to see our families it’s different types of houses and another lifestyle.” It worries him: ❤️ “We’ll try, but it cannot be the same as when we grew up. It’s not possible.” When he was a child, ❤️ he says, his parents didn’t have much, but it was plenty: “We had what we needed; a nice garden.” Does ❤️ he have siblings? “One sister. She did trampoline and was pretty good at it. But she didn’t have the character ❤️ to go on like I did.” So many promising footballers fall by the wayside. Fewer than 0.5% of the kids in ❤️ English academies at the age of nine make it as professionals at any level. So what is character? “It’s will. ❤️ It’s saying no to fun stuff. At 17, 18, a new social life is beginning, people are going out, having ❤️ fun with friends, and you have to say no.” That must be hard? “It is, and that’s why many people ❤️ fall down at that stage. You have to become an adult quickly in football. When you start playing with the ❤️ first team, you’re living with 30-, 35-year-olds; people with kids. It’s not easy and you need to learn that quickly, ❤️ because if you don’t, you fall out. Elite sport is brutal.” Did he find it tough as a teen? “Yes. I ❤️ also missed part of my life because I went away from 14. We’d play on a Saturday, then I would ❤️ go home to see my parents and on Sunday evening I’d travel back. So I missed the whole social part ❤️ of my life.” Was he jealous of his friends? “Not at that time. Maybe afterwards. Later, when you experience things, ❤️ you think perhaps it would have been fun to be doing this when everybody else was.” It was his decision to ❤️ leave home at 14: he was desperate to play football, and his parents were supportive. I ask if the story about ❤️ being dumped by his foster family is true. “Yes,” he says. “There were three of us and the other two ❤️ were more sociable. At summer break I said bye to the family and went home. Then my parents told me, ❤️ you’re not going back, they don’t want you any more.” He says the foster family never said anything directly, but ❤️ told his parents they didn’t want him because he was too quiet, too difficult, a teenager who didn’t fit in. ❤️ To add insult to injury, Genk told him he had to go to boarding school instead. In Belgium, boarding schools ❤️ are more for problematic than privileged students. “I really didn’t want to do it.” Did that rejection make him question his ❤️ character? “No. I thought I’m going to push more and show them. I said to my parents, I will do ❤️ good, you’ll see. I’ll be in the first team quickly, then everything will change.” There is a YouTube film about De ❤️ Bruyne that depicts his life as a triumph over tragedy. “Right from the beginning he was abandoned by his foster ❤️ family,” it says. “And still life didn’t stop hitting him with tragedy after tragedy.” It goes on to document how ❤️ the 20-year-old signed for Chelsea in a £7m deal and played only three Premier League games before being sold as ❤️ a flop. Celebrating a hat-trick against Wolverhampton in May. Photograph: Nick Potts/PA Has he seen the film? “No.” In the film, it ❤️ mentions a match in which he came on as a half-time substitute and scored five goals. Every goal, it says, ❤️ was a way of answering the foster family: “One goal, they don’t want you any more. Two goals, too quiet. ❤️ Three goals, too difficult. Four goals, they don’t want you any more. Five goals, because of who you are.” When ❤️ I describe this, he turns a pinker shade of pink. “That’s not true. I don’t know who said that, but ❤️ it’s not true. I find that a little bit embarrassing, to be fair.” Now he’s laughing. “My life wasn’t that ❤️ bad, to be honest!” De Bruyne says too much was made of his time at Chelsea when he left, and too ❤️ much was made when he returned to the Premier League a couple of years later with Manchester City. “When I ❤️ came here people said, ‘Chelsea reject.’ No, I was just a young boy who didn’t play and was there for ❤️ six months. I was really young.” Leaving Chelsea was the making of him. He signed for Bundesliga club Wolfsburg in 2014 ❤️ for £18m, ended the 2014-15 season with 16 goals and 27 assists in all competitions and was named Germany’s footballer ❤️ of the year. In August 2024, Manchester City signed him for £55m. Those who remembered his unhappy time at Chelsea ❤️ couldn’t believe how much City paid for him. Former Liverpool player Phil Thompson said: “The world is going mad. The ❤️ amount of money they’re paying for this boy is just absolutely bonkers.” But it turned out to be a bargain. ❤️ In four of his seven seasons, he has been voted player of the season, and City have won the Premier ❤️ League four of the past five seasons. In 2024-18 they became the first (and still only) club to get 100 ❤️ points in a season and the following season won an unprecedented clean sweep of domestic trophies. Eight months after De Bruyne ❤️ arrived at City, Pep Guardiola became manager. It was the catalyst for the club’s greatest run in its history. For ❤️ most of my life as a City fan, I was used to nothing but failure; between 1976 and 2011 the ❤️ club didn’t win a trophy. Thanks to huge investment from its UAE owners, the signing of great players and arguably ❤️ the best manager in the world, City have dominated the Premier League for the past decade. skip past newsletter promotion Sign ❤️ up to Inside Saturday Free weekly newsletter The only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday ❤️ magazine. Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and ❤️ columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend. Privacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded ❤️ by outside parties. For more information see our Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by ❤️ outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy . We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the ❤️ Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. after newsletter promotion ‘When I was younger, it was just football. Now I ❤️ have a family, life is different.’ Photograph: David Yeo/The Guardian. Styling: Bemi Shaw As supporters, I say, we love everything our ❤️ owners have done for the club, but some/many of us do worry about the UAE’s human rights record. Does it ❤️ bother him? “Honestly, I don’t know too much about that. All I can say is when we speak to people ❤️ from the Emirates, they’re all really good and polite. I can only speak highly of them, especially Khaldoon [chairman Khaldoon ❤️ al-Mubarak]. You speak to him and he’s a normal person.” I ask Lacroix if De Bruyne finds it easy to turn ❤️ off from football. “Yes. He comes home and it’s like, ‘Oh my God, I need a break’, so he’ll watch ❤️ NBA or Formula One. If he’s injured and City plays, me and the kids just leave him alone in front ❤️ of the television, because when something goes wrong he shouts. I’m like, nothing is going to change, then he shouts ❤️ at us, and I’m like, OK, let him just watch the game, and after he’s like, sorry!” De Bruyne has never ❤️ been sent off for City. But there is a famous clip of him losing it with his teammates at the ❤️ end of a Champions League match against Napoli in 2024 when he wants to confront the referee. De Bruyne, at ❤️ his pinkest, shouts “Let me talk” five times. Every time his voice gets louder and more high-pitched. In the end, ❤️ he sees sense and walks away. I ask Lacroix to do an impression of him getting angry. “One time when he ❤️ was injured he threw a bottle of water on the floor with full strength. He couldn’t walk but still managed ❤️ to get up to the television to shout at it.” “I just want my team to win,” De Bruyne says meekly. Suddenly ❤️ the door bursts open and Spider-Man flies into the room. He removes his head gear, and it’s Mason. “Are you ❤️ going to answer questions?” Lacroix asks. “No,” Mason says. Is it true you’re more interested in playing piano than football, ❤️ I ask. “Yes,” he says. Despite City’s domestic success, they have yet to win the Champions League, the most prestigious club ❤️ tournament in Europe. How important does De Bruyne think it is? “I don’t think it’s that important. It would be ❤️ nice, but I think it’s more from the outside. It’s a stick people can beat City with. ‘Oh, you’ve done ❤️ this but you haven’t done this.’ OK, but we’ve still done really good.” Who are his best friends at City? “I ❤️ would say probably Kyle Walker and Nathan Aké.” That’s surprising, I say. Walker seems quite different from you. (Walker was ❤️ splashed across the front pages of the tabloids after hosting a party with sex workers during lockdown.) “Not really,” De ❤️ Bruyne says. Is that the media? “I don’t know about media. Obviously there have been issues in the past for ❤️ him. But from day one I have been close to Kyle and he has three kids and they play with ❤️ my kids.” With Kyle Walker and the Premier League trophy, May 2024. Photograph: Peter Powell/AFP/Getty Images I ask about Belgium’s chances in ❤️ Qatar, wondering if he’ll be more diplomatic this time. But he’s not. “I think our chance was 2024. We have ❤️ a good team, but it is ageing. We lost some key players. We have some good new players coming, but ❤️ they are not at the level other players were in 2024. I see us more as outsiders.” De Bruyne, at 31, ❤️ is at his peak. It’s hard to imagine him playing with such pace for much longer. Does he feel it’s ❤️ getting tougher? “I am fully able to do what I need to do, but I feel the difference compared with eight ❤️ years ago. I need more treatment, more rest.” “When he was younger, the day after a game he’d be like, ‘We ❤️ can go and play tennis,’” Lacroix says. “Now the day after he’s like, ‘I need to rest. My body hurts.’” Lacroix ❤️ says football has brought her the lifestyle she dreamed of. The only difference is she had always imagined she would ❤️ make her own money. What’s the worst thing about being a footballer’s wife? Often she feels like a single parent, ❤️ she says. “For example, Kevin has never been to one school nativity. I’m always the parent on their own. It’s ❤️ rare he can go to something for them. Two of the kids are at school, so we only have weekends ❤️ to do things with them, but Kevin is playing then. It makes it harder to do stuff together as a ❤️ family. Kevin always says now we need to be disciplined for football and later we can enjoy everything together.” Does she ❤️ think when he retires that will be her time to pursue her dreams? “That’s what everyone keeps saying. But I ❤️ don’t think so now. I’m devoted to being with the kids, and I’ve just started the podcast.” Kevin giving up football ❤️ wouldn’t happen. When Covid began he was running round the sofa. I couldn’t cope with him at home “She’s the glue,” ❤️ he says out of nowhere. Then he looks embarrassed. “I don’t want to say that because tonight she’ll say, ‘My ❤️ God, look what you’ve said.’” Lacroix: “No, I don’t do that. I do not.” “Yes, you would,” he says. “If I said ❤️ you were the glue to the family, you’d say, ‘Remember you said that.’” Do you mean Michèle would use it against ❤️ you? Lacroix: “Noooooooo.” De Bruyne: “Of course!” Lacroix: “He’s making it up!” They seem to have a lovely relationship. I ask if he is planning ❤️ for life after playing? She looks at him, curious to hear the answer: “He gets annoyed when I ask about ❤️ it. ‘I’m still playing!’” De Bruyne: “Not really.” Lacroix: “You do a bit.” De Bruyne: “Well, I do things to advance the future. ❤️ I’ve got my Uefa A and B coaching qualification already.” Does he think he’ll stay in football? De Bruyne: “Probably, yes.” Lacroix: “100%. ❤️ Kevin loves football way too much to not be in it. He should because it’s in his heart as well.” But ❤️ he could simply retire, live a life of luxury, make up for lost time on the self-indulgence and dossing front. “It ❤️ would never happen,” Lacroix says. “Give him one month, then he would be annoyed. When Covid started he was running ❤️ around the sofa. I couldn’t cope with him at home.” They go to have their photos taken. I stay in the ❤️ office staring at his platoon of man of the match awards. I pop in to see how the shoot is ❤️ going. De Bruyne is trying to juggle all three children in his arms and I’m worried he may get injured. ❤️ I’m not sure Pep would be happy. On the way out, I tell him that at away matches my daughter Maya ❤️ and I get into the ground early when it’s almost empty and shout for waves from the players when they ❤️ come out to warm up. Nearly all have given us waves, but never De Bruyne. You’re so intensely focused? “I ❤️ think so, yes. I’m very different on the pitch to when I’m here. Once I’m playing football it’s a different ❤️ zone. Then when I’ve finished, the game is done.” For many years, Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo were the undisputed two ❤️ best players in the world. But things are changing. In August, De Bruyne was runner-up in the Uefa Men’s Player ❤️ of the Year award, won by another oldie, Karim Benzema. How important is it to be regarded as one of ❤️ the best in the world? The quiet, diffident De Bruyne looks at me with magnificent imperiousness. “It’s not important to ❤️ be regarded as one of the best,” he says. “I want to be the best.” The next few weeks with Belgium ❤️ at the World Cup will provide the perfect stage for him to prove that he is. {nl}como apostar online na mega cena como apostar online na mega cena um estado como a Califórnia. onde as probabilidade de esportiva não são is! Contanto que ele esteja fisicamente 🫦 localizadoem{ k 0); Estado Onde arriscar iva também São legais”, Você pode faz...? ParapostaS online: o sitedecontas on-line o localizados no página 🫦 da empresa; Avistam nas plataformas sancionadas pelo stas esportiva, regulamentados operam em como apostar online na mega cena como apostar online na mega cena vários mercados. 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