Kevin De Bruyne on being a leader and Belgium’s progress – interview

“Our growth has been unbelievably nice to see,” says the Belgium captain as he prepares for his third UEFA EURO finals.

There is not much that will faze Belgium captain Kevin De Bruyne when he leads his side out in Germany at UEFA EURO 2024. The 32-year-old will be appearing at his sixth major international tournament, and the Manchester City midfielder has been there and seen it all on the biggest stage.

Despite winning practically everything on offer with City, however, De Bruyne is still missing a trophy with Belgium in his silverware collection. Speaking to UEFA.com, he discussed his side’s chances of glory in the next few weeks, along with his reflections on his Red Devils career and coach Domenico Tedesco.

On Belgium’s EURO mindset

It’s good to finally be here. You don’t want to spend too long in the preparation stage – you just want to start the tournament. In terms of chances, we just have to get off to a good start in the first match. After that, we’d like to make it out of the group stage and then we just have to wait and see what will happen. That’s still a long way off and it seems a little pointless to speculate now as to what might happen later on.

On earning over 100 Belgium caps

I’m proud. Ultimately, people always say we don’t win, but I started with Belgium earning my first cap sitting on the bench in front of 5,000 spectators in a stadium. Since 2014, we have seen that rise to full stadiums with everyone behind us, so our growth has been unbelievably nice to see.

It would have been nice to have achieved more with Belgium, but that has been difficult given the difference on paper between us and other countries. I just try to do my job as a player, as a team-mate, for the good of the whole team. If I can bring on other players and can teach them, then that is nice.

On coach Domenico Tedesco

We did some unbelievable things with [previous coach] Roberto Martínez, and achieved things that Belgium had never achieved before. So, for Tedesco, there would have been a lot of pressure. Since the 2022 World Cup, he has had to build a completely new team with a lot of younger players, so everything had to be adjusted to his philosophy of playing.