Harry Kane Was Overweight and Didn't Stand Out, Says Former England Teammate
Kane Was Overweight and Didn't Stand Out, Says Walker

Harry Kane was 'a little bit overweight' and 'didn't stand out' as a youngster at Tottenham, according to former England teammate Kyle Walker, before going on to become England's greatest ever striker.

Walker's Revelation

Walker, who played with Kane at Spurs and for many years at international level, shared his thoughts in The Sun. 'I signed for Spurs at 19 and did a couple of training sessions with Harry's age group which included the likes of Andros Townsend, Steven Caulker, Ryan Mason and Tom Carroll. It was a good group but Harry was a little bit overweight and didn't stand out. He would be honest with himself about that.'

Kane did not burst onto the scene immediately, taking time to make an impact at Tottenham after unspectacular loan spells at Leyton Orient, Millwall, Norwich and Leicester. The 32-year-old made his debut in 2011 and scored his first Spurs goal in December that year in the Europa League, but did not net in the Premier League until April 2014.

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Relentless Hard Work

Walker explained that relentless hard work on the training pitch, especially on finishing, has taken Kane to the top, when he didn't necessarily have obvious natural assets. 'He's always been obsessive in training, staying behind to practice his shooting and work on his finishing. I'm not speaking out of turn because H is a good friend, but he's not the quickest. And he really had to sharpen up on the tools when he was around the box, he had to be clinical.'

Kane then got going, scoring 31 goals in the 2014/15 season and has proved very difficult to stop since then, now a Bayern Munich player with 146 goals in 147 games for the German giants. He will captain England in their World Cup opener against Croatia on Wednesday night, having scored 79 goals in 114 caps.

Kane's Confidence

Kane arrives at this World Cup just shy of his 33rd birthday, but having scored 61 goals last season in 51 games for Bayern. There is pressure on him to produce if England are to have a chance of success, but he says he is absolutely fine with that. 'I'm coming into this tournament in the best way possible; the best place physically and mentally. Throughout a career, there aren't loads of times when all the pieces of the puzzle will come together at the right moment. Talking now, I feel like I'm in that place.'

'With every tournament, I always feel under pressure being the goal-scorer … people expect you to score and help the team and I guess this year is no different. But I'm comfortable having that responsibility. I'm probably even more comfortable going into this year because of the way the season was for me.'

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