Rayan Ait-Nouri on importance of Muslim faith, pride in playing for Algeria and trying to stop Mohamed Salah


Andy Mitten
  • English
  • Arabic

A wall of honour at Wolverhampton Wanderers' training ground lists all the players with more than 100 games for the club.

There are the greats of the 1950s including club legend Billy Wright who captained the team to three English top-flight titles. There's Steve Bull, a bona-fide goal machine of the 80s and 90s. Then a distinctly Portuguese flavour to more recent additions. But in among the Rubens, Ruis and Rauls, the Diogos, Joaos and Pedros is the name Rayan Ait-Nouri.

The Paris-born Algeria international may only be 23, but he’s in his fifth season as a Premier League regular with over 140 Wolves games to his name and counting.

Ait-Nouri played all 38 Premier League games last season and has started all but one this term following a one-match ban after a sending off against Ipswich Town.

That December defeat, which left Wolves 19th in the 20-team Premier League, saw coach Gary O’Neil dismissed and a furious Ait-Nouri ushered off by a teammate, the low point in a season which has since improved.

That game aside, Ait-Nouri is an otherwise stable influence at a club under five different managers since he broke into the first team following a loan move from Ligue 1 side Angers in 2020.

He impressed so much that when Wolves decided to make the deal permanent, French giants Paris Saint-Germain attempted to hijack the deal.

It was Wolves who got their man though, signing Ait-Nouri for a fee of £9.8 million on a five-year deal, helped by the fact that Jorge Mendes, with his connections to Wolves, was Ait-Nouri’s agent.

Wolves have endured a tough season with only five wins from 24 league games so far, but form has improved under new manager Vitor Pereira and three of the wins have come in the last eight games.

Ait-Nouri’s role has shifted from left-back to wing-back under Pereira, his skills better suited in attack rather than defending.

Wolves have managed only four clean sheets all season and despite the fact they sit two points above the relegation zone, the mood feels positive.

“I grew up in France outside Paris, close to Vincennes, with my family – my mother, my two sisters and my brother,” Ait-Nouri, who is of North African heritage, told The National.

“I played football from when I was very young in the street with my friends. Happy moments and memories. I liked to watch Real Madrid when I was young with Cristiano Ronaldo, Marcelo and Sergio Ramos. I followed Madrid in all those Champions League finals.

“My parents are from Algeria. They came to France in their early 20s and met in France. Mother was a cleaner; dad worked at Orly Airport on the runways.

“There’s a big Algerian population in France, maybe the biggest outside Algeria. And we can see many footballers; Zinedine Zidane’s parents are Algerian, [Karim] Benzema, [Riyad] Mahrez … My story is similar to his, I grew up in France and play for Algeria”.

Ait-Nouri made his national team debut in 2023 – having represented France at under 18 and 21 level.

“My parents separated and I stayed with mum,” he explains of his background. “I would see my father one weekend every two weeks. They both pushed me when I was young.

“I was training every day with the first team. It was a good city, small, by the big Loire River, but a city proud to have a football team in the top division. And life there doesn’t have the stress of Paris”.

No city on earth produces as many top footballers as Paris where youth football is well organised, well coached and standards are high.

“My mum pushed me in school, my dad in football. But I didn’t like school and I stopped school early because I signed a first professional football contract at Angers when I was 16 years old."

The Parisian working-class areas are a melting pot of culture; French people coming to Paris for a job, immigrants from the old colonies such as Mali or Senegal or in the French Caribbean who started arriving in the 1960s.

In the 90s there were more immigrants from Congo and Zaire. Then there are immigrants with roots in North Africa – Morocco, Tunisia or Algeria, like Ait-Nouri.

This mix produces every type of footballer, big physical players that can do well in England, smaller technical players such as Wissam Ben Yedder, a France international striker of Tunisian descent who thrived in Ligue 1 and La Liga. Yet the best often have to leave the capital to find their way.

Thierry Henry went to Monaco, Antony Martial to Lyon and then Monaco, Patrice Evra to Italy after being missed not only by the Clairefontaine, the national academy outside Paris, but by every professional French club.

“Why Paris produces so many professional footballers? For me, it was street football every day, five v five. My father didn’t mind, my brother told me to study and not play football. But I was free when I played street football, free to express myself,” Ait-Nouri explains.

Ait-Nouri’s game needed more structure and Angers was the perfect step up, a chance to escape the distractions of Paris and learn professional football in a relative backwater, albeit one with a top-flight football team and proud, loyal support.

He joined then from the youth academy of Paris FC, the capital’s now ambitious second club. Ait-Nouri began in Angers’ second team aged only 16, made his first-team debut at 17 and was being watched by several Premier League clubs.

“He was technically excellent,” one Premier League scout who watched him tells The National. “Brilliant left foot, good soft feet in possession and could handle the ball under pressure. Lovely balance and control, so he could always play with his head up. He ran with the ball very well.

“Very attacking. I saw him play for Angers and France U21. Technically he was above his age and French football was too easy for him.

“The only downside when I watched him at Angers was his physique and whether he could cope in the Premier League. He just needed to develop physically, which he did. I think he’ll get better and better.”

Then Wolves pounced and it was time for a step up in levels – and intensity.

“It was like a dream when I first heard that a Premier League club wanted to sign me,” he says. His English is softly-spoken, one of his three languages along with French and Arabic. “I was 19 when my agent told me Wolverhampton were interested.

“The level in the Premier League is higher than Ligue 1 – which is already high.

“It’s more intense in England, more physical, more attacks and defence, it never stops. As a player in my position that means more runs, less time to recover. Sometimes in France when you have the ball, the game is static.”

It wasn’t only the football which changed, but living in England. “My big brother lives with me,” he says. “He pushes me all the time. Like the fans.

“The Wolves fans are close to us, the people feel like a family. I am one of the players who has played the most games in this team so I know it all well.

“I like England. I don’t like the food compared to French or Arabic food – couscous, tagine. And I’ve not tried the fish and chips, I’m a footballer!”

International honours soon followed for a country he first visited when very young. “We would go for holidays and see my grandmother and my cousins,” added Ait-Nouri.

“I always had good sensations being in Algeria and I still have them now that I play for my country. It’s my chance to make the people happy in a country which made me happy.

“My family were so proud when I first played for Algeria. My father was in the stadium – we played Niger. They played the national anthem; he was very emotional. I hadn’t learnt it then because I grew up in France, but it was an incredible experience.”

Ait-Nouri was initially reluctant to do this interview. He didn’t think his English was good enough. It is.

“I can understand everything but sometimes to speak I forget some words,” he laughs. “I try to do my best.

“I have improved in four years and the players teach me new words like ‘lads’. I didn’t know this word before. I’m actually shy. I don’t like to speak a lot, but I think I’m a good guy who tries to do my best. My religion asks this of me, to help others.”

Ait-Nouri says his Muslim faith means “everything to me” and “comes before everything”.

“I practice my religion every day by praying and saying thank you to God who gives me everything I have,” he added.

The holy month of Ramadan is fast approaching, and Ait-Nouri says the practice of fasting is demanding on a top-level athlete's body.

“As a footballer, Ramadan is very hard when you are fasting and playing, but I have to do this. It’s difficult enough to play against the best players when you are not fasting, even more when you are.

“I try to drink a lot of water and eat in the night. And I try to speak to the other players who are fasting so that we can support each other.”

It’s unsurprising that a well-known fellow North African is his toughest opponent: “Mo Salah is very difficult to play against. He’s strong, he runs all the time, scores all the time, he assists. You need complete focus.”

Wolves fans will tell you that Ait-Nouri always does well against the Egyptian superstar. In one game he kept the Liverpool striker quiet for 89 minutes, then Ait-Nouri went off with cramp and Wolves conceded straight away through Salah.

There is another inspiration from closer to home. “I didn’t play against Riyad Mahrez when he was at Leicester but it was amazing to watch him when they won the league,” said Ait-Nouri.

“It showed that an Algerian player could win things in the biggest league. Riyad is the best player of Algeria of all time, the captain of our national team and he tries to help the young players.”

Algeria's Riyad Mahrez lifts the trophy after winning the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations. Reuters
Algeria's Riyad Mahrez lifts the trophy after winning the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations. Reuters

“The national team footballers are famous in Algeria,” Ait-Nouri added. “The fans support us home and away. If we play in South Africa for example, there will be Algeria supporters.

“It’s a strong team but we have strong rivals in North Africa and I wonder why this is. Maybe it’s because we are all playing street football from a very young age. So the North African is technically good.

“The football is different there to Europe. It’s more physical, the weather is often a lot hotter. Sometimes the pitches are very different to Europe, but I like the different experiences.

“I like to travel to the different countries in Africa and that my life as a footballer is taking me there.”

There are big games approaching, for club and country, while Ait-Nouri has one eye on the Africa Cup of Nations to be held in Morocco at the end of the year.

Algeria were last champions in 2019. Their leading striker, Amine Gouiri, left joined Marseille from Rennes in the winter transfer window in a €22m deal. Mahrez, 33, is captain with 98 appearances, Ait-Nouri is a decade younger with 15.

Algeria have a top side and were seeded in the first pot for the 2025 Afcon. Morocco, the hosts, are favourites.

“We are little bit rivals with Morocco,” Aït-Nouri says with a smile.

“A little bit? It’s like Wolves v West Brom?” counters The National, picking out the hottest derby game in the area where Ait-Nouri now lives.

“But we are brothers [with Morocco],” he laughs. “It will be good there [for the Cup of Nations]. The atmosphere will be crazy. It’s a beautiful country.”

Before that, Wolves need to stay in the Premier League. They currently sit just one place above the relegation zone have ended a four-game losing streak by defeating another Midlands rival Aston Villa in their last match.

“I am confident that we can stay up,” he says. “Every moment is an experience for me here and I just love being here.

“We have good players like [Brazilian forward] Matheus Cunha, I really enjoy playing with him. He loves this team and we are happy for him to be with us.

“He is a good colleague, a special talent and a very good player. We know the Premier League is very hard. Very hard. But we are Wolves and we will fight until the end.”

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Stuck in a job without a pay rise? Here's what to do

Chris Greaves, the managing director of Hays Gulf Region, says those without a pay rise for an extended period must start asking questions – both of themselves and their employer.

“First, are they happy with that or do they want more?” he says. “Job-seeking is a time-consuming, frustrating and long-winded affair so are they prepared to put themselves through that rigmarole? Before they consider that, they must ask their employer what is happening.”

Most employees bring up pay rise queries at their annual performance appraisal and find out what the company has in store for them from a career perspective.

Those with no formal appraisal system, Mr Greaves says, should ask HR or their line manager for an assessment.

“You want to find out how they value your contribution and where your job could go,” he says. “You’ve got to be brave enough to ask some questions and if you don’t like the answers then you have to develop a strategy or change jobs if you are prepared to go through the job-seeking process.”

For those that do reach the salary negotiation with their current employer, Mr Greaves says there is no point in asking for less than 5 per cent.

“However, this can only really have any chance of success if you can identify where you add value to the business (preferably you can put a monetary value on it), or you can point to a sustained contribution above the call of duty or to other achievements you think your employer will value.”

 

What is 'Soft Power'?

Soft power was first mentioned in 1990 by former US Defence Secretary Joseph Nye. 
He believed that there were alternative ways of cultivating support from other countries, instead of achieving goals using military strength. 
Soft power is, at its root, the ability to convince other states to do what you want without force. 
This is traditionally achieved by proving that you share morals and values.

In numbers

Number of Chinese tourists coming to UAE in 2017 was... 1.3m

Alibaba’s new ‘Tech Town’  in Dubai is worth... $600m

China’s investment in the MIddle East in 2016 was... $29.5bn

The world’s most valuable start-up in 2018, TikTok, is valued at... $75bn

Boost to the UAE economy of 5G connectivity will be... $269bn 

ELIO

Starring: Yonas Kibreab, Zoe Saldana, Brad Garrett

Directors: Madeline Sharafian, Domee Shi, Adrian Molina

Rating: 4/5

WHAT IS A BLACK HOLE?

1. Black holes are objects whose gravity is so strong not even light can escape their pull

2. They can be created when massive stars collapse under their own weight

3. Large black holes can also be formed when smaller ones collide and merge

4. The biggest black holes lurk at the centre of many galaxies, including our own

5. Astronomers believe that when the universe was very young, black holes affected how galaxies formed

The specs: 2017 Ford F-150 Raptor

Price, base / as tested Dh220,000 / Dh320,000

Engine 3.5L V6

Transmission 10-speed automatic

Power 421hp @ 6,000rpm

Torque 678Nm @ 3,750rpm

Fuel economy, combined 14.1L / 100km

Key facilities
  • Olympic-size swimming pool with a split bulkhead for multi-use configurations, including water polo and 50m/25m training lanes
  • Premier League-standard football pitch
  • 400m Olympic running track
  • NBA-spec basketball court with auditorium
  • 600-seat auditorium
  • Spaces for historical and cultural exploration
  • An elevated football field that doubles as a helipad
  • Specialist robotics and science laboratories
  • AR and VR-enabled learning centres
  • Disruption Lab and Research Centre for developing entrepreneurial skills
AVOID SCAMMERS: TIPS FROM EMIRATES NBD

1. Never respond to e-mails, calls or messages asking for account, card or internet banking details

2. Never store a card PIN (personal identification number) in your mobile or in your wallet

3. Ensure online shopping websites are secure and verified before providing card details

4. Change passwords periodically as a precautionary measure

5. Never share authentication data such as passwords, card PINs and OTPs  (one-time passwords) with third parties

6. Track bank notifications regarding transaction discrepancies

7. Report lost or stolen debit and credit cards immediately

RESULTS

Bantamweight

Victor Nunes (BRA) beat Siyovush Gulmamadov (TJK)

(Split decision)

Featherweight

Hussein Salim (IRQ) beat Shakhriyor Juraev (UZB)

(Round 1 submission, armbar)

Catchweight 80kg

Rashed Dawood (UAE) beat Otabek Kadirov (UZB)

(Round-1 submission, rear naked choke)

Lightweight

Ho Taek-oh (KOR) beat Ronald Girones (CUB)

(Round 3 submission, triangle choke)

Lightweight

Arthur Zaynukov (RUS) beat Damien Lapilus (FRA)

(Unanimous points)

Bantamweight

Vinicius de Oliveira (BRA) beat Furkatbek Yokubov (RUS)

(Round 1 TKO)

Featherweight

Movlid Khaybulaev (RUS) v Zaka Fatullazade (AZE)

(Round 1 rear naked choke)

Flyweight

Shannon Ross (TUR) beat Donovon Freelow (USA)

(Unanimous decision)

Lightweight

Dan Collins (GBR) beat Mohammad Yahya (UAE)

(Round 2 submission D’arce choke)

Catchweight 73kg

Martun Mezhulmyan (ARM) beat Islam Mamedov (RUS)

(Round 3 submission, kneebar)

Bantamweight world title

Xavier Alaoui (MAR) beat Jaures Dea (CAM)

(Unanimous points 48-46, 49-45, 49-45)

Flyweight world title

Manon Fiorot (FRA) v Gabriela Campo (ARG)

(Round 1 RSC)

10 tips for entry-level job seekers
  • Have an up-to-date, professional LinkedIn profile. If you don’t have a LinkedIn account, set one up today. Avoid poor-quality profile pictures with distracting backgrounds. Include a professional summary and begin to grow your network.
  • Keep track of the job trends in your sector through the news. Apply for job alerts at your dream organisations and the types of jobs you want – LinkedIn uses AI to share similar relevant jobs based on your selections.
  • Double check that you’ve highlighted relevant skills on your resume and LinkedIn profile.
  • For most entry-level jobs, your resume will first be filtered by an applicant tracking system for keywords. Look closely at the description of the job you are applying for and mirror the language as much as possible (while being honest and accurate about your skills and experience).
  • Keep your CV professional and in a simple format – make sure you tailor your cover letter and application to the company and role.
  • Go online and look for details on job specifications for your target position. Make a list of skills required and set yourself some learning goals to tick off all the necessary skills one by one.
  • Don’t be afraid to reach outside your immediate friends and family to other acquaintances and let them know you are looking for new opportunities.
  • Make sure you’ve set your LinkedIn profile to signal that you are “open to opportunities”. Also be sure to use LinkedIn to search for people who are still actively hiring by searching for those that have the headline “I’m hiring” or “We’re hiring” in their profile.
  • Prepare for online interviews using mock interview tools. Even before landing interviews, it can be useful to start practising.
  • Be professional and patient. Always be professional with whoever you are interacting with throughout your search process, this will be remembered. You need to be patient, dedicated and not give up on your search. Candidates need to make sure they are following up appropriately for roles they have applied.

Arda Atalay, head of Mena private sector at LinkedIn Talent Solutions, Rudy Bier, managing partner of Kinetic Business Solutions and Ben Kinerman Daltrey, co-founder of KinFitz

England v South Africa schedule:

  • First Test: At Lord's, England won by 219 runs
  • Second Test: July 14-18, Trent Bridge, Nottingham, 2pm
  • Third Test: The Oval, London, July 27-31, 2pm
  • Fourth Test: Old Trafford, Manchester, August 4-8
FIXTURES

Monday, January 28
Iran v Japan, Hazza bin Zayed Stadium (6pm)

Tuesday, January 29
UAEv Qatar, Mohamed Bin Zayed Stadium (6pm)

Friday, February 1
Final, Zayed Sports City Stadium (6pm)

Infiniti QX80 specs

Engine: twin-turbocharged 3.5-liter V6

Power: 450hp

Torque: 700Nm

Price: From Dh450,000, Autograph model from Dh510,000

Available: Now

Sarfira

Director: Sudha Kongara Prasad

Starring: Akshay Kumar, Radhika Madan, Paresh Rawal 

Rating: 2/5

Updated: February 13, 2025, 7:12 AM`