Jérémie Bela


Jérémie Bela is a French professional footballer who plays as a forward for English Championship club Birmingham City. He previously played for Lens, Dijon and most recently Albacete. Bela represented his native France at under-16 level, and has been called up by both DR Congo and Angola senior teams but has played for neither.

Early life

Bela was born in Melun, in the Seine-et-Marne department of France. His mother is Angolan and his father is from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. He played football at AS Herblay from age six to eight and, after a two-year break, joined Ville d'Évry where he spent four years. In the 2007–08 season, he represented Viry-Châtillon in the Championnat fédéral des 14 ans. In 2006, Bela was accepted onto the three-year programme at the Clairefontaine training centre, during which he was capped by France at under-16 level. In late 2008, he told the French Football Federation website that he expected to join Ligue 2 club RC Lens when he left Clairefontaine, having been scouted by Marc Westerloppe.

Club career

Lens

Bela progressed through Lens' junior teams, made his reserve-team debutthree minutes in the Championnat de France Amateur in November 2010, and was a regular in the CFA side in the 2011–12 season, with eight goals from 26 appearances. Ahead of the new campaign, he was part of an increasingly youthful reserve squad, many of whom were still eligible for the under-19s.
Bela was involved with the first team in 2012–13 pre-season, and caught the eye of his captain, Jérôme Le Moigne: in an interview in August, Le Moigne picked him out as the Lens player most likely to enjoy a good career in the future, and said he reminded him of former team-mate Lossémy Karaboué. He received his first call-up to the matchday squad for, and then made his debut as a late substitute in, a Ligue 2 match at home to Niort on 5 October 2012 that Lens won 1–0. He made his first start a month later against JA Armentières in the Coupe de France and scored his debut first-team goal in the 6–0 win. Bela made his first league start on 11 January 2013 in a goalless draw at home to Avignon, and played with increasing regularity in the second half of the season. In mid-February, coach Éric Sikora remarked on how Bela had grasped the connection between training properly and being able to achieve one's aims: after struggling physically in the CFA, he could now string together a series of games at senior level. The player later confirmed that Sikora had spoken to him about maturity, that he had been working on his concentration, and that he recognised the need for hard work to establish himself in the team. Bela injured a hip flexor in the Coupe de France semi-final defeat to Bordeaux, but was able to return to action in time to score his first league goal, in a 2–1 loss away to Le Mans in the last game of the season, taking his totals to three goals from 21 appearances in all competitions.
Out of contract at the end of the 2012–13 season, Bela was keen to stay and progress with Lens, and negotiations over a new deal had begun some time earlier. He remained without a contract throughout July 2013, during which time the club acquired new owners and Antoine Kombouaré replaced Sikora as coach, and eventually signed a three-year professional contract. A wrist sprained during the pre–season tour kept him out of the opening Ligue 2 fixture, and his substitute appearance in the second, a draw away to Dijon, proved to be his last for the club. He was made available to Sikora's CFA team, suffered a foot injury that kept him out for a couple of months and, once fit, resumed his career in the CFA.

Dijon

With Lens lying third in the division at the mid-season break and little prospect of first-team football, Bela was expected to leave on loan to a lower division or possibly to be sold abroad. In the event, he was allowed to join promotion rivals Dijon where, after a successful trial, he signed a two-and-a-half-year contract on 22 January 2014. Bela made his Dijon FCO debut on 27 January as a late substitute in a goalless draw with Angers, and made three more appearances, all from the bench, over the next few weeks, but a groin problem kept him on the sidelines for the rest of the campaign and into the following pre-season.
Bela returned to the first team as a 70th-minute substitute in the opening game of the 2014–15 season, a 1–1 draw with Nancy, and continued as a regular in the matchday squad. He scored his first goal on 20 October in a 3–0 win over Valenciennes. After a hamstring injury kept him out throughout November, Bela returned as a substitute against Brest on 13 December, and engineered a late winner, tackling the ball against a defender's leg to force an own goal. He scored a stoppage-time winner against Sochaux on 7 February 2015, and in the last game of the season, in a 3–1 win over Nancy, he scored his sixth goal of the season and produced a performance that earned him a place in France Football team of the week. Speaking in March 2015, manager Olivier Dall'Oglio picked out Bela as one of two playersthe other was Júlio Tavareswho had made particular progress over the season, describing him as a player who can change a game.
Interviewed before facing his former club in August 2015, Bela admitted that he had sometimes drifted through the daily routine while at Lens. His lengthy absence through injury in 2014 had given him an awareness of how short a career could be, since when he had taken a more responsible approach to his work. He was instrumental in Dijon's 2–0 win, drawing a foul from Dušan Cvetinović that earned the defender a second yellow card and, a couple of minutes later, producing a powerful strike to score the second goal that relieved the pressure on his team. France Football marked him 8 out of 10 and gave him a place in their team of the week. After three months out with tendinitis in a knee, he came back to earn and convert a match-winning penalty against Créteil at the end of January that strengthened Dijon's position in second place, but his personal season ended in mid-March after he broke his right arm in training. He had contributed four goals from 23 matches to the team's promotion to Ligue 1, which was confirmed a few weeks later, and signed a two-year contract extension in June.
Bela made his Ligue 1 debut as a 78th-minute substitute in a 1–0 loss at home to Nantes in the opening game of the 2016–17 season. However, he found it difficult to retain a place: he started only twice at the higher level and made 12 appearances from the bench. He set up a goal with a pacy run and cross for Loïs Diony in a 3–0 win over Rennes in September, and scored once himself, against Louhans-Cuiseaux in the Coupe de France round of 64.

Albacete

No longer in Dall'Oglio's plans at Dijon, Bela signed a two-year contract with Albacete, newly promoted to the Spanish Segunda División, early in August 2017. He said he had had no doubts about the move and thought his stylehe preferred to play facing the goal and enjoyed one-on-oneswould be well suited to Spanish football.
Bela made his Albacete debut as a substitute after 69 minutes of the opening game of the season, a goalless draw with Granada. Website Queso Mecánico saw flashes of the sort of quick, clever player who can kill a game but thought he lacked fitness. He scored twice to give his side a 2–1 lead away to Osasuna in the Copa Del Rey second round, but Albacete conceded a 94th-minute equaliser and lost 3–2 after extra time. Bela's first league goal was a spectacular right-footed shot from the left edge of the penalty area into the far top corner of the net that tied the scores against Oviedo; Albacete scored again to record their first win of the season. He missed most of October with injury, but was a regular in the starting eleven from November to April. Bela suffered a minor tear to his thigh in April, but his season was ended prematurely in May by a torn hamstring. He had made 37 appearances and scored six goals in all competitions.
Despite injury and fatigue affecting the first half of his season, he scored six goals by the winter break. A fine run of form in the new year earned him the club's Player of the Month award for January, after which he spoke of his satisfaction with his physical fitness, his goalscoring, statistically the best of his career, and his contentment both on and off the field, describing himself as "in general, a better Bela than last year". He contributed another five goals in the regular season, helping Albacete finish fourth, and passed up the chance of an international debut with Angola to make himself available for the promotion play-offs. The first leg of the play-off semi-final, away to Mallorca, ended in a 2–0 defeat; Bela scored with a free kick after 15 minutes of the home leghis twelfth goal of the season, making him the club's top scorerbut Albacete were eliminated 2–1 on aggregate.
In February, Bela confirmed that he was keen to stay but that issues remained unresolved; after the play-off defeat, and with interest from top-flight Spanish clubs as well as from abroad, he opted to leave. His contract included a one-year option contingent on his making a certain number of appearances; the club's view was that this would come into force automatically, but the player claimed it required mutual consent. In mid-July, with Albacete well into pre-season while Bela trained alone in France, he published his intention to invoke his right to free movement under Spanish law; the club planned court action for breach of contract. The matter dragged on until November, when the player paid the club an undisclosed sum in return for their voiding the contract and waiving legal action.

Birmingham City

Now a free agent, Bela signed a three-year contract with a one-year option with English Championship club Birmingham City, with whom he had been training for several weeks. He made his debut on 9 November as a second-half substitute in a 1–0 defeat at home to Fulham, and on 7 December away to Reading, he scored a free kick - which went on to be voted the club's Goal of the Season - and set up a match-winning goal for Álvaro Giménez.

International career

While Bela was at the national training centre at Clairefontaine, he was called up to the French under-16 team for two matches against Wales U16 in September 2008. He played in both matches and scored in the first, a 4–2 win.
As well as his native France, Bela qualifies by descent to play for Angola or the DR Congo. In March 2017, he was long-listed by Florent Ibenge, manager of the DR Congo national team, for a friendly against Kenya, but was not in the final squad. He was included in Angola coach Srdjan Vasiljevic's provisional squad for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations, but did not accept the invitation. Although he considered himself Angolan and was "proud and grateful" to be selected, he felt his priorities had to lie with Albacete's promotion play-off campaign.

Honours

Individual