Fan 'soi' danh tính sao Ngoại hạng Anh giấu mặt ở Baller League - Tuổi Trẻ  Online

In the high-octane world of English football, where multimillion-pound transfers and dramatic last-minute winners dominate headlines, a new mystery has gripped fans like a vice: Who is the masked Premier League star secretly moonlighting in the chaotic Baller League?

Picture this: The Copper Box Arena in Hackney, London, pulses with energy as the second season of Baller League – a six-a-side indoor spectacle blending futsal flair with celebrity drama – explodes onto Sky Sports screens. Celebrities and ex-pros manage ragtag teams of semi-pros, YouTube sensations, and academy dropouts in matches that are equal parts skill, showmanship, and sheer madness. Managers like England women’s star Chloe Kelly, prankster YouTuber Niko Omilana, and former Liverpool and Chelsea striker Daniel Sturridge trade barbs, bid wildly in drafts, and chase glory.

But on opening night, Omilana drops a bombshell. Weeks earlier, the NDL FC boss teased: “An active Premier League footballer is joining my squad.” Fans rolled their eyes – typical hype. Then, he appears: A shadowy figure in a bright yellow jersey, black Batman-style eye mask, full-face black covering, and long leg warmers hiding every tattoo. No name on the back. No post-match interview. Just one job – set pieces.

He steps up for a free kick. The run-up? Precise. The stance? Elite. The delivery? Pinpoint. The ball curls into the top corner, and the arena erupts. But the real explosion happens online. Within minutes, X (formerly Twitter) ignites with sleuthing fans wielding slow-mo videos, side-by-side comparisons, and forensic analysis.

Top suspect: James Ward-Prowse. The West Ham set-piece wizard, renowned for his dead-ball mastery (over 20 Premier League free-kick goals in his career). “James Ward Prowse (West Ham) 100000%,” declares one Hammers fan-turned-detective. “Look at the run-up – identical!” But doubts creep in: “Dáng chạy (running style) doesn’t match perfectly.” A desperate West Ham supporter pleads: “Please don’t be JWP – our club’s got enough drama with one win in nine!”

Arsenal panic mode activated. One Gooner tweets: “Praying it’s not Gyokores” – referring to Swedish striker Viktor Gyökeres, linked heavily with a Emirates move. Chelsea fans pile on: Mykhailo Mudryk (suspended winger with flashy skills) and Cole Palmer (cool finisher) get dragged into the fray. Jarrod Bowen? His pace and Hammers ties make him a dark horse.

Skeptics abound. “No way a Prem player risks this – clubs would fine them into oblivion!” one user scoffs. Daily Mail uncovers a twist: German futsal ace Kevin Weggen, a Baller League veteran with Calcio Berlin, matches the build and style perfectly. *“Legend of the game,” his Insta bio boasts. Marketing stunt? Or real infiltration?**

The video – “Masked Premier League Star” – racks up millions of views on TikTok and X in hours. Sky Sports replays the run-up on loop. FourFourTwo claims: “We’ve figured it out!”* Podcasts buzz. Memes flood feeds: Photoshopped masks on Haaland, Salah, even retired legends.

Why the secrecy? Premier League contracts ban unauthorized play – image rights, injury risk, fan backlash. West Ham, languishing at 19th, can’t afford the PR nightmare. Yet Baller League thrives on this chaos: Idris Elba drafts ex-Afghan pros; Angry Ginge rants about bribe offers; KSI grills Sidemen rivals.

One fan nails it: “Eyes and snood hiding tats – it’s HIM.” (16K likes). ChelsTransfer debunks Mudryk via insider Kieren Gill.

Baller League isn’t just gimmicks – it’s football’s future for Gen Z: Fast-paced, streamed, interactive. Imported from Germany, it’s hooked UK youth while Prem stars grind 60-game seasons.

As Matchday 2 looms, Omilana smirks: “The secret’s safe… for now.” Will the mask slip? JWP benched for West Ham’s next game – coincidence?