The 17-year-old icon
The social media response was scathing.
“The most embarrassing thing a football club has ever done,” said one user. “Tinpot,” said another. “Pathetic,” said a third.
They were reacting to Birmingham retiring Bellingham’s number 22 shirt.
Birmingham explained their decision like this: Bellingham was an “iconic figure” noted for his “talent, hard work and dedication”; removing the number 22 from their roster would be a gesture to “remember one of our own and to inspire others”.
But Bellingham was just 17. He had played only 44 games and a single first-team season for the Blues. To its critics, Birmingham’s decision was hype-fuelled froth.
There was context however. Bellingham is truly one of their own.
Born in Stourbridge, 10 miles west of Birmingham, he joined the Blues aged eight.
“What a place, what a city, what a club,” Bellingham said in an interview in 2021.
“It is always the first score I check, I am always watching the games when I can, it means so much to me that club.”
He may have been part of Birmingham’s set-up since primary-school age, but his football education began lower down the ladder and closer to home.
His father Mark was a prolific striker in the West Midlands lower leagues, scoring more than 700 goals in a career that stretched into his mid-40s.
A young Jude didn’t really watch football on television. Instead, he would see the glory and physicality close up on the Saturday morning sidelines of his father’s games. It left an impression.
“I used to watch him play all the time; it’s where I started to get that love for football,” he told the Guardian.
“That non-league style of toughness and being gritty when you need to be is reflected in my game. That comes from watching my dad play – even though he never tackled!”
Jude did tackle. And pass. And dribble. And create.
Such was the completeness of his midfield game that his coaches gave him the number 22 shirt – the one that Birmingham would later retire – as a reminder.
It was the total reached by combining the numbers of a defensive anchorman (four), a box-to-box touch merchant (eight) and a final-third creator (10).
It didn’t take much calculation to see Bellingham was a rare talent though. Few players have passed the ‘eye test’ so conclusively.
He covered the ground in a languid, liquid gallop, nimbly retained the ball with deft touches and dropped shoulders and invariably chose the right option to put his team in a better position on the pitch.
He made his Birmingham first-team debut just a month after his 16th birthday, starting a 3-0 EFL Cup defeat by Portsmouth.
Three weeks later, he marked his home debut with the winning goal against Stoke. He never looked back.
He made 44 appearances that season to a backdrop of increasing speculation.
Premier League scouts wrote back with glowing reports.
Arsenal were already well on his trail, having tried to prise him away from St Andrew’s as a 14-year-old.
But it was Manchester United who came on strongest.
Bellingham was given a tour of the training ground in early 2020. United’s pitch centred on the number seven shirt. Eric Cantona and Bryan Robson – two of its most famous occupants – were on hand to greet him and his family.
Sir Alex Ferguson and the then-manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer told Bellingham he could be similarly instrumental in United’s future.
However, Bellingham’s father Mark, who oversees his sons’ careers, was not convinced.
Paul Pogba and Bruno Fernandes led the queue for United’s midfield spots, with Scott McTominay, Nemanja Matic and Fred also in the squad. The scrutiny, even on the fringes, would be unforgiving.
German side Borussia Dortmund couldn’t offer as much money or as high a profile, but their record of developing young players quickly and well was the clincher.
Jadon Sancho, the English winger who had swapped Manchester City for Dortmund, was most often cited, but Ousmane Dembele and Christian Pulisic’s successes showed it wasn’t a one-off.
Bellingham let United down gently. They signed Donny van de Beek instead.
There was, however, one final bit of business before Jude could move.
Under league rules, Bellingham, only 16, was ineligible for a full professional contract before his 17th birthday. Instead he was a star on scholarship terms, earning only £145 a week.
In theory, Bellingham could have walked away from Birmingham in the summer of 2020, with the club receiving negligible compensation.
In practice, he couldn’t. The relationship between the club and family was worth more.
After turning 17, Bellingham signed a professional contract at Birmingham, one both he and they knew would never be fulfilled. But it meant that Dortmund would pay Birmingham a fee of up to £30m – a record for a 17-year-old – to secure Bellingham.
Whatever his status on the teamsheet, Bellingham is a legend on the Birmingham balance sheet.