Geronimo Morgans@GeronimoMorgans
There was a moment when Vincent Kompany was asked a simple question:
If you could spend a day with any person, past or present, who would it be?
His answer was immediate: Nelson Mandela.
Then he added a sentence that carried enormous weight:
“His crime was being Black.”
Kompany was speaking to children at the time (Manchester City), and the way he explained Mandela’s story was powerful in its simplicity.
He told them about a man who went to prison for a crime he didn’t commit, who spent decades behind bars, and yet when he walked free, he chose forgiveness instead of hatred.
For the children listening, the lesson wasn’t political. It was human. Kompany told them something deeper: be grateful for the life you have, wherever you come from. Whether your beginnings are comfortable or difficult, what matters is what you build from them.
Kompany knows that truth personally.
His father arrived in Europe as a refugee from Congo. There was no golden path waiting for Vincent Kompany. Everything had to be earned. Step by step. Through discipline, education, and relentless work, he carved his way to the very top of football.
That journey shaped the man we saw leading Manchester City as a captain.
He wasn’t just a captain. He was a standard. A voice of authority. A leader who understood responsibility, who carried the weight of the badge with pride, and who delivered when it mattered most. When City needed calm, he gave it. When they needed courage, he stepped forward. When they needed belief, he embodied it.
Some leaders inherit authority.
Kompany earned it.
That is why, when people talk about the future after Pep Guardiola, his name inevitably returns to the conversation.
Because succeeding Pep will not only require tactical intelligence. It will require character. Identity. Authority in the dressing room. Someone who understands what Manchester City is, what it became, and what it must remain.
Kompany is more than a former captain. He is part of this club’s soul. A legend. The greatest leader the club has known.
Sometimes, the person best suited to guide the future is the one who helped build the foundation in the first place.