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Sunderland's Enzo Le Fée, a £20m signing from Roma, showcases his magical skills both on and off the pitch. He excels in creating attacking opportunities and is known for his disciplined play and effective tackling.
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Enzo Le Fée has been chatting for 25 minutes when it becomes clear that his ability to extract rabbits from hats is not confined to the pitch.
âIâm a magician,â says Sunderlandâs French playmaker as the conversation drifts to life off the field. âYes, really! I can do some magic, tricks with the cards, that sort of thing. I used to practise a lot when I was young so I got really good. I still sometimes like to do my tricks but Iâm a bit shy about performing them now.â
These days Le FĂ©e prefers to concentrate on casting his spells on rival teams, bewitching Sunderland fans and bewildering opponents in equal measure. RĂ©gis Le Brisâs ÂŁ20m signing from Roma possesses an unerring ability to glimpse attacking possibilities undetected by other players and transform midfield chaos into a coherent threat.
Not content with helping turn the passing triangles beloved by Sunderlandâs manager into the type of trigonometry opposition markers struggle to comprehend, Le FĂ©e knows when to slow things down and when to speed play up. He understands the right moments to pass first-time and when he needs to draw defenders out of position by delaying deliveries until space opens for teammates.
Yet there is far more to his game than exquisite touch, highâcalibre technique and audacious improvisation as he drifts between the lines. Off the ball, Le FĂ©e is a disciplined battler, a diligent presser and, for a slight man of 173cm (5ft 8in), a surprisingly effective tackler.
âI can be good on the ball but from the first minute Iâm also fighting,â he says. âI try to bring some magic but I win a lot of tackles as well. Thatâs what Sunderland fans love. Since I was a young boy Iâve always been smaller than everyone so I had to learn how to fight.
âMy best ability is when I have the ball. I enjoy finding solutions to problems. But in this league youâre no good if you donât work hard for the team when we defend without the ball. If I can alter the game itâs perfect but I have to do the other side too.â

âIn this league youâre no good if you donât work hard for the team when we defend without the ball.â Enzo Le FĂ©e battles with Manchester Untiedâs Bruno Fernandes. Photograph: Craig Cowan/Every Second Media/Shutterstock
Whether occupying his current preferred central role as a deepâlying No 10, placed further back as a No 6 or No 8, or deployed on the left, Le FĂ©e represents a welcome antidote to a sometimes sterile, set-piece-dominated modern game full of aggressive grappling at corners and overcoached players. His resistance to robotic, painting-by-numbers football has provided Sunderland supporters with considerable joy and explains why Le Bris believes a playmaker who could do with scoring a few more goals possesses the potential to reach the highest echelons.
Enzo Le Fée stands out for his ability to create attacking opportunities, his high-calibre technique, and his disciplined off-the-ball play.
Sunderland signed Enzo Le Fée for £20 million from Roma.
Enzo Le Fée claims to be a magician, able to perform card tricks and other magic, which he practiced as a child.
Enzo Le Fée is 173 cm (5 ft 8 in) tall, and despite his slight frame, he is an effective tackler and a disciplined presser.
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âHeight is very important to a lot of coaches today,â Le FĂ©e reflects. âBut thereâs this midfielder called Pedri at Barcelona ⊠To me footballâs about whatâs inside your head, about instinct, not how tall you are.â
The concern on Wearside is that his quick, clever feet and even sharper brain have captivated Premier League rivals. Liverpool seem particularly enamoured. âItâs really good to hear, itâs flattering,â Le FĂ©e says. âYou want to play in a really big club, of course. But I enjoy my time at Sunderland a lot. Iâm not sure Iâve done the maximum here yet. Because they have given me a lot, I want to give more to Sunderland.
âAt the moment my head is here, my heart is here and my house is here. Iâm 100% a Sunderland guy.â
Le Bris would certainly be reluctant to lose a fellow Breton he first coached when Le FĂ©e was a 12-year-old at Lorient. âWe have a special relationship,â says Le FĂ©e, who seems more likely to be offered an improved contract than sold. âIt makes it easier because I know how RĂ©gis works and he knows how I think. It simplifies things. Sometimes we donât need to say a lot. And I think, for him, itâs good to have a player in the changing room who knows his ideas.â
As Le Bris rose from running Lorientâs academy to become the clubâs head coach he honed Le FĂ©eâs precocious talent and proved an important mentor to a teenager who missed training only when visiting his father, JĂ©rĂ©my LampriĂšre, in prison. LampriĂšre had been a gifted footballer who was drawn into a world of drug dealing and violence. When Le FĂ©e was 21 he found him dead in bed. His father had taken his own life.
In the past he has spoken openly, and bravely, about the tragedy and he continues to actively support mental health campaigns but these days Le Fée refuses to let his life be defined by the past and prefers to look forward.
He would love to break into the France squad â âItâs an objectiveâ â and play Champions League football, although for the moment at least, he enjoys Wearside too much for restlessness.
Back in Lorient, Le Bris encouraged Le FĂ©e to take schoolwork seriously and Sunderlandâs staff are impressed by the intelligence of a midfielder who has leapt from speaking minimal English 16 months ago to fluency. Much more importantly, they appreciate the impeccable politeness and humility of a player who, refreshingly, does not do aloof.
In January 2025 Le FĂ©eâs naturally sunny disposition was clouded by the defensive confines of Romaâs tactical structure. A door had opened for Le Bris, contemplating his first transfer window as Sunderlandâs manager, to secure an ambitious loan from Serie A.
âMy wife knew I wasnât happy, so when I got the message from RĂ©gis she told me straight away: âWhatever you want to do, we do,ââ says Le FĂ©e, who had arrived in Rome from Rennes six months earlier. âThat was really good to hear ⊠and from day one, weâve been made so welcome here.
âRĂ©gis said we could do something really big together and help get Sunderland promoted but my advisers were really shocked. I said: âTrust me.â I knew I needed to have the freedom to play, to feel the right emotion, again. I was really pleased RĂ©gis wanted me. He knows how to give me the confidence I need. Itâs a pleasure to work with him.â

âI was really pleased RĂ©gis wanted me. He knows how to give me the confidence I need. Itâs a pleasure to work with him.â RĂ©gis Le Bris coached Enzo Le FĂ©e at Lorientâs academy. Photograph: Bruce White/Colorsport/Shutterstock
Le FĂ©e is talking at the Academy of Light, Sunderlandâs training complex, on an important anniversary. A year earlier Le Brisâs team overcame Coventry in the second leg of the playoff semiâfinals. Once Sheffield United were beaten at Wembley, Le FĂ©eâs loan became a formal transfer.
Fifteen new faces, including most notably Granit Xhaka, followed during a hectic summer that prefaced a season dedicated to confounding Sunderlandâs doubters. With two games remaining â Everton away on Sunday and Chelsea at home â hope, albeit slight, of Conference League qualification remains alive.
âWeâve got two finals now,â says Le FĂ©e. âOur idea is to win them both. I donât think itâs too early for Europe.â
Getting there would be a testament to Le Brisâs talent. âEvery day heâs the first to arrive here and the last to leave,â says Le FĂ©e. âThe love he gives to football, itâs a lot. He demands a lot from us too but he always asks for our opinions. He gives us freedom to think for ourselves. He believes the most important thing for any player is to be able to sometimes take a risk.
âIt means weâre not scared to try things ⊠and to me footballâs about feeling, instinct and, sometimes, magic.â