As a 19-year-old Premier League footballer at Swansea, Ben Davies always took an eternity to leave the clubâs training ground. In those days, he drove an old Volkswagen Polo with manual windows â much to the amusement of the rest of the squad â and autograph-hunting supporters kept him busy.
âBen would wind down the window, say hello, have a photo, sign something, wind it back up and then 15 yards on another fan would stop him and heâd do it all over again,â says Alan Curtis, Swanseaâs assistant manager at the time. âBut he did it without fuss. He was a lovely boy and he is a gentleman now.â
It is a story that chimes with Daviesâs down-to-earth and uber-professional character, the common denominator in conversations when those who know him best discuss the Wales defender poised to win his 100th cap in Mondayâs World Cup qualifier against Belgium. The 32-year-old will be the fourth menâs player to reach the milestone, after Gareth Bale, Wayne Hennessey and Chris Gunter.
âPlaying for Wales means everything to him and that really shows,â says Gunter. âHeâs always leading, in different forms: setting standards, driving the group and being a person the squad can rely on. He is as passionate as anybody Iâve seen play for Wales and, rightly, he will be celebrated and talked about for years to come.â
There is a catalogue of moments that encapsulate Davies, none more than his goal-saving block to deny Slovakiaâs Marek Hamsik at Euro 2016. Curtis references a line from Bill Shankly. âA football team is like a piano. You need eight people to carry it and three who can play the damn thing. Iâm not calling Ben a piano carrier, but heâs one of those people that every team needs.
âHe would be Mr Consistency, unflappable, on the same plane whether heâs playing Kazakhstan or the world champions. As the years have gone by, heâs become indispensable; Iâm sure when Craig Bellamy picks the team, the first name down on the team sheet would be Ben.â
He is Walesâs de facto captain in the absence of Aaron Ramsey, who last played for his country in September 2024. Davies has been on the playersâ committee for several years and was part of the historic run to the Euro 2016 semi-finals. He also featured at Euro 2020 and the 2022 World Cup.
âHe thinks about every part of the game,â Gunter says. âHeâs not one to go on the pitch, do the session, go back to his room and then you donât see him. Heâs massively involved in everything.â
For most of his career Davies has been an unsung hero, content operating in the shadows of superstars: Bale and Ramsey on the international stage, Harry Kane and Son Heung-min, the godfather to his children, at Tottenham, who signed him in July 2014. He was Mauricio Pochettinoâs first recruit at Spurs, ending Daviesâs long association with Swansea, the club he joined aged seven and rejoined after two years living in Viborg, Denmark.
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âWe were at the end of a pre-season camp in Chicago and due to fly home the next day,â says Curtis, Swanseaâs honorary club president. âBut Spurs were flying out to Chicago the same day so he had to stay. He realised it was a big opportunity, something he couldnât turn down, but I remember it breaking his heart and all the boys consoling him. They were genuine tears; he was very, very fond of the club and the area.â
Eleven years later Davies is Tottenhamâs longest-serving player and has worked under seven managers, his staying power a symbol of the regard in which he is universally held within the game. His game time has dwindled in recent seasons â he is yet to play in the Premier League this campaign â but his performances for Wales are regularly monstrous. Bellamy suggested Daviesâs display against Canada last month, a friendly defeat in Swansea, was the best he had seen him play.
âIt goes back to how he is as a professional,â says Gunter, appointed head coach of Walesâs Under-19s last year. âEven if heâs not playing he makes sure heâs in the best possible place so that when heâs on the pitch, he makes the most of every single minute. When he turns up for Wales, you wouldnât know if heâs been playing or not.â
As a player, he has lived in the Premier League for more than a decade but, as a person, Davies prefers to keep himself to himself. âI think this sums him up: at his wedding his two best men were from his old school,â Curtis says. He is articulate and personable, but politely declined a request to talk at length about his impending achievement to avoid pre-empting anything and ensure total focus on performance.
Davies is bright; he has an Open University degree in business and economics, hence his attendance at the Financial Timesâs business of football summit, and last year secured his Uefa A coaching licence with the Football Association of Wales. Bellamy believes Davies has the makings of a manager, but could also envisage him working as a director of football or chief executive. âBen could stay in the game in a number of roles, which is unique for players, because normally it is coaching or management,â Gunter says. âHe is an intelligent and ambitious guy.â
Bale is Walesâs most-capped male player with 111. âBen definitely wonât be thinking about breaking Gazâs record â he would swap his caps for team success â but he 100% could do it,â Gunter says. âIf he did it really quickly it would be amazing because that would probably mean that Wales are competing at the World Cup next summer and that would be his fourth major tournament, something no Wales player has done.â
For his part, Davies spoke at Walesâs press conference on Sunday. âIâd have been happy if Iâd have picked up one cap for Wales in my life growing up as a kid, so it is an incredibly proud moment for me and my family but, at the same time, there is a job to be done,â he said.
Davies deserves his moment in the sun. âI was fortunate because my 100th cap came during lockdown,â Gunter says. âThat was a blessing in the sense no one was really allowed in the stadium and it was all a little bit strange. Unfortunately for Ben, heâs going to have a load of attention on him.â






