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Marbella Life After Pro Football For Lee Payne

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Ex-footballer Lee Payne finds sanctuary in Marbella. Credit: LP

Moving to Marbella has had a huge impact on Lee Payne’s life. And it had already been a colourful one.

He rose from non-league football to the Premiership, making the leap to Newcastle United and playing 100 league games before injury ended his career at just 26. Undaunted, he became the youngest football agent in Holland in 1996, when there were only eleven agents in the whole country. He learned Dutch, and bridged the gap that brought so many Dutch players to British clubs in the nineties. His work took him across Europe, Brazil and South America. It was during those whirlwind years that he first set foot on the Costa del Sol.

Marbella felt like coming home

Something clicked the day he watched a UEFA Cup Malaga CF match against Leeds United when Malaga beat leads away Elland Road. After years of airports, hotels and stadiums, the South coast of Spain felt different, like coming home before he even knew he was looking for one. Twenty-five years later, Lee has finally made his home in Marbella. He sat down with Euro Weekly News and spoke quietly about the place that helped heal him.

Lee Payne in Newcastle days.
Lee Payne in Newcastle days.
Credit: Payney500 wiki

It was during his 3-day stay at the Puente Romano hotel in Marbella for that UEFA cup match in 2002 that left an everlasting impression, with the lights of the port glittering and the warm air on his skin, Lee knew. He and his family had to move here. The life of a football agent never stopped, with fifty or so players on his books, constant flights, meetings with lawyers and club officials. But in Marbella his wife and children could put down roots while he was away. They could flourish.

“I don’t want to use the word ‘magical’, but it’s a very special place for me. Marbella can chew you up and spit you out, everything is available in Marbella good and bad I have witnessed both sides, but there’s something about this place, that everything in the world is put right as soon as I get back here.” He smiled, almost embarrassed by his own emotion. “Marbella was always a place to come and find sanctuary. I feel the sun, I see the blue sky, I feel the air and appreciate the beauty of all the he flowers its such a colourful place. I think you have a microclimate here, there’s a difference between here and anywhere else in the world. And I always found, I actually found peace.”

Chance encounter changes Lee’s life

He has seen the world. He knows there is no comparison. “People often talk about random acts of crime in Marbella but believe me I think the local police do a great job, I used to live in Rio de Janeiro, and this is nothing compared to there.”In Brazil, the narcos control everything. They carry bazookas, rocket launchers, so coming back here, there’s no comparison. Here, you can walk around safely at night.”

Lee paused, then told the story that changed everything. He leaned forward, eyes distant. “I was living in the interior, in an authentic Brazilian town away from the tourism. I was buying some home grown tropical fruit from an elderly woman when I noticed a picture of a beautiful young girl, who looked very similar to my own daughter. When I asked about the picture, the woman said the girl was with Jesus now.” His voice softened. “Four months before, the girl had been killed when someone attacked the motorbike she was riding on.” As a father, Lee was stunned, not just by the loss, but by the way the woman spoke. She was calm. At peace. “She had such an outpouring of love.” The quiet dignity of that mother, only four months after burying her eleven-year-old daughter, something shifted that day inside him. “I asked God, on the way home, please give me that kind of peace and my faith began to grow from that day forward on another level.”

That encounter stayed with him on every flight home. When he finally moved his family to Marbella, the peace he had glimpsed in that Brazilian woman settled over him too. The mountains behind the town, the sea in front, the easy rhythm of daily life, they wrapped around him like a promise kept. The place has its faults, he knows that. Yet its beauty always wins and his two daughters Larissa and Gabrielle spent the best part of their childhood growing up in Marbella.

Lee Payne on TV
Lee Payne interviewed on TV
Credit: Revelation TV

Nowhere else in the world Payne would live

Today, he shares his life with Sonia Marquez, his new wife, a fashion designer with her own brand I AM based in Marbella, whose perspective on the world and on life on the Costa del Sol matches his completely. Together they have no doubt there is no other place in the world to live.
For Lee Payne, Marbella is more than a postcode. It is the sanctuary he searched for across continents, the place where a retired footballer and football agent finally found rest, and the home where everything in the world is put right the moment he steps off the plane.

His journey and reflections are also captured in his book The Football Agent Who Found Grace, written in Marbella and available on Amazon.

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Orihuela To Host 37th Regional School Theatre Showcase

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Orihuela hosts 37th school theatre showcase with 27 performances. Photo Credit: Orihuela Town Hall

ORIHUELA is preparing to host the 37th edition of the Regional School Theatre Showcase, which this year will feature 27 special performances at the Circus Theatre. The event, which for nearly four decades has brought together students from educational centres all over the Vega Baja region, has been firmly established as a source of local pride and unites the students with a love for theatre.

A programme to celebrate theatre in Orihuela

The programme, which will take place from May 5 to May 28, includes a wide variety of styles and stage productions, from classical theatre to contemporary and innovative works. The project includes performances of famous works, including:

  • Lost in Translation, Toc-Toc, The Gods or Cinderella (IES Tháder)
  • Trash TV (IES Mare Nostrum)
  • Punch and Judy (Reverse Version) (IES Santiago Grisolía)
  • Scarlet Theorem (MUDIC Jesús Carnicer)
  • The Magic of Emotions, The Wizard of Oz, Shrek, Cantar Mio Cid or The Play That Goes Wrong (Jesús María San Agustín)
  • Cinderella Who Didn’t Expect a Prince (CEIP San Bartolomé)
  • The Pied Piper of Hamelin, Saint George and the Dragon, Beauty and the Beast or Enchantment (Oratorio Festivo)
  • Peter Pan Musical (Santo Domingo)
  • The World Upside Down or The Darlings (Virgen de Montserrate de Torremendo)

The event fosters essential values including camaraderie, teamwork, and creativity. The project allows students to enter the world of art and theatre, as well as develop important communicative skills and, above all, foster and facilitate group work among them.

Admission will be free for all audiences, though the Orihuela Department of Education recommends making a reservation in advance through the Teatro Circo to help organize attendance.

With this project, the students’ hard work onstage will reflect the talent, effort, and commitment of schools throughout the Vega Baja region, and re-affirm Orihuela’s place as a cultural and artistic hotspot on the Costa.

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Marbella National Wheelchair Tennis Open

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Marbella is ready and set to welcome 23 tennis players from across Spain this week as the city hosts the 18th edition of the National Wheelchair Tennis Open. The competition runs from Thursday 23 April through to Sunday 26 April at the Polideportivo Paco Cantos.

The tournament is organised by Club Deportivo Jacamar and forms part of the national wheelchair tennis circuit run by the Royal Spanish Tennis Federation (RFET). Now in its 18th consecutive year, it is one of the longest-running events of its kind in the country.

All competitors get maximum court time over the few days

The big news of this year’s edition is the return of the women’s draw. The Marbella city council announced that five women will compete in a round-robin format, meaning every player faces every other player, with matches beginning on the opening day, Thursday. The format ensures that all five competitors get maximum court time and that the final standings reflect consistency across the full draw rather than a single day’s result. The sport maintains the same rules as conventional tennis, with the only difference being that it allows a second bounce.  

The women’s competition was absent from last year’s tournament due to the complexity of assembling a competitive female field. Its return this year was confirmed in official communications from the Marbella Town Hall.  

Paco Cantos is the perfect home for the tournament with its range of accessible facilities

For the men’s draw, the remaining players will compete across all four days, with finals in both competitions scheduled for Sunday 26 April.

The Polideportivo Paco Cantos has served as the home of this tournament for multiple editions and provides the accessible facilities required to host a national-level wheelchair tennis event.  Located on Avenida Canovas del Castillo in Marbella. Its indoor hall can house a range of sports including tennis, futsal, basketball, volleyball and skating, and the site also features three outdoor tennis courts, three padel courts, a fronton court, a climbing wall, changing rooms, and a bar. The breadth of the facility makes it well suited to hosting a multi-day national tournament, with courts available for simultaneous matches and adequate space for players, officials and spectators. Entry for spectators wishing to follow the action at Paco Cantos across the four days is open to the public.  In addition, the matches on the center court will be broadcast live on Facebook. 

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Bull Gores Famous Bullfighter In Prestigious Sevilla Event

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Morante de la Puebla suffers the horn. Credit: Natursports – Shutterstock

Shock swept through the Real Maestranza in Sevilla on Monday, April 20, during the much loved Feria de Abril when veteran torero Morante de la Puebla received a severe horn wound from his fourth bull.

Crowds had packed the historic venue for the Monday event featuring bulls from García Jiménez. Morante attempted to control the animal with his cape but lost his footing. The bull charged and struck him in a highly sensitive area just below the left buttock. Medical teams rushed the injured fighter to the ring’s infirmary for immediate surgery.

Doctors are said to have later detailed the injury as a 10 cm wound affecting anal sphincter muscles and perforating the rectum by an eye-watering 1.5 cm. Surgeons performed wound cleaning and rectal wall repair and placed drainage. Borja Jiménez took over the bull’s handling while concern spread among spectators outside the arena. Initial reports suggested the prognosis remained guarded though not immediately life-threatening.

Toreros face frequent risks in the ring

Bullfighters encounter horn wounds on a regular basis. Studies of Spanish events over eight years recorded more than 1,200 such injuries over 13,500 occasions, producing an average accident rate near 9 per cent. Matadors absorb most of these incidents, often in the thighs or groin. While deaths stay rare thanks to modern medicine, serious cases still demand urgent vascular or specialist care.

Thousands of bulls die yearly in bullfights

Estimates indicate around 35,000 bulls lose their lives in Spanish rings each season, with global figures reaching up to 180,000 when including related events. Every traditional corrida ends in the animal’s death after a structured sequence of lances and passes. Critics describe the practice as inherently cruel, pointing to the prolonged suffering before the final sword thrust.

Bullfighting loses ground with the Spanish public

Attendance has dropped sharply over recent decades. Figures show a 75 per cent fall in spectators at bullfighting events across 25 years, from nearly 9 million in the mid-2000s to projections near 2 million today. Only about 2 per cent of Spaniards attend regularly, with younger age groups showing even lower interest in many polls. Wider surveys reveal opposition levels around 77 per cent among the population.

Fewer events take place overall, and many smaller rings have closed. Public funding continues through subsidies and youth vouchers, yet these measures have not reversed the long-term slide in popularity. Industry voices promote school programmes and media exposure to attract new followers and preserve the tradition.

Many observers view such efforts as uphill battles against changing values that question animal use in entertainment. The Sevilla incident serves as a nasty reminder of the dangers involved while pouring petrol onto the ongoing debate about whether bullfighting belongs in modern Spain.

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