Global Times

SPECTACULA­R LEADERSHIP

Top scorer Valencia back in World Cup spotlight with Ecuador

- AFP

Journeyman Ecuador striker Enner Valencia has drifted in and out – mainly out – of planet football’s consciousn­ess.

The striker skirts the periphery of relevance until arriving at the World Cup, where suddenly he is in his element.

Ecuador’s 33-year-old captain burst into the limelight in Brazil 2014, scoring three in the group phase against Switzerlan­d and Honduras, although his team were eliminated.

Eight years later, in the Qatar curtain-raiser on November 20, Valencia spoiled the party for the hosts with a brace to secure a 2-0 win and saw another ruled out.

Valencia’s spot kick opener made him the oldest player to score the tournament’s opening goal.

Ecuador thrilled against the Netherland­s in their second match and deserved more than a 1-1 draw, in which Valencia struck again, emphasizin­g his penchant for the big occasion.

Valencia is the tournament’s joint top goalscorer, along with France’s Kylian Mbappe, on three goals from two games.

“We know what a spectacula­r captain we have,” said left-back Pervis Estupinan.

“He is always fighting to improve.”

Valencia is only the fourth player to score six consecutiv­e goals for a nation at the World Cup, behind Portugal great Eusebio, Italy’s Paolo Rossi and Russia’s Oleg Salenko.

While coach Gustavo Alfaro rightly depends on Ecuador’s exciting youngsters, including Brighton’s Moises Caicedo, Estupinan and Jeremy Sarmiento, Valencia remains an essential presence.

Formerly a winger, Valencia has developed into Ecuador’s main goal threat and is their all-time top scorer with 38 goals.

Ahead of the World Cup he suffered a barren spell, with just one goal in eight games, but right on cue, the goals are flowing again in Qatar.

Ecuador’s main concern ahead is that Valencia has been forced off injured in both games, because of a knee problem.

“I did tests and it showed I have a knee sprain, which is annoying me a bit,” said the striker after the Netherland­s draw.

“I played through the pain but the important thing is that I could help the team and

we’re still strong.

“The knee’s improving, I have to do good recovery work and I hope to be able to play [against Senegal].”

Well-traveled

After starting his career with Emelec in Ecuador’s top flight, which he won in 2013, Valencia earned a move to Mexican side Pachuca.

A prolific season with 18 goals in 23 league games earned him a call-up to Ecuador’s 2014 World Cup squad, where performanc­es attracted Premier League interest.

West Ham pounced, splashing 12 million pounds ($14.5 million) on the forward, who scored a brilliant goal lashed in from range on his full league debut against Hull City.

It proved a start impossible to live up to and he only managed four goals in 32 appearance­s in his first league campaign, and the same paltry contributi­on in his second.

West Ham loaned him to Everton, where he continued to struggle, putting a full stop on his Premier League adventure.

He headed back to Mexico in 2017 for a more profitable three years with Tigres, before Turkish side Fenerbahce signed him in the summer of 2020.

With 13 goals in 12 games, Valencia is the division’s top goalscorer this season, finding the kind of form Ecuador are now profiting from.

The country’s hopes are pinned to Valencia’s mast once again, and if he delivers against Senegal, he can fire them into the knockouts for only the second time in their history.

 ?? Photo: VCG ?? Ecuador’s Enner Valencia (center) vies for the ball with Jurrien Timber of the Netherland­s during their World Cup Group A match in Doha, Qatar, on November 25, 2022.
Photo: VCG Ecuador’s Enner Valencia (center) vies for the ball with Jurrien Timber of the Netherland­s during their World Cup Group A match in Doha, Qatar, on November 25, 2022.

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