The Asian Age

Salah idol of his Egyptian village

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Cairo: Deep in Egypt’s Nile Delta region, the children of Nagrig village have a clear goal in life: they want to become football stars like Mohamed Salah, Liverpool’s top scorer and Africa’s top player.

Salah, who hails from their village, has been one of the sensations of the Premier League since joining Liverpool — his goal in the victory against Southampto­n on Sunday was his 29th of the season. Further enhancing his status as a national hero, Salah played a key role in leading Egypt to the World Cup finals in Russia later this year. On Wednesday his talent will be on show in the Champions League as Liverpool tackle Porto.

Mohamed Abdel- Gawad, 12, gazes in admiration at the three- storey house where Salah was born and raised, which overlooks a narrow dirt road like most of the houses in the village, about 120 kilometres ( 75 miles) northwest of Cairo.

“I hope to be like Mohamed Salah when I grow up,” Abdel- Gawad said.

“Mohamed Salah has become a profession­al player because of his ethics and humbleness.”

In Nagrig as well as in Basyoun, the closest town, the youth centres were renamed after the Egyptian star. Fully aware that his success has become an inspiratio­n for children in Egypt and Africa more widely, Salah addressed them in his acceptance speech when he won the African player of the year accolade in January, telling them: “Never stop dreaming, never stop believing.”

While the house of the player’s father, Salah Ghali, resembles others in the village, it was quieter: no- one was looking out of an open window, and no clothes hung from the house.

GRUELLING DAILY JOURNEY

Salah’s journey, figurative­ly as well as literally, was anything but easy.

“His talent clearly showed from the beginning,” said Ghamri Abdel- Hameed elSaadani, who was the juniors coach at the Nagrig Youth Centre, where Salah started training at the age of eight. Still, Salah’s success is not just due to his talent, “it’s also a product of a will of steel, effort, and determinat­ion”, said Saadani.

The mayor of the village, Maher Shateyya, a family friend, bursts with pride when he talks about Nagrig’s most famous son.

“Mohamed was only 14 when he joined the Arab Contractor­s club in Cairo, and he had to spend nearly 10 hours a day in transport to make it to and from practice,” said Shateyya of Salah’s “journey of torment”.

Nagrig to Basyoun, then to Tanta city, the capital of AlGharbiya province, then a bus to downtown Cairo, and a final ride to the Nasr City neighbourh­ood where the club is located.

Salah grew up in a sporty family, with his father and two uncles having played football at the youth club in Nagrig.

“In the beginning, Salah played with the team in Basyoun town, then he moved to Tanta city before he was taken by the Arab Contractor­s team,” said Shateyya. Starting in the under- 15s, Salah spent five years there before his talent earned him a moving abroad and Swiss club Basel.

From Basel, Salah moved to Chelsea but failed to break into the first team. He went to Italy where eye- catching performanc­es for Roma caught Liverpool’s attention and he signed last year in a deal that could eventually be worth $ 60.8 million.

 ?? — AFP ?? Boys at Egypt’s Nagrig village, where Mohamed Salah was born, have wholeheart­edly taken to football with the hope of becoming as big a name as the Liverpool star.
— AFP Boys at Egypt’s Nagrig village, where Mohamed Salah was born, have wholeheart­edly taken to football with the hope of becoming as big a name as the Liverpool star.
 ??  ?? Mohamed Salah
Mohamed Salah

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