The Observer - Sport

From Gloucester to Ghana via Norway: Wollacott set to realise African dream

Swindon goalkeeper is primed to make an impact on the internatio­nal stage after quite a journey, he tells Ben Fisher

- Sports · Soccer · Gloucestershire · Ghana · Norway · Gloucester City · Conference South · Africa · Swindon Town F.C. · Morocco · Bristol · Zimbabwe · South Africa · Qatar · Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang · Arsenal F.C. · Gabon · Bristol Rovers F.C. · Bristol City F.C. · The Football Association · Thomas Partey · Woking · Illinois · England · England national football team · Thurrock · Thurrock F.C. · National League · Morocco national football team · Accra · Ghana Football Association · EFL League Two

It is three years this week since Jojo Wollacott lined up for Gloucester City at East Thurrock United in National League South before 242 supporters. That game was a month into the eighth loan move of a career that has taken him on a remarkable journey from Truro to Norway and now the Africa Cup of Nations, where he is set to be Ghana’s No 1.

No one can accuse the Swindon goalkeeper of not putting in the hard yards when he starts against Morocco tomorrow. “It was always my ambition and I told myself it was going to happen one day,” he says. “To play for your country at a major tournament is every boy’s dream … I’ve got to pinch myself again.”

Wollacott, who was born in Bristol, qualifies to play for Ghana through his mother, who was raised in Accra. He recalls watching Richard Kingson, now the Ghana goalkeeper coach, at the 2010 World Cup and getting a flavour for the nation’s obsession with the game. In October, he made his debut in a World Cup qualifier against Zimbabwe.

They beat South Africa a month later to reach the play-offs for Qatar 2022, which take place in March. “I was a bit emotional after the game because it just hit me,” Wollacott says. “That was when I realised: ‘I’m playing internatio­nal football for Ghana.’ It is going to be a busy few months but I am looking forward to it.”

Wollacott has developed as a goalkeeper this season, becoming more comfortabl­e in possession and improving his distributi­on, but arguably his most attractive trait is his humility. He has a laser-like focus and after an hour discussing everything from his Ghana debut shirt having pride of place in his hallway to the prospect of facing Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang – albeit now in doubt since the Arsenal striker has Covid – when they take on Gabon in Group C and his love for jollof rice, it is clear he will not be getting carried away any time soon.

“I am pretty grounded,” he says. “I’m quite aware of my situation. I’ve had a good upbringing – that is down to mum. She does keep me in check every now and then, but not as much as when I was a little kid.”

No one was prouder to watch Wollacott win his first cap than his

‘You have to trust the process and if you keep doing the right things the opportunit­y comes’ Jojo Wallacott

mother, who ferried him to games as a boy. He had trials at Bristol Rovers and Bristol City, who accepted him at the third time of trying, and he spent 10 years at the club without making a first-team appearance before joining Swindon last summer.

His adviser, Eric Anyan of JIA Sports Agency, and Anyan’s son, Elijah, a talent scout, previously alerted the Ghana Football Associatio­n to Wollacott’s eligibilit­y. “My mum told me her phone was going off because everyone was messaging her,” he says. “She sacrificed a lot for me when I was younger.”

It has been a slow-burning career for Wollacott but he is determined to seize his latest opportunit­y. Playing alongside the Ayew brothers and Thomas Partey at a major tournament was a distant dream when he was on loan at Weymouth and Woking. Ghana players and staff converse in English and Twi, a dialect Wollacott is getting to grips with. “I need to get better at it, but I can get away with the basics,” he says.

He values the importance of those loans, including one where he pitched up at an archipelag­o in Norway, spending three months at fourth-tier Bergsøy IL. “I don’t think I had anything else on the table in England, so I thought I might as well just take a chance and go abroad, see how it is.

“Norway was another really good life experience. You need to experience winning three points and being in high-pressure situations. There comes a point when you’re in the reserves or under-23s where it is not relevant any more. It is not realistic.”

The backdrop when he arrived at Swindon was far from ideal – two weeks before the start of the season the League Two club had eight contracted players and no manager – but a takeover lifted the gloom. The goalkeepin­g coach, Steve Mildenhall, who has had a profound impact on Wollacott, was the de facto manager.

“I signed for John McGreal and a week later he left due to the circumstan­ces. It was a big risk to sign but it was one of the best decisions I made because I needed to play. I’m 25 now. Hopefully, the next few months we can keep pushing, climb the table and get promoted.”

He acknowledg­es it has been an incredible rise from Gloucester to Ghana. “I know, I know,” Wollacott says. “It still has not sunk in. But it is just the nature of football. It is a game of opinions. You have to believe in yourself, trust the process and understand that if you keep doing the right things and the opportunit­y comes, you just need to be ready to take it.”

Wollacott has not had much time to stop and reflect but is adamant his life has not changed much over the past few months, aside from no longer breezing through the airport terminal on arrival in Accra. “The first time no one really knew who I was,” he says, laughing. “The second time I think people started to recognise me a bit more.

“I’m not getting ahead of myself. I am just going to stay consistent with what I’m doing. I’m not a superstar. I’m the same person. I’m not going to change.”

 ?? DAVE SHOPLAND/ SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? Bristol-born Jojo Wollacott will be Ghana’s No 1 when their campaign kicks off tomorrow against Morocco
DAVE SHOPLAND/ SHUTTERSTO­CK Bristol-born Jojo Wollacott will be Ghana’s No 1 when their campaign kicks off tomorrow against Morocco
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