Daily Mail

I play football in bare feet with kids … but don’t tell Benitez!

Newcastle’s Atsu on his African roots

- By Craig Hope @CraigHope_DM

CHRISTIAN ATSU was 12 years old when, after the sudden death of his father, he declared: ‘I’m either going to be a doctor or a footballer.’

Even today, 13 years on and sitting inside Newcastle united’s training ground in the wake of promotion to the Premier League, you can sense Atsu’s regret at his father’s passing in Ghana.

What it did do is serve as motivation for a boy who could have been lost to the streets of Ada Foah, the hometown where he played football in his bare feet until being spotted by scouts from Feyenoord’s west African academy.

Atsu was in the first term of a six-month training camp some three hours from home when news came through that his father, Immanuel, was sick. He never saw him again.

‘I was not paid at the academy and because of that my father died — we did not have the money for the treatment,’ says Atsu (below), the youngest of 11 siblings and now a father of two.

‘ I did not ask anything about the sickness, but I know he was drinking a lot of alcohol. He was a farmer. There was no-one to help the family. That inspired me. I was either going to be a doctor, to help the sick, or make it as a footballer, to provide for my family.’

That, he has done. His mother, Afiko, has moved out of the two-bedroom dwelling where she raised the family. Atsu’s twin sister, Christiana, is studying nursing at university and hopes to join her brother in Newcastle for a masters degree. Atsu, though, has done more than just help his own. The Ghana star is an ambassador for Arms Around The Child, a British charity which supports orphanage sites in his country. He will return this summer with Newcastle kit, boots and balls. ‘ I will play football with the children and my friends in my bare feet, but please, don’t tell the manager,’ he says with a smile. However, given his own upbringing, he will offer more than material goods. ‘The hard life I passed through, I know how it is,’ he says. ‘Those children on the street, they don’t have parents, friends, they have nothing. ‘I try to provide food, books and clothes, but most of all I want to give them hope, I want them to have a better future. It is more important for them to feel loved, to know there is someone there to help, someone who cares. ‘They have lost parents, like I did. For many, their parents just left them on the street because they could not afford school fees.

‘It happened to me, too. It got to the point where my parents could not pay my fees and I had to sacrifice school. I sold rubber bags in the market with my friends.

‘Sometimes I would be away from the house for two weeks without seeing my family, staying with friends, just to forget things. I loved playing football but also had to work hard to feed my family. I could not see them suffering, especially my twin sister and mother.’

For a young man driven by a work ethic and sense of duty off the pitch, on it he was blessed with flair and played with freedom.

That much has been evident on Tyneside, where the Chelsea loanee’s fifth goal of the season — a delightful free- kick — set Newcastle on their way to victory at Cardiff last Friday.

He also scored in the promotionc­linching win against Preston and wants to make it a treble by helping Newcastle to the Championsh­ip title tomorrow.

Atsu hopes to make a permanent £6.5million move in the coming weeks. After loan spells at Everton and Bournemout­h brought just five top-flight appearance­s, this finally feels like home.

He is softly spoken. But, when it is put to him that — at 5ft 8in — he is perhaps too small to have an impact in the Premier League, he comes back with anything but a whisper. ‘OK,’ he declares. ‘I know I’m very small, but I have a very big heart. It does not matter how small you are, I go to win — in football and in life.’

Atsu arrived at Chelsea from Porto for £3.5m in 2013 but is yet to play for the Stamford Bridge club. ‘It just didn’t work for me at Everton or Bournemout­h. I am more focused in my life now.

‘I have forgotten the past. It is my dream to play in the Premier League. Everyone in Ghana watches English football. Now I have that chance. Rafa Benitez has helped me so much. He is not only a great coach, but a great man.’

Benitez’s influence apart, the newfound serenity which has allowed Atsu to shine is perhaps best explained by the happiness of life with his young family.

‘My second boy was born at the start of this season. I named him Godwin, as my life was difficult. I said, “This is me now — God will help us win”,’ says Atsu, who also has Joshua, three. ‘Their childhood will be different to mine but I want them to have the same values.’

Those values have taken Atsu this far. He will need them more than ever if he is finally to make a name for himself in the Premier League.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Kids’ stuff: Atsu working with Arms Around The Child in Ghana
Kids’ stuff: Atsu working with Arms Around The Child in Ghana
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom