Nigeria
forward Henry Onyekuru out to prove doubters wrong
Nigeria striker Henry Onyekuru says he is determined to prove his
doubters wrong after a stuttering start to his professional career.
Now at French club AS
Monaco, work permit issues meant that he did not play a single competitive game
for his previous club Everton.
Despite that setback
he is still determined to fulfill his 'boyhood dream' of playing in the English
premier league.
"We have our
plans but then life brings its own plans, but I am still working on it, and
hopefully I will be back soon, maybe not with Everton but surely in the Premier
League," he insisted.
Onyekuru first hit the
headlines in the 2016-17 season when aged 20 as he scored 22 goals for Belgian
top-flight team KAS Eupen.
Since then the
23-year-old has signed two long-term deals, firstly with English side Everton in 2017 and then last
year at French club AS Monaco, with both teams sending him out on loan.
In January he was
loaned, for a second time, to Turkish giants Galatasaray, where he spent the
2018-19 season while on the books of Everton.
With his second spell
at Galatasaray now at an end Onyekuru is now looking forward to taking his
chances at Monaco alongside the likes of Senegal's Keita Balde and Spanish
World Cup winner Cesc Fabregas.
"I have been with
players like Keita Balde from my days at the Aspire Academy, Cesc Fabregas is a
top guy, who welcomed me when I arrived at the club, it's like going back
home," he said.
"Monaco are a big
club they know how to work with their players when it comes to transfers, just
look at Anthony Martial.
"I hope to make a
good season or two and hopefully the future will be bright."
However Onyekuru also
admits that playing well with his club is no guarantee of a call-up to the
Super Eagles.
"I don't think
the national team is based just on performances at the club, the coach knows
his first eleven," he explained.
"He (Gernot Rohr)
is the type of coach who doesn't change when everything is going well. I'm
there to contribute but hopefully I will get the chance someday."
He also insisted that
his move to Everton in 2017, which came as he decided not to join French giants Paris St-Germain despite
completing a medical, did not come too early in his career.
The English club
immediately loaned him to Belgian club Anderlecht, where his time was
interrupted by injury.
"It didn't work
out because of the work permit, we African players need 75% appearances in the
national team to play in the Premier League," he explained.
"A lot of people
might think I am not good enough (to earn enough caps), and don't know it had a
lot to do with my injury, but that's what it is, I just have to keep working
hard."
The winger was called
up to the Nigeria team in 2017 by coach Gernot Rohr and he looked set to be
part of the Super Eagles team at the 2018 World Cup in Russia.
That in turn would
have boosted his chances of securing his permit to work in the United Kingdom
and play for Everton.
However the knee
injury he suffered while on loan at Anderlecht meant he was unable to prove his
fitness in time for the World Cup and ultimately meant he did not make the
required appearances for a UK work permit.