PARIS
Antoine Semenyo is set for his second World Cup with Ghana, this time as an established Premier League forward, but he came close to abandoning his dream of becoming a professional footballer.
Now at Manchester City, Semenyo is expected to play a key role for a Ghana side led by new coach Carlos Queiroz, after the Black Stars failed to qualify for the most recent Africa Cup of Nations. Four years is a long time in football, as Semenyo’s meteoric rise since Ghana’s group-stage exit in Qatar so vividly demonstrates.
Semenyo managed just 19 minutes across two substitute appearances in a disappointing 2022 World Cup campaign, but barely a month later he made the step up to the Premier League after joining Bournemouth from Bristol City.
The 26-year-old has scarcely looked back. His startling progress masks a demanding journey shaped by rejection that led Semenyo to consider a different career altogether.
After three years at Bournemouth, Manchester City triggered Semenyo’s release clause in January in a deal worth £65 million, fending off competition from Liverpool, Manchester United, Chelsea and Tottenham.
Semenyo quickly endeared himself to City supporters, producing one of the great FA Cup final goals with an audacious back-flick to secure a 1-0 victory over Chelsea at Wembley earlier this month.
There was a touch of irony in that moment: Semenyo was born just a stone’s throw from Chelsea’s Stamford Bridge home in west London.
Despite spending his entire life in England, Semenyo said there was no question about representing Ghana.
“My mum and dad are Ghana through (and through). They never really mentioned anything about England,” he told FIFA.
“Obviously, living in England, you get the conversation of: ‘Oh, you should represent England’. But it was never a conversation I ever had, really. Ghana came in when I was 19, 20, so I was never going to turn it down.”











