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Coming of age the hard way

Lazio loanee Minala rebuilding career following damaging false claims he was 41, not 17

China Daily | Updated: 2020-10-03 00:00
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Joseph Minala does not wish to dwell on the bizarre age claim which propelled him into the headlines in 2014, but there is just no getting away from it.

"It held back my career and is (still) holding back my career," the Cameroonian said.

Minala was a budding star at Italian giant Lazio when a report out of Senegal claimed that he was not aged 17, as he said, but 41.

The allegation gained traction because Minala's rugged appearance and well-developed physique made him look significantly older. He was subjected to cruel ridicule on social media.

But Italy's soccer federation conducted an investigation and concluded that he was telling the truth.

Minala turned 24 last month and is now playing for Qingdao Huanghai in the Chinese Super League, but the midfielder says that he cannot shake off the stigma.

"I had opportunities at some clubs (to move there), but I think it didn't happen because of this business," he said.

"This is an image that some people unfortunately have of me," Minala added.

"I had the opportunity to go to France, I had the opportunity to go to Paris Saint-Germain at the time... but it didn't happen."

Speaking by telephone from Suzhou, where his new team Qingdao is playing in a bio-secure bubble to thwart the coronavirus, Minala said: "I would have had a different career (without this controversy).

"Sometimes people prefer to ignore that I'm a good player and only point out that aspect of me."

Milan scam

His agent at the time of the controversy explained that Minala looked older because of his difficult back story, which includes a spell in an Italian care home.

The player was spotted as a talented youngster in Cameroon, and a former player who was also an agent promised him a trial at AC Milan. His parents spent "a lot of money" to finance the trip to Italy, but after arriving the 14-year-old Minala found himself stranded at a Rome train station.

"I was told that people were coming to pick me up for the trial but I waited an hour, an hour-and-a-half, and still no one was there," he said.

"I only knew two words of Italian. I was abandoned at the station with my two suitcases and a mobile phone without a SIM card in it. In the end, it was a scam that I never understood."

Not knowing what to do, Minala went to a police station.

"I didn't know anyone, I didn't know where to go, I wanted to tell my story to the police and return to my country," he recalled.

"But since I was an unaccompanied minor, they took me to a hospital for tests, then to a social-welfare center and I was enrolled in an Italian school. This is where my adventure began."

'I keep going'

Minala lived in the housing center with other youths and it was there that he trained to do another job in case his soccer dreams failed to materialize.

"I'm good at baking. Maybe after football, I'll open a bakery, you never know," he laughed.

Mino Raiola, the high-profile agent who represents Paul Pogba and a slew of other stars, spotted Minala playing in amateur soccer in the Rome region and took him south to Napoli.

After one year as a youth player at Napoli there was interest from Juventus, Milan and Inter, Minala says, but in 2013 he joined Lazio's under-19 squad.

It was a year later that the claims were made about his age and he then made several loan moves, notably to Bari and Salernitana in Italy's second tier.

At the start of this year he moved to Qingdao on loan, but the coronavirus pandemic delayed his debut until last month.

He has made eight starts for Qingdao in the abbreviated, reformated season. The team finished second-last in Group B and is set for a relegation fight when the knockout stage begins this month in Dalian. The eight-team championship playoffs will be held in Suzhou.

Minala is unsure what will happen when his contract expires in June 2021 at Lazio, where he has made a handful of first-team appearances.

"I keep going on with my life, despite everything people have tried to do against me," said Minala, who has ambitions of playing for Cameroon's national team.

"A lot of people expected me to stop playing or go crazy."

Agence France-presse

 

 

Joseph Minala, pictured in action for Qingdao Huanghai earlier this year, is unsure what his future holds after his loan spell with the Chinese Super League club concludes at the end of the season. In 2014, the then 17-year-old made headlines after it was reported he was actually 41. XINHUA

 

 

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