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Tadious Manyepo-Zimpapers Sports Hub
DYNAMOS’ new Ghanaian import Frank Agyemang typically enjoys his Christmas Holidays in the quiet countryside of Effiduase Oyoko in Ashanti back in his home country.
He has done that as far as he can remember even during the time he was playing for Ghanaian First Division side Pacific Heroes as a teenager around 2019 and 2020.
But the last Christmas holiday was different.
Close to inking a deal with the Glamour Boys, a team whose legacy he began to know when he was reading about the history of Ghana’s big teams like Hearts of Oak and Asante Kotoko around 2017, Agyemeng found himself confined to a room in Warren Park 1.
The normally bustling high-density suburb was unusually quiet apparently because the residents had visited their rural homes and holiday places.
The 22-year-old felt so lonely not because he didn’t have the resources to fly back to Ghana but because he feared he would risk missing signing for DeMbare.
“It was a painful day for me. I was just days living in Warren Park. I didn’t know anyone there and there wasn’t a single person that I could talk to.
“Even those who stay where I live had gone to visit their relatives. I was alone and very lonely.
“It was boring to say the least. So I just told myself to pack up my training gear and headed to a community football field I had seen the previous day.
“Man, I trained the whole day. I did everything, ball work, speed drills, agility, strength and everything else. I got tired and that’s when I then went back home.
“I went for a shower then slept till the following day. I didn’t see it (Christmas Day). But I felt very much better the day after.
“The four, five days that followed were even worse but I could always talk to my manager Adomsi Mukosi who made me feel at home. I was always training, each day, but the Christmas session was intensive.”
Agyemang is looking forward to a good time with the Glamour Boys, especially after seeing his move to Europe falter.
“I would be honest with you. I played football at a lower level in Ghana because I was still a student. First I was at Pacific Heroes in the First Division.
“Someone identified me there and took me for trials with a Turkish Division One side Umraniyespor. I passed the audition but I was supposed to go for an attachment somewhere else. Somehow the deal collapsed.
“With everything seemingly taking too long, I was training with a Division 2 club back home, Kairos FC, but never played for them. Unbeknown to me, they had registered me.
“I only got to know about it when I was about to be registered by Dynamos. The clearance has since come but it was a huge scare and a big surprise for me when I learnt about it.”