Yohanna’s trajectory did not follow this pattern. His path was markedly different and his story is distinct from that of the aforementioned football stars. It is inexplicably blissful, epochal and moment-defining. Yohanna’s story is what unfolds when raw talent, hard work, tenacity, and determination meet with grace, humility, and luck.
On Saturday, English football club, Brighton Albion, announced the signing of talented and sensational teenager, Zadok Yohanna, from AIK Stockholm for £21.5m. The signing of Yohanna sparked a frenzy, leaving social media abuzz. The signing dominated public discourse on social media. The development was as surreal as it was delightful and heartwarming. At a time when Nigerian football is short on joyful and inspiring news, Yohanna’s move to Brighton and the story of his meteoric rise to stardom are an uplifting and cheerful silver lining for many forlorn football aficionados in Africa’s most populous nation.
Yohanna is not the first teenager to be signed by a top European football club. We’ve had the likes of Victor Osimhen, Kelechi Ihenacho, Mike Obi and a handful of other football prodigies getting snapped up by clubs in Europe at a relatively young age. But their move to Europe was either preceded by a gruelling tryout or an exceptional performance at an age-grade national, regional, continental or international football tournament. However, Yohanna’s trajectory did not follow this pattern. His path was different and his story is distinct from that of the aforementioned football stars. It is inexplicably blissful, epochal and moment-defining
Yohanna’s story is what unfolds when raw talent, hard work, tenacity and determination meet grace, humility and luck. As early as last year, he was playing football on the streets of Kaduna. Just two or three years ago, Yohanna was on June 29, 2007, in the backwaters of Bauchi state in North East Nigeria. Where he was born, civilisation and the trappings of modernity are a thing of distant allure for a prodigious child like Yohanna. Determined to make it, the talented teenager, armed with nothing but discipline and determination to make it, took an audacious decision to leave his bucolic hometown and journeyed to Kaduna for prospects and better opportunities.

In Kaduna, while playing football on the dusty streets of the northern city, serendipity smiled at him and he was registered at Ikon Allah Football Academy. After about five years at the academy, a scout, Herish Sadi, came across footage of him on Facebook and his interest was piqued instantly. Sadi saw a diamond in the rough, a flower that was about to bloom, he was dazzled by his talent, he saw the tenacity and the fire in him. and he bet everything on him. He convinced AIK Stockholm to sign Yohanna. So certain and convinced was he about the talent and potential of Yohanna that he was quoted as asking the CEO to fire him without compensation if Yohanna did not make it.
With the assurance and confidence of Sadi that Yohanna would turn out good, the club took a chance on Yohanna and signed him from Ikon Allah for just €750,000. In less than a year in Sweden, after just playing eighteen matches for Alk Stockholm, the boy exploded. Goals. Assists. Magic. Yohanna established himself as one of the most fascinating young talents in Swedish football. Playing mainly as a right winger, he became known for his pace, close control, creativity, and ability to cut inside onto his stronger left foot. Every match became a glorious opportunity to display his wondrous talent and irrepressible footballing skills. He is nimble, fast, agile and surefooted. He weaves past players with fascinating feints and jaw-dropping dribbles. His ball-striking ability is also superb.
And before long, he did not only become the cynosure of football lovers, he became the subject of intense interest from top European clubs as they started scrambling for his service — Real Madrid, Chelsea, Newcastle, Tottenham. But it was Brighton & Hove Albion who won the race. On Saturday, the English club signed him on a five-year contract.
Where does Yohanna’s meteoric rise leave Ikon Allah
Yohanna cut his teeth in Ikon Allah academy. His raw talent was nurtured and refined into a respectable and coveted asset by the top football establishments in the academy. He was forged into a superstar. So it is only natural that the club where the journey all began get something by way of financial reward for the exceptional and tremendous role they play in his career. Under the FIFA Solidarity Mechanism, Ikon Allah is entitled to a certain percentage (5%) of the transfer fee.
Using a transfer fee of £21.5 million, the FIFA solidarity contribution would be: 5% of £21.5m = £1.075 million available for all training clubs combined. If Ikon Allah trained Zadok Yohanna from ages 12–18, its entitlement would be:
Ages 12–15: 4 years × 0.25% = 1.0%
Ages 16–18: 3 years × 0.50% = 1.5%
Total = 2.5% of the transfer fee
Calculation: 2.5% × £21,500,000
= £537,500
Therefore, the Ikon Allah would be entitled to approximately £537,500 in FIFA solidarity payments.
At an exchange rate of about ₦2,100–₦2,200 per pound, this would be roughly ₦1.13 billion–₦1.18 billion.
Since the announcement of his move to Brighton, there has been an immense outpouring of joy and adulation, with Nigerians taking to their social media pages to congratulate and felicitate with Yohanna over the life-changing move.
“A teenager from northern Nigeria, armed with little more than talent, discipline and determination, has forced his way into one of the most competitive talent markets on earth.
” This is why I will always believe in investing in young people. Not because every child will become a professional footballer, but because talent exists everywhere in this country. What is often missing is opportunity, structure, support and belief,” Former governor of Kwara state and former Senate president, Bukola Saraki, said in his reaction to Yohanna’s signing by Brighton.
The rise of Yohanna to stardom has also reignited the calls for more investment in Nigerian football and its value chain, particularly in the local league and grassroots football, which will come with an overhaul of the current system and comprehensive and strategic restructuring.
“I encourage the Nigeria Football Federation @thenff, the National Sports Commission @NatSportsComm, and the National Institute for Sports, to look into creating the enabling environment for more football academies aimed at discovering more talents like Zadok Yohanna, as the global searchlight beams on Nigeria as the football destination for Africa,” Saraki said.