Odion Jude Ighalo (born 16 June 1989) is a Nigerian professional footballer who plays as a striker for English club Manchester United, on loan from Chinese club Shanghai Greenland Shenhua.
After starting his career at Nigerian clubs Prime and Julius Berger, Ighalo moved to Norwegian side Lyn in 2007. A year later he was signed by Udinese, spending most of his tenure notably loaned out at Granada. In 2014, he signed for EFL Championship side Watford and was integral in the club's promotion to the Premier League in the 2014–15 season.[4] In January 2017, Ighalo joined Chinese Super League club Changchun Yatai for a reported £20 million before moving onto Shanghai Greenland Shenhua. On 31 January 2020, Ighalo returned to the Premier League, joining Manchester United on loan until the end of the 2019-20 season.
Ighalo made his debut for the Nigeria national team in 2015. He represented the nation at the 2018 World Cup and was the highest goalscorer in the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification campaign. He eventually led Nigeria to a third place finish at the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations, where he finished in the competition's Team of the Tournament and was crowned Top Scorer
Club career
Early career
Born in Lagos and raised in Edo,[6] Ighalo played in his country with Prime and Julius Berger, where he was discovered by FIFA agent Marcelo Houseman who recommended him to Atta Aneke, being subsequently taken on trial by Norway's Lyn.
He made his Tippeligaen debut on 16 September 2007 at the age of just 18, scoring in a 2–0 home win against Viking. He scored six goals in 13 matches in his second year to help his team to the seventh position, and subsequently arose interest from other clubs in the country, with Brann reporting Lyn to the Norwegian Football Federation for unfairness in the negotiation process.[7]
Udinese / Granada
On 30 July 2008, Ighalo signed for Udinese in Italy, moving alongside teammate Jo Inge Berget and agreeing to a five-year contract.[8] He appeared rarely in Serie A in his debut season, scoring against Cagliari in a 6–2 home routing –[9] four of his five league appearances came as a late substitute.
Ighalo was loaned to Granada in summer 2009, as part of the partnership agreement between Udinese and the Spaniards.[10][11][12] He scored 17 times in his first year (playoffs included)[13] and five in the second, as both seasons ended in promotion;[14][15] this was interspersed with a brief loan stint back in Italy, with Cesena.[16]
Ighalo continued playing with Granada in the following years, still owned by the Udine side.[17][18] He played his first La Liga match on 27 August 2011, starting and playing the full 90 minutes in a 0–1 home loss to Real Betis.[19]
Watford
Ighalo joined Watford on a season-long loan deal from Udinese, on 29 July 2014.[20] He made his debut for the English club in the first round of the Football League Cup at Stevenage on 12 August,[21] and scored his first goal in the Championship against Brentford on 30 September by tucking the ball home after his initial penalty was saved by David Button, in a 2–1 home win.[22][23]
On 24 October 2014, Watford terminated Ighalo's loan and re-signed him on a permanent deal the same day after Udinese released him from his contract.[24] Exactly three months later, he scored four second-half goals and was voted Man of the match in a 7–2 home routing of Blackpool, who led 0–2 at half time;[25] he took his league tally to 14 on 10 February 2015, after netting a brace to help his team come from behind at Brentford to win it 2–1 – his second came through an injury time header.[26]
Ighalo scored in his Premier League debut on 8 August 2015, replacing José Manuel Jurado 16 minutes from time and putting the visitors ahead 2–1 in an eventual 2–2 draw away against Everton for the season opener.[27] He netted twice in a 2–0 home win over West Ham United on 31 October, reaching seven goals for the season and becoming the highest club scorer in the competition after just 11 matches.[28]
On 20 December 2015, Ighalo scored in a Watford victory for the fourth consecutive time, netting a brace in a 3–0 win over Liverpool.[29] His five-goal haul earned him December's Premier League Player of the Month, while his manager Quique Sánchez Flores won the equivalent award.[30]
Ighalo broke a 599-minute personal scoring drought on 13 March 2016, with a goal in a 2–1 win at holders Arsenal in the quarter-finals of the FA Cup, putting the Hornets into the last four for the first time in nine years.[31] On 12 August he signed a new five-year contract[32] but, the following season, he scored just one league goal and did not find the net in any of his last 15 games.[33]
Changchun Yatai
On 31 January 2017, Ighalo joined Chinese Super League club Changchun Yatai for a reported £20 million.[33] He ranked second in the scoring charts in his second season at 21, but his team suffered relegation.[34][35]
Shanghai Greenland Shenhua
Ighalo transferred to Shanghai Greenland Shenhua on 14 February 2019.[36][37] In March, he said he turned down a move to Barcelona the previous month.[38]
Manchester United (loan)
On 31 January 2020, Ighalo returned to the Premier League, joining Manchester United on loan until the end of the season.[39][40]
International career
On 24 March 2015, after a series of strong performances for Watford, newly appointed Nigeria interim coach Daniel Amokachi selected Ighalo for the first time, and the latter stated, "I feel good because it is my dream to play for my country".[41] He won his first cap two days later, starting in a 0–1 friendly home loss to Uganda.[42]
Ighalo was initially named as one of three overage players in Nigeria's squad for the 2016 Olympic tournament, but he eventually did not make the trip to Brazil.[43] In June 2018, he was named in the 23-man squad for the upcoming edition of the FIFA World Cup in Russia,[44] making his first appearance in the competition by playing 73 minutes in the 0–2 group stage defeat against Croatia;[45] in October, he revealed that his family had received death threats after he failed to score in the tournament.[46]
Ighalo scored seven goals in the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification campaign, the most by any player, to help Nigeria qualify for the finals in Egypt later that year.[47] He was included in Gernot Rohr's squad,[48] taking part in all the matches and finding the net against Burundi in the group phase (1–0),[49] Cameroon in the round of 16 (3–2 win),[50] Algeria in the semi-finals (1–2 loss)[51] and Tunisia in the third-place playoff (1–0);[52] at the end of the competition, he announced his retirement from the international scene.[53]
Personal life
Ighalo is known to be a devout Christian,[1] who also often dedicates part of his wages for Nigerian charitable organisations to help impoverished children, schools and widows below the poverty line
After starting his career at Nigerian clubs Prime and Julius Berger, Ighalo moved to Norwegian side Lyn in 2007. A year later he was signed by Udinese, spending most of his tenure notably loaned out at Granada. In 2014, he signed for EFL Championship side Watford and was integral in the club's promotion to the Premier League in the 2014–15 season.[4] In January 2017, Ighalo joined Chinese Super League club Changchun Yatai for a reported £20 million before moving onto Shanghai Greenland Shenhua. On 31 January 2020, Ighalo returned to the Premier League, joining Manchester United on loan until the end of the 2019-20 season.
Ighalo made his debut for the Nigeria national team in 2015. He represented the nation at the 2018 World Cup and was the highest goalscorer in the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification campaign. He eventually led Nigeria to a third place finish at the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations, where he finished in the competition's Team of the Tournament and was crowned Top Scorer
Club career
Early career
Born in Lagos and raised in Edo,[6] Ighalo played in his country with Prime and Julius Berger, where he was discovered by FIFA agent Marcelo Houseman who recommended him to Atta Aneke, being subsequently taken on trial by Norway's Lyn.
He made his Tippeligaen debut on 16 September 2007 at the age of just 18, scoring in a 2–0 home win against Viking. He scored six goals in 13 matches in his second year to help his team to the seventh position, and subsequently arose interest from other clubs in the country, with Brann reporting Lyn to the Norwegian Football Federation for unfairness in the negotiation process.[7]
Udinese / Granada
On 30 July 2008, Ighalo signed for Udinese in Italy, moving alongside teammate Jo Inge Berget and agreeing to a five-year contract.[8] He appeared rarely in Serie A in his debut season, scoring against Cagliari in a 6–2 home routing –[9] four of his five league appearances came as a late substitute.
Ighalo was loaned to Granada in summer 2009, as part of the partnership agreement between Udinese and the Spaniards.[10][11][12] He scored 17 times in his first year (playoffs included)[13] and five in the second, as both seasons ended in promotion;[14][15] this was interspersed with a brief loan stint back in Italy, with Cesena.[16]
Ighalo continued playing with Granada in the following years, still owned by the Udine side.[17][18] He played his first La Liga match on 27 August 2011, starting and playing the full 90 minutes in a 0–1 home loss to Real Betis.[19]
Watford
Ighalo joined Watford on a season-long loan deal from Udinese, on 29 July 2014.[20] He made his debut for the English club in the first round of the Football League Cup at Stevenage on 12 August,[21] and scored his first goal in the Championship against Brentford on 30 September by tucking the ball home after his initial penalty was saved by David Button, in a 2–1 home win.[22][23]
On 24 October 2014, Watford terminated Ighalo's loan and re-signed him on a permanent deal the same day after Udinese released him from his contract.[24] Exactly three months later, he scored four second-half goals and was voted Man of the match in a 7–2 home routing of Blackpool, who led 0–2 at half time;[25] he took his league tally to 14 on 10 February 2015, after netting a brace to help his team come from behind at Brentford to win it 2–1 – his second came through an injury time header.[26]
Ighalo scored in his Premier League debut on 8 August 2015, replacing José Manuel Jurado 16 minutes from time and putting the visitors ahead 2–1 in an eventual 2–2 draw away against Everton for the season opener.[27] He netted twice in a 2–0 home win over West Ham United on 31 October, reaching seven goals for the season and becoming the highest club scorer in the competition after just 11 matches.[28]
On 20 December 2015, Ighalo scored in a Watford victory for the fourth consecutive time, netting a brace in a 3–0 win over Liverpool.[29] His five-goal haul earned him December's Premier League Player of the Month, while his manager Quique Sánchez Flores won the equivalent award.[30]
Ighalo broke a 599-minute personal scoring drought on 13 March 2016, with a goal in a 2–1 win at holders Arsenal in the quarter-finals of the FA Cup, putting the Hornets into the last four for the first time in nine years.[31] On 12 August he signed a new five-year contract[32] but, the following season, he scored just one league goal and did not find the net in any of his last 15 games.[33]
Changchun Yatai
On 31 January 2017, Ighalo joined Chinese Super League club Changchun Yatai for a reported £20 million.[33] He ranked second in the scoring charts in his second season at 21, but his team suffered relegation.[34][35]
Shanghai Greenland Shenhua
Ighalo transferred to Shanghai Greenland Shenhua on 14 February 2019.[36][37] In March, he said he turned down a move to Barcelona the previous month.[38]
Manchester United (loan)
On 31 January 2020, Ighalo returned to the Premier League, joining Manchester United on loan until the end of the season.[39][40]
International career
On 24 March 2015, after a series of strong performances for Watford, newly appointed Nigeria interim coach Daniel Amokachi selected Ighalo for the first time, and the latter stated, "I feel good because it is my dream to play for my country".[41] He won his first cap two days later, starting in a 0–1 friendly home loss to Uganda.[42]
Ighalo was initially named as one of three overage players in Nigeria's squad for the 2016 Olympic tournament, but he eventually did not make the trip to Brazil.[43] In June 2018, he was named in the 23-man squad for the upcoming edition of the FIFA World Cup in Russia,[44] making his first appearance in the competition by playing 73 minutes in the 0–2 group stage defeat against Croatia;[45] in October, he revealed that his family had received death threats after he failed to score in the tournament.[46]
Ighalo scored seven goals in the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification campaign, the most by any player, to help Nigeria qualify for the finals in Egypt later that year.[47] He was included in Gernot Rohr's squad,[48] taking part in all the matches and finding the net against Burundi in the group phase (1–0),[49] Cameroon in the round of 16 (3–2 win),[50] Algeria in the semi-finals (1–2 loss)[51] and Tunisia in the third-place playoff (1–0);[52] at the end of the competition, he announced his retirement from the international scene.[53]
Personal life
Ighalo is known to be a devout Christian,[1] who also often dedicates part of his wages for Nigerian charitable organisations to help impoverished children, schools and widows below the poverty line
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