To Victor Moses, the images have a dream-like 
quality. The Nigeria winger had prayed since the beginning of July for 
the completion of his transfer from Wigan Athletic to Chelsea and there 
had come a point when he feared that it would not happen.
But, in a whirlwind week at the end of August he 
signed for £9m, was introduced to the Stamford Bridge crowd before the 
Newcastle United game, felt his eyes widen and his stomach flip during 
his first training session and then, the finale, watched the European 
Super Cup against Atlético Madrid as an unused substitute.
Moses speaks in shy, hushed tones but they do not 
disguise the awe and excitement that he feels. His arrival at Chelsea 
marks a significant staging post in his quest to reach the game’s 
summit, even if it pales in comparison to his broader journey from the 
depths of personal tragedy. His parents were murdered in Nigeria and 
Moses fled to England as an 11-year-old asylum seeker. He feels that 
they look down on him with pride.
Moses’s focus is on the future and the opportunities 
that he intends to grasp. He hopes to make his debut at some stage of 
the grudge fixture at Queens Park Rangers on Saturday, although to give 
it such billing feels crass in the light of what he has lived through.
The 21-year-old bristles with quiet determination. He
 was Chelsea’s final attack-minded signing of the summer, following Eden
 Hazard, Marko Marin and Oscar, who joined at a total cost of £60m, and 
with Juan Mata and Ramires also vying for prominence in Roberto Di 
Matteo’s line of three behind the main striker, the competition for 
places is ferocious.
“I don’t really know if it was Di Matteo or if it was
 the chairman or whoever but I knew that Chelsea were interested in me 
and that was it, really,” Moses says. “For a club to come and get you, 
they are going to use you at some stage. I know that there are a lot of 
players at Chelsea but if I do get my chance, I just have to grab it.”
Moses already has Chelsea stories to tell. He smiles 
when he recalls standing on a chair in Monaco, in the build-up to the 
Super Cup final, and being ordered to sing and dance for the amusement 
of his teammates. The initiation routine for new recruits has become a 
feature at many clubs. “I was nervous,” Moses says. “I thought: ‘What am
 I going to sing?’ because when I stood there, I literally didn’t know 
what to sing.”
For the record and the grime fans out there, Moses 
“kind of sang a Skepta song”. “It’s a little bit embarrassing,” he says,
 “… everyone watching me, thinking: ‘What is he singing?’ But it was all
 right.”
Moses has needed more than the occasional superlative
 of late. “The first training session was unbelievable … seeing JT, 
Ashley Cole, Torres and people like that, it was incredible, kind of 
crazy,” he says. “And the Super Cup, when I was watching it, I was 
thinking to myself: ‘I can’t actually believe that I’m here.’ I didn’t 
get on but I still got a [runners-up] medal.”
Moses’s appetite for precious metal, though, has been
 fired by a different encounter. “I saw the Champions League trophy the 
other day, it was at the training ground,” he says. “Everyone was having
 their picture taken with it but not me. It was the players that played 
in the Champions League. I just walked away, although I did touch it. I 
thought to myself: ‘Hopefully, we will win it again this year.’”
Moses’s single-mindedness and strength of character 
is evident and it is easy to connect it with the manner in which he has 
coped with his childhood trauma. His father, Austin, was a Christian 
pastor in Kaduna, and his mother, Josephine, helped with his work.
Violence, though, was depressingly familiar between 
the Muslim majority and the Christian minority and when riots erupted in
 2002, Moses’s parents, who were obvious but unflinching targets, were 
attacked in their home and killed. Moses was given the news as he played
 football in the street. He became a target, too, and, after being 
hidden by friends for a week, he was sent to England, where he was 
placed with foster parents in south London. Upon his arrival in the 
country, he knew nobody.
“It has been a long journey from Nigeria and I just 
want to keep strong and work hard for myself, whether it’s football or 
not football,” Moses says. “I have to thank God for being where I am, 
it’s like a dream come true and, if I keep working hard, who knows, I’ll
 probably end up in Barcelona one day,” he says.
He made his Palace debut at 16 and was called up by 
England at every youth level. He won the Golden Boot at the European 
Under-17 Championship in 2007, in which England lost to Spain in the 
final, but his momentum was checked at Under-21 level. Stuart Pearce 
fielded him only once, against Uzbekistan in 2010, and the manager 
substituted him at half-time. Moses was not called up for the next game.
 “I played for England Under-16s, 17s, 18s, 19s, 20s and then 21s … then
 … I just decided to make the decision to play for Nigeria,” he says.
•Culled from guardian.co.uk
 
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