Friday, March 29, 2024 | Ramadan 18, 1445 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Bance, Burkina Faso’s globe-trotting goal-getter

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Libreville: With his giant frame and his instantly recognisable hairstyle, it is hard to miss Aristide Bance, the man who fired Burkina Faso into the semifinals of the Africa Cup of Nations.


And yet it has been a case of blink and you might miss him when it comes to his club career, which has seen the 32-year-old turn out for sides in a dozen different countries.


The player who came off the bench in Saturday’s quarterfinal in Libreville against Tunisia and fired his side into a last-four tie against Egypt is a veritable globe-trotter.


In fact even he has lost count of the number of clubs he has played for, but a glance at his CV shows spells in the Ivory Coast, Latvia, Germany, Dubai, Ukraine and Kazakhstan, among others.


“Twelve clubs, something like that. I have travelled a bit. I have a lot of experience,” the man with the blonde mohawk said.


In fact it is more like 20 clubs in 12 different countries for a player who was born in the Ivory Coast and moved to Ouagadougou in 2002, at the height of the Ivorian civil war.


It was, he admitted recently, a move made “to protect our lives”.


After several months spent at local club Santos, Bance took off for Europe, joining Lokeren in Belgium, the first on a whistle-stop footballing tour of the world. “There are some countries where I didn’t have much luck. When I went to Dubai, at the beginning everything went well,” he said.


“After four months I started to have problems with my pay. When a club stops paying you, it’s a way of saying you are no longer in the coach’s plans, so I had real problems there.


“I went to Finland (HJK Helsinki) to play in the Europa League, and in Latvia they were very professional too. I got paid there. I was already used to the cold after a spell in Ukraine,” added Bance, who retains particularly happy memories of his time spent in Germany with Mainz.


His most recent move, from Riga back to Africa with ASEC Abidjan, had a more practical explanation to it.


“In Latvia the season does not start again until March. For me the most important thing was to play.”


He says he masters English enough to get by, wherever he might be, from Samsunspor in Turkey to Irtysh Pavlodar in Kazakhstan. Even if, for all the countries he has played in, he is not a great adventurer.  — AFP


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