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Ivory Coast teenager Yan Diomande took a whirlwind path from a Florida high school to the World Cup

Sport

Ivory Coast teenager Yan Diomande took a whirlwind path from a Florida high school to the World Cup
Sport

Sport

Ivory Coast teenager Yan Diomande took a whirlwind path from a Florida high school to the World Cup

2026-05-20 00:16 Last Updated At:00:20

Yan Diomande came to America as a 15-year-old soccer prospect not speaking any English, with his family half a world away in Ivory Coast.

Over the course of two years in Florida, he sharpened his skills on the field and grappled with unfamiliar U.S. customs and “unhealthy” food.

Less than two years after leaving the U.S., he's heading back as a star in European soccer and one of the most-hyped young players at the World Cup.

“That was this crazy life,” he told reporters last week, shortly before he was named to the Ivory Coast roster. “Everything went fast.”

While most of the world’s top teenage players were at storied club academies in Europe, Diomande was playing for DME Academy in Daytona Beach and taking local club team AS Frenzi to a national title.

He returns as the German league's rookie of the year after he scored 12 goals and assisted nine more this season for Leipzig.

Diomande arrived in Florida from the Ivory Coast aged just 15, without any family members and speaking only French. He's grateful for what he learned in the U.S., but the memories are bittersweet.

“Really far away from your family, from your friends, and from the people you love, and I didn’t speak English before, so it was really difficult for me, but that was a great experience to be there,” he said.

Diomande took the unusual career path via Florida at a time when he was too young under international soccer rules to sign a pro contract outside of his home country.

He said he struggled with “unhealthy” food, the American preference for basketball over soccer and other culture clashes.

“It was a very different culture, because I’m from Africa. There’s a lot of, kind of, respect, the way you speak to people,” he said, adding the U.S. was “not the same thing.”

Moving to the Spanish league in January 2025 with Leganés — where he made his pro debut against Real Madrid — and then to Germany in July gave Diomande a chance to shine against the world's best opponents.

Those multi-million-dollar transfers will also leave a lasting financial legacy for his family and small-town Florida club Frenzi.

When the Ivory Coast steps out at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia for its World Cup opener against Ecuador on June 14, it'll be a world away from Diomande's previous biggest game on U.S. soil.

Back in August 2023, the winger scored both goals in front of a few dozen spectators in Loudoun, Va., as his Frenzi team beat Sporting Wichita to the title in the United Premier Soccer League, a lower-level U.S. developmental competition.

Darting past two players for the opening goal showed Diomande's speed and skill. Scoring the extra-time winner showed his stamina and ability to find space on the field.

Team owner Wayne Dorman remembers Diomande as a player so committed to his teammates that he ended a trial with a Major League Soccer team early so he could return for the championship game.

“After he scored the winning goal in that final, he cried,” Dorman told The Associated Press. “He bent on his knees and he cried in tears. He was so happy with joy. It brought him to another level. He was MVP of the tournament and it was ‘sky’s the limit.'"

Dorman remembers a player who “mesmerized” coaches with his skill at his first tryout, shrugged off rough tackles as word spread and opponents targeted him, and showed the kind of ambition and leadership that, Dorman thinks, would make him fit to be Ivory Coast's president one day.

He was also a kid who put on French-language music in Dorman's car on rides to practice and listened to the Jamaica-born Dorman's reggae in return.

However hard he personally found his time in the U.S., Diomande believes it was worth it.

“For me it was more easy to stay in USA because it’s really difficult in Africa,” he said.

Now, his rapid rise in world soccer means he can change his family's lives too.

“I know you cannot buy happiness with money but this is one part of happiness as well,” he added. “I’ve got money from Leipzig a lot to help my family, to bring my family here, take care of them.”

More could be coming. Diomande has been linked with transfers to some of Europe's biggest teams and admits it gives him extra motivation to show his best game.

Dorman said Frenzi's in line for a small slice of transfer fees as part of FIFA's programs to help teams who develop players in their youth. That would allow Frenzi to set up younger kids' teams and mean “we can sustain as a club for quite a few years,” Dorman said.

Diomande has suggested Chelsea or Real Madrid as future destinations in his career, but first comes the World Cup.

AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/fifa-world-cup

FILE - Leipzig's Yan Diomande, centre, and Bayern's Leon Goretzka challenge for the ball during the Bundesliga soccer match between RB Leipzig and FC Bayern Munich in Leipzig, Germany, on Jan. 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader, File)

FILE - Leipzig's Yan Diomande, centre, and Bayern's Leon Goretzka challenge for the ball during the Bundesliga soccer match between RB Leipzig and FC Bayern Munich in Leipzig, Germany, on Jan. 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader, File)

FILE - Ivory Coast's Yan Diomande, left, and Burkina Faso's Issa Kabore challenge during the Africa Cup of Nations best of 16 soccer match between Ivory Coast and Burkina Faso in Marrakech, Morocco, on Jan. 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe, File)

FILE - Ivory Coast's Yan Diomande, left, and Burkina Faso's Issa Kabore challenge during the Africa Cup of Nations best of 16 soccer match between Ivory Coast and Burkina Faso in Marrakech, Morocco, on Jan. 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe, File)

PRISTINA, Kosovo (AP) — Voters in Kosovo headed to the polls Sunday for an early parliamentary election, the third in 18 months, in an attempt to unlock a political impasse in the small Balkan nation that is striving to join the European Union and NATO.

Sunday's ballot was scheduled after the main political parties failed to agree by a March deadline on who should replace former President Vjosa Osmani. The first inconclusive election in February 2025 left the country without a functioning government for much of last year, forcing a second election in December.

The prolonged crisis has negatively affected Kosovo’s economy, already hit hard by the global energy crisis and rising fuel prices. One of the youngest and poorest countries in Europe declared independence from Serbia in 2008 after a 1998-99 war that ended in a NATO bombing that forced Serbia to withdraw.

Prime Minister Albin Kurti’s center-left Vetevendosje party has held a clear parliamentary majority since the early election in December. But Kosovo’s president is elected by at least 80 lawmakers in the 120-member assembly, requiring a broader political consensus.

Kurti is being challenged by the two main opposition parties, the Democratic Party of Kosovo and the Democratic League of Kosovo, which have accused him of seeking to impose full control over all political institutions in the country.

“Today is a sunny Sunday, a very important day for democracy in Kosovo," Kurti said upon voting. “I hope the people of Kosovo once again will show their maturity as always, with a very high turnout.”

Former president Osmani is running on the opposition LDK list in the election, having turned against Kurti after he refused to back her for a second term. Osmani on Sunday expressed “great optimism” that the election will "take us out of the repeated crisis that has damaged our country, both domestically and beyond our borders.”

While the key players blamed each other for the crisis, their inability to reach a compromise has fueled disappointment among Kosovo’s around 2 million voters, who want the government to focus on the economy and living standards instead.

Analysts still don't expect major changes in the election outcome compared to the previous vote in December.

Arton Smajli, 42, a resident of the capital, Pristina, is hoping for a “positive change.” He said that “we are tired, but the will for change is greater than that.”

Sejdi Shala, 73, is also optimistic the election will bring "stability of the institutions and the society.”

The institutional vacuum, without a stable government, has delayed access to the EU and other international funds available to the country. European Council President Antonio Costa, during a visit last week, urged Kosovo to end the political stalemate and unite over the goal of EU integration.

Kosovo has been recognized by the United States and most EU countries, but not by Serbia and its allies, Russia and China. Pristina and Belgrade have been told they must mend relations to move forward with their EU membership bids.

People wait at a bus station displaying election posters in capital Pristina, Kosovo, Friday, June 5, 2026, ahead of snap parliamentary elections on June 7. (AP Photo/Visar Kryeziu)

People wait at a bus station displaying election posters in capital Pristina, Kosovo, Friday, June 5, 2026, ahead of snap parliamentary elections on June 7. (AP Photo/Visar Kryeziu)

Vjosa Osmani, Kosovo former president, waves to supporter at the closing political rally of the Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK), in capital Pristina on Friday, June 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Visar Kryeziu)

Vjosa Osmani, Kosovo former president, waves to supporter at the closing political rally of the Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK), in capital Pristina on Friday, June 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Visar Kryeziu)

People pass by a giant election poster of acting prime minister Albin Kurti, in capital Pristina, Kosovo, Friday, June 5, 2026, ahead of snap parliamentary elections on June 7. (AP Photo/Visar Kryeziu)

People pass by a giant election poster of acting prime minister Albin Kurti, in capital Pristina, Kosovo, Friday, June 5, 2026, ahead of snap parliamentary elections on June 7. (AP Photo/Visar Kryeziu)

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