Ighalo had starred for Watford in the Championship, scoring the goals that got the Hornets promoted in 2015, when he was offered the chance to play in the Chinese Super League

 

Former Manchester United striker Odion Igahlo has revealed that he rejected an offer to play in China for £300,000 per week ahead of his first stint in the Premier League.

📸 Odion Ighalo turned down the chance to move to China ahead of his first season in the Premier League

 

At the time, Ighalo was playing for Watford, scoring 20 goals as they won promotion to the top-flight under Slavisa Jokanovic.

 

But before the Hornets had even played a game following their eight-year stay in the Championship, a team from the Chinese Super League swooped in to attempt to buy him.

 

With the Chinese government at that time heavily pushing clubs to splash out on huge fees, Ighalo was offered a staggering wage to move east.

 

And Ighalo has now revealed the lengths to which the unnamed club went, including a transfer fee Watford owner Gino Pozzo immediately accepted.

 

“We just get promotion to the Premier League. Back in Lagos, my dream was to play in the Premier League,” he told the King Ekong podcast.

 

“So we just gained promotion, I scored 20 goals in the Championship to gain promotion to the Premier League.

 

“An offer came from China, a big offer even for the club. Gino already accepted the offer from China. You know Gino is a businessman but he already accepted the offer from China.

📸 Ighalo was starring for Watford at the time, firing them to promotion from the Championship(Image: GETTY)

“They were calling me. I have to accept this, very big money from this. First of all it was like £300,000 a week.”

 

Despite that huge wage, Ighalo decided to reject the move to China, though the interested club made one final offer to the striker.

 

“I said: ‘I don’t want to go to China, my dream is to play in the Premier League’. And I won’t sell that dream for nothing,” he said.

 

“He said: ‘Is the money the problem?’. I said no and he said ‘Ok we’re going £500,000 to the sign-on fee.

 

“I said it’s not the money, give me time, let me think and pray about it. I was lucky I turned that down, then I played in the Premier League, I scored 16 goals.”

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By AIFS