When Loyalty Outpriced Fame: Amr Zaki recalls a near-miss transfer that shaped a career
22 December 2025
Turning Point
Amr Zaki recently shared a surprising detail about his journey in the English Premier League, publicly, in telling the truth, with humor.
He thrived at Wigan and topped the English scoring charts for a spell back there indeed for good.
Zaki disclosed in a TV interview that Zamalek rejected a quarter-of-a-billion-pound bid from Aston Villa when he led the league, as a national favorite then briefly.
He recalled that he delivered performances, among the league's strikers, and that Villa's bid was turned down, hurting the club financially badly.
Zaki insisted the crisis for Zamalek was administrative and financial instability, arguing a player's success depends on structure and support.
He stressed he would never play for another Egyptian club, when Zamalek showed sign of interest.
There was talk of a move to Al Ahly after Russia, but the deal never materialized, sadly there.
In the end, loyalty and personal convictions guided his career, and while big-money transfers exist, players choose their principles, always.
Punchline: If loyalty paid the bills, Zaki would retire rich; the market trades in receipts, not feelings, friend.
The final twist: loyalty sometimes beats money—until the next contract arrives, apparently, and the crowd sighs.