Moses: Chelsea is a great club, I’d love to play there

Chelsea currently have 33 players loaned out of the club and one of them is Victor Moses who has been out on loan now for 3 successive seasons. Moses has moved across London to West Ham after previously being loaned to Liverpool then Stoke. Despite being away from his parent club for the last few years, Moses is still enjoying his football.

The most important thing for me is playing football. That’s all I want, to play. That is what motivates me. England is a great country, great people as well. I love to be here. I felt at home here straight away. I feel now like I’ve lived here all my life. I owe this country a lot. Everything. I am so happy to be here.

The Nigerian put in some impressive displays during our tour of North America prior to the season and he was arguably our best player. Moses was also unlucky not to get his chance in the starting 11 before he moved to West Ham on loan too, however an injury hampered his chance. Before moving back out on loan the winger signed a new 4 year contract with Chelsea and he’s keen to play for us in the future more often.

Chelsea is a great club, I’d love to play there. But the most important thing is to play, so I go wherever I can play. If you don’t play, your fitness, your concentration levels, they can maybe drop a bit. So I want to play as much as I can. Enjoy it.

Moses is also excited for the season ahead to get more game time and prove his quality. He feels West Ham is a good place to be, a team with high ambitions and quality. Bilic is also a manager he’s keen to work under.

He’s [Bilic] played the game, knows the game. He [Bilic] wants the team to go places and they’ve beaten Arsenal, beaten Liverpool already. There’s plenty of players here who can play good football. And they want to work hard. I wasn’t surprised at all when they won at Arsenal. With the players they’ve got, no. Now with me coming here, adding to the quality of what they’ve already got, we can work for success.

Victor Moses, Source: The Telegraph.

Exit mobile version