From European Gold to Eggs in Africa: The Salary Chasm That the Story of Football Players Like Kennedy Musonda Revealed
In the same world where stars receive millions of euros per month to play football, a Zambian forward walked off the field in 2022 holding five trays of eggs as a prize. This contrast, which seems like a joke, is actually a cruel portrait of the economic inequality between African football and the major European leagues.
And it is precisely this reality check that makes stories like Kennedy Musonda’s go viral – and raises an uncomfortable question: how much is a player’s talent really worth?
The Day a Star Received… Eggs
In November 2022, Kennedy Musonda, a striker for Power Dynamos, experienced one of those perfect afternoons for any player: he scored the winning goal in the classic against Nkana, the famous “Kitwe Derby,” in the Zambian national league.
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He was named man of the match. But instead of lifting a shiny trophy or posing with a giant check, he received five trays of eggs in front of the cameras.
Local reports suggest that the “logic” of the prize was as follows: two trays for the decisive goal and three for the title of best player of the match.
The moment was filmed, went viral on social media, and quickly crossed Zambia’s borders, becoming a topic on humor pages, football profiles, and even international media.
Behind the laughter and curiosity, there is powerful symbolism: while some players live surrounded by luxury in Europe, others, equally dedicated and talented, are rewarded with basic everyday goods – literally food on the table.
This Is Not a Meme: It Is Economic Context
Before thinking it’s just “funny,” it’s worth understanding why such a prize makes sense in the context in which Musonda plays.
- In many African leagues, clubs have limited resources, small sponsorships, and modest ticket and TV revenues.
- Local companies end up offering products as a form of sponsorship: food, beverages, services – everything feasible within the budget and with immediate appeal.
- Football is professional “on paper,” but the structure is often semi-state: poor fields, little infrastructure, low and delayed salaries.
In other words: Musonda’s five trays of eggs are not just an exotic prize. They are a synthesis of an ecosystem that struggles to survive on little while feeding talents to the richest leagues on the planet.
How Much Does a Player Earn in Africa?
When we talk about a “professional player,” many people imagine high salaries in dollars, luxury cars, and mansions. In African football, the reality is very different for most.
- In various leagues on the continent, average monthly salaries in the first division range from 400 to 2,000 dollars, with many competitions below 1,000 dollars.
- In some championships, the annual ceiling for the highest-paid players hovers between 5,000 and 30,000 dollars per year; there are cases, in leagues like Zambia or Nigeria, where the reported maximum is close to 6,000 to 7,000 dollars annually.
- There are still delays: it is not uncommon for players to go months without receiving payments, resort to strikes, or depend on other jobs to supplement their income.
In contrast, there are small islands of exception: continental giants like Al Ahly in Egypt manage to pay some of their top players figures in the range of 1 to 1.5 million dollars annually.
But this is the reality of a few top clubs; for the vast majority of athletes, “professional” resembles a precarious working class much more than an elite star.
And How Much Does a Player Earn in Europe?
Now shift the scene: instead of a modest stadium in Zambia, think of packed arenas in England, Spain, Germany, Italy, or France – the five major European leagues.
- Players in elite European leagues typically earn between 15,000 and over 100,000 euros per month, with some names easily exceeding 150,000 euros monthly.
- In the top divisions of Europe, the average annual remuneration for first division players can easily exceed 1 to 2 million euros, depending on the country and the club.
- At wealthy Premier League clubs, it is not uncommon to find salaries between 150,000 and over 400,000 pounds per week, which means tens of millions of pounds per year for the big stars.
We are talking about players who, in one week, can earn the equivalent of the entire career salary of an athlete playing in a local African league.
The same sport, the same position, the same continent of origin in many cases – but completely distinct economic universes.
Putting Numbers Side by Side
To understand the size of the gap, just compare typical salary ranges:
- “Average” player in various African leagues: something between 500 and 2,000 dollars per month.
- “Common” player (not a star) in big European clubs: something in the range of 60,000 to 200,000 euros per month.
This means that a European can earn 30, 50, or even 100 times more than an African doing exactly the same job.
Even at the top of the African pyramid, when a star from a major club on the continent reaches 1.5 million dollars annually, they still lag far behind the big names in Europe, who can earn between 15 and 30 million euros per year – more than ten times that amount.
Why Does This Huge Difference Exist?
The disparity is not a result of “talent,” but of structure and money circulating in the system.
- TV and Marketing Revenues
Leagues like the Premier League, La Liga, or Bundesliga sell broadcasting rights to the entire world, negotiate with major global brands, and turn clubs into media platforms.
Meanwhile, many African leagues have local TV contracts with little international viewership and reduced capacity to attract major sponsors. - Infrastructure and Fan Experience
Modern stadiums, comfort, technology, official merchandise, and consumption within games increase revenues for European clubs. On the other end, poor fields, limited capacity, and lack of infrastructure hinder attendance, ticket sales, and the league’s image abroad. - Global Branding and Narrative
European clubs are global brands: they sell shirts in Japan, streaming in Brazil, and tours in the United States. Many African clubs, even with significant local tradition, struggle to enter the global market consistently. - Historical Inequality and Dependence on Talent Export
Africa is a vast supplier of players, but the dominant model is to export talent while still young to Europe, where they generate value – both sporting and financial – for foreign clubs. This constant flow reinforces the vicious circle: local leagues lose their best athletes, reduce their competitiveness, and remain small in the international market.
What Musonda’s Story Reveals About the “Value” of a Player
Kennedy Musonda is not “worth less” as an athlete because his prize was a basic product. What the scene with the eggs reveals is that the value of a player in the market is determined by factors far beyond talent on the field: it depends on the league’s ability to generate revenue, the strength of sponsors, global audience, and an economic system that favors some centers and marginalizes others.
While a decisive goal in a Zambian classic yields five trays of eggs and a modest salary, a goal in a televised Champions League match can generate millions in advertising, betting, merchandise sales, and broadcasting rights.
The physical effort is the same. The emotion of the fans is the same. But the “financial weight” of that moment is completely different.
That is why so many young Africans dream not just of “being a player,” but of “reaching Europe”: it is not just about sporting status, but about real social mobility.
A good contract in Europe can change not only the athlete’s life but that of their entire family and often their community.
The next time you see one of those videos circulating, it’s worth going beyond the laughter and asking yourself: how many Kennedy Musondas are out there today, playing under difficult conditions, earning little, but with enough talent to be in any major league in the world?
In the end, the story of “Musonda’s eggs” is an uncomfortable reminder: football is one, but the world in which it takes place is deeply unequal.
And until that changes, we will continue to see gold trophies in some places – and trays of eggs in others.

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