Yan Diomande’s career has accelerated at uncommon speed — from the obscurity of a small U.S. sports academy known for shaping basketball players to an undecorated Spanish club and then to the bright lights of the Bundesliga, where the swift Ivorian winger has grown into one of soccer’s hottest transfer targets.
The evolution transpired over the course of about a year — the blink of an eye in an athlete’s maturation.
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So it’s richly poetic that Diomande’s formal development began not in the steady pace of a major European youth system but down the road from a place where things happen fast: Daytona International Speedway.
Through an agency that places African prospects in academies, Diomande left his home in Ivory Coast at age 15 and enrolled at DME Academy, located in the seaside Florida city best known for staging the Daytona 500.
Only the commercial airport separates the 250-student school and 150,000-capacity racetrack.
“It would probably take only three kicks of the ball to hit the track,” academy chief executive Seth Brown joked.
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Only recently did the school invest in soccer — and its prized pupil was Diomande, who this spring, at age 19, is nearing the end of his phenomenal debut season with German club RB Leipzig.
In all likelihood, he will return stateside next month as a member of Ivory Coast’s World Cup squad. He debuted with the Elephants last year and has scored three goals in nine appearances, including one goal at the Africa Cup of Nations in January.
In its fourth World Cup, Ivory Coast is grouped with Germany, Ecuador and Curaçao.
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“I didn’t imagine to do everything so quickly like this, but of course, I have the ambition and I have a vision,” he said in a video call with reporters Wednesday. “I want to become one of the best players in Africa and in Europe.”
Yan Diomande’s path to the World Cup took him from a little-known academy in Florida to the bright lights of RB Leipzig in barely a year
(NurPhoto via Getty Images)
He is certainly on the fast track. With the Bundesliga season closing this weekend, Diomande is second on the team in goals (12) and tied for second in assists (seven).
From an analytics standpoint, he has been the second-best player on RB Leipzig, whose third-place finish has earned a Champions League berth next season. Diomande leads the Bundesliga — and is second behind Barcelona superstar Lamine Yamal in top European leagues — in successful dribbles, or beating an opponent while retaining possession.
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Primarily a right wing, Diomande has been clocked as one of the fastest players in Europe’s top leagues, reaching a speed of 22.6 mph.
Ball skills and finishing power complement his athletic ability. He recorded a hat trick against Eintracht Frankfurt in December, and in the second meeting between the sides last month, scored a sensational goal.
The sequence began on the right, and after dodging two defenders, he cut across the top of the penalty area, entered the box and juked inside before sending a low shot into the far corner.
Although Diomande’s contract with RB Leipzig runs through the 2029-2030 season, big European clubs are beginning to circle. Given his age and performance this season, such a purchase would require a transfer fee in the many tens of millions.
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Leipzig had acquired him last summer from Spanish club Leganés by agreeing to pay a $23 million release clause.
“Imagine you say you have to go to Chelsea or you go to Real Madrid to do this job,” Diomande said. “You are happy and motivated to do more. I don’t think about this kind of thing because I’m trying to be focused on the pitch and because my job is playing football.”
Diomande grew up in the Ivorian capital of Abidjan with his mother and sister. He played for local clubs before going to Florida.
Todd Eason, DME Academy’s former director of soccer, said an African contact with a “foundation for helping elite footballers come over to the States and get exposure” recommended Diomande.
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“It’s kind of like an agency but they know the process of getting them to learn the language and getting some education,” Eason told Yahoo Sports. “It’s also a method of trying to kind of hide them from all the other agents that are out there. It’s like, ‘I’ll send them to America. No one will find out.’”
Diomande said he “didn’t decide to go [to DME Academy]. … I didn’t have the age to make a good decision.”
Rather, “someone was making a decision for me,” he said. “They told me to go there, and I think it was one of the best experiences for me, because I was so young, living alone, really far away from your family, from your friends. I didn’t speak English before, so it was really difficult for me, but that was a great experience.”
Diomande bonded with other athletes from French-speaking African countries, such as Senegal and DR Congo. Beyond soccer, he was growing as a person.
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“He was a special player from the beginning,” Brown said. “I think the thing that allowed him at DME to continue in his growth … was a support system of other young people going through a similar [situation]. He immediately had a connection to others around him.”
One of his closest friends was Chris Kitenge, a Congolese basketball player who will play in NCAA Division I next winter.
“We’d watch Real Madrid and watch Barcelona, and I’d say, ‘Dio, just do your thing. You’re going to get there one day,’” Kitenge said.
Before Diomande arrived in Florida, Eason had seen video of him playing for Ivory Coast at the Under-17 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers.
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“So I kind of knew what I was getting,” said Eason, now general manager of Miami FC, a second-division pro club. “But there’s an acclimation period, and it takes a lot of African players usually six months to get used to the culture and to be able to perform. Dio was a little different. He didn’t take long to adjust.”
His skill set was so high, “regular league games weren’t going to challenge us,” Eason said. “So I was trying to find some exhibition games of a higher level so we could actually see what Diomande was all about.”
DME Academy began playing Major League Soccer developmental teams, but even those games were not testing Diomande, Eason said.
In the summer of 2023, Diomande starred for Central Florida’s AS Frenzi, which competes in the semipro United Premier Soccer League on American soccer’s fourth tier. At 16 and competing against adults, Diomande led the league in goals and scored twice in the championship victory.
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Beyond physical traits, “He’s probably the most intelligent player I’ve ever worked with,” Eason said. “He is looking at things that will help him, that will service his abilities. He’s very in-tuned with everything the game offers.”
MLS began taking interest in early 2023. In Orlando for preseason, the Colorado Rapids invited him to workouts. They offered him a contract but nothing came of it, Eason said.
Diomande worked out with multiple other MLS sides but his sights were on Europe. “I didn’t want to start my career” in the U.S., he said.
“I didn’t want to stay there for long because we have a different culture,” he said. “That’s why I didn’t like to be there. I was speaking to my family [and saying] I want to come back because I didn’t like the country because it’s for basketball. They don’t really love football like in Europe. I did my best to come to Europe, and everything is going well today. I’m happy.”
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Diomande wasn’t a fan of American cuisine either, saying, “They don’t eat healthy there. It’s not good for us, because you need to take care of your body as well. You need to look after what you eat.”
He subsequently trained with Chelsea, Crystal Palace, Rangers and Bournemouth before moving to Olympiacos in Greece.
In late 2024, he signed with Leganés. His first-team debut, at age 18, came in March 2025 as a sub against Real Madrid. Diomande’s first start was two weeks later against Barcelona, with Diomande on the left flank facing Yamal, Barca’s right wing.
Five months later, Diomande’s first Bundesliga start came against another global titan, Bayern Munich.
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Playing in one of the world’s best leagues, Diomande says he must pour everything into his career.
“In Germany, there is no life. The life here is only work,” he said. “I learn a lot from the discipline.”
His quick adaptation — and ascent — has grabbed the attention of prominent European clubs and old American friends alike.
“Seeing him play against Real Madrid, it was like, ‘Man, he’s grown up,’” Eason said. “He’s playing with some of his idols now and exchanging jerseys with [Kylian] Mbappé. I’m like, ‘This is kind of weird.’ But it’s also like, one day they’re going to be wanting his jersey because he’s of that level.”
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Assuming he makes the World Cup squad, Diomande will return stateside next month.
“It’s going to be good to be back in the USA, because I have friends there,” he said. “I’m really excited to be back there and play in the World Cup. I’m waiting for that.”
Even if he doesn’t have time to visit the small academy in Daytona where he started his engines.
