Asamoah Gyan

It was back in 2003, at the beginning of his storied career, when Gyan last played in the domestic top flight, as he made his name with Liberty Professionals.
Since moving on to Udinese, his subsequent feature for the likes of Stade Rennais and Sunderland, was influential as Ghana reached the quarter-finals of the World Cup, and achieved great success in Asian football.
The hitman is one of the biggest African stars to return to the continent. The Black Stars legend completed a shock move to newly branded Legon Cities earlier this season, returning to the Ghana Premier League for the first time in 17 years.
Ahmed Musa

Musa who had been a free agent since parting ways with Saudi Pro League side Al Nassr on October 25, although he had appeared close to signing for Premier League West Bromwich Albion during the January window.
The Super Eagles skipper raised a few eyebrows this week when he opted to return to the NPFL to sign for Kano Pillars, the club where he made his name,
At 28, he has returned to the Sani Abacha Stadium after agreeing a short-term contract with the Nigeria Professional Football League outfit.
Rashidi Yekini

After beginning his career in his homeland with the likes of Shooting Stars and Abiola Babes, he later returned to Nigeria with Julius Berger and Gateway to round off his club career.
One of Africa’s greatest strikers and Nigeria’s top scorer Yekini enjoyed a superb goalscoring record in Portuguese football with Vitoria Setubal during the first half of the 1990s.
He was a member of the Super Eagles’ Golden Generation, winning the Africa Cup of Nations in 1994 before scoring the West Africans’ first ever World Cup goal later that year.
Siphiwe Tshabalala

He’s a legend in South African, having etched an unforgettable memory back in the 2010 World Cup in the hearts of all Bafana Bafana fans when he netted the opening goal of the tournament on homesoil. Tshabalala signed for AmaZulu earlier this season following a recent spell in Turkish football.
In the Premier Soccer League, he’s widely decorated, and marked his 200+ league appearances for Kaizer Chiefs by winning the South African title twice.
Steven Pienaar

Tshabalala is following in the footsteps of his compatriot Pienaar, who returned to the PSL at the latter stage of his career signing for Bidvest Wits having started off with Ajax Cape Town.
Unlike Shabba, Pienaar enjoyed immense success in Europe, winning two Dutch titles with Ajax, representing two of Europe’s biggest sides in Borussia Dortmund and Tottenham Hotspur, and also enjoying a decade-long stint at Everton as they rode high in the Premier League under David Moyes.
Benni McCarthy

Having begun his career with Cape Town-based Seven Stars, McCarthy was recently back in the Mother City, where he held the reins at Cape Town City FC until last year.
One of South Africa’s all-time greats, McCarthy reached the pinnacle of the European game with FC Porto, where he was a European champion in 2004.
He also won silverware in the Netherlands and Spain, and returned to the PSL to clinch silverware again between 2011 and 2013.
Dennis Oliech

One of Kenya’s all-time great players, Oliech is the Harambee Stars’ all-time top scorer, and some may argue the nation has never produced a better striker.
He didn’t quite reach the heights of Victor Wanyama in European competition, but Oliech was considered by Olympique de Marseille, and went on to spend a decade in French football with Nantes, Auxerre and Ajaccio.
Having begun his career with local side Mathare United, he came a full circle last year when, after a period of absence, he returned to action with Gor Mahia.