The 18-year-old winger arrives from Ghanaian side Adabraka Elders on a deal running until June 2029, according to Fabrizio Romano, and will initially join Sevilla's Juvenil A side in the Division de Honor. He becomes the first Ghanaian player in the club's history.
Abrokwa began his career at Peace Boys before establishing himself at Adabraka Elders, where his performances started to attract attention from European scouts. He was on Huesca's radar during a scouting trip late last year, but it was Sevilla's technical staff who moved decisively, inviting him for a trial in March that proved convincing enough to secure his signature.
All the paperwork on the contract itself has been completed, but Abrokwa's arrival in Andalusia is not yet finalised. He is still waiting on the visa required to travel to Spain, having spent recent weeks working through the necessary administrative processes, meaning the timing of his move to the club's training ground will now depend on how quickly the embassy can process his application.
The signing fits a pattern for Sevilla, who have leaned increasingly on low-cost, high-potential recruitment from emerging markets as the club looks to build value in young players who might develop into first-team contributors or future sales further down the line.
It comes at a time when Sevilla's finances remain tight, with sporting director Jose Ignacio Navarro working to move on fringe players such as Tanguy Nianzou and Joan Jordan in order to ease the wage bill.
Abrokwa is regarded as a direct, pacey wide player with strong close control and an eye for goal, qualities that have made him one of the standout prospects to emerge from Ghana's grassroots system in recent years.
His representatives worked alongside Adabraka Elders and Sevilla's academy staff to finalise both the transfer and his personal terms, in a deal seen in Spain as another example of the club's willingness to look beyond Europe for emerging talent.
