He told The Standard: “It was difficult. Very difficult. I went [to Manchester] on my own and it was my first time moving away from home. I had no one up there, apart from my PlayStation.
“Because Manchester’s smaller, everyone’s aware of everything that’s happening. You have to be mentally strong to avoid the negative stuff it comes with.”
The report adds Wan-Bissaka felt so isolated he would travel back to London after training most afternoons and spend a few hours with friends and family - before returning to Manchester the same night.
He added: “It got tiring! It wasn’t the right idea for me to be doing that. I had to try and settle up there, and I ended up doing that.”