Connect with us

Sports

Tribute: Keshi More Popular In Death

Published

on

Stephen “Bobby Moore”
Keshi, was my childhood play mate, my youthful and faithful companion; he was a brother, a teammate and my captain.
We ate from the same plate at each other’s houses. We were friends since our pre-teen age, and followed the same football career path.
He was personable, shy, humorous, charismatic, and disciplined as an individual and as a captain. He was not a womanizer; he never skipped camp to go partying, in fact, he detested that wholeheartedly. Hence, he led by example.
During his speech at a Greater Tomorrow event, in 2014, where we presented computers, laptops, a generator, ceiling fans and a printer to Saint Paul’s Primary School, Apapa Road, Ebute-Metta, Mainland, Lagos, he said,  ”Lucky, ‘Johnny Rep’ Okoku, is not my friend, he is my brother….” Lucky was my birth name while Paul was my baptism name.
Anyway, it speaks directly to his character of unbiased and unassuming leadership and his father-benevolent approach and direct action to humanity where he co-donated (with me and Godwin Odiye), computers, laptops, printer, generator, etc. to St. Paul’s primary school.
He was a marvelous guy and a gentleman, but widely misunderstood by so many. He made time for the Abuja’s orphans and less privileged children and took pictures with them during the launch of Greater Tomorrow Children’s Foundation.
He graced Greater Tomorrow Children’s Foundation to celebrate Children’s Day and World’s Hunger Day as his own way of giving back to the community. He received the highest Mainland humanitarian award for his giving back to the society that supported him.  That was Stephen, an ambassador for goodwill.
He was a true Christian; he epitomized what it meant to be a devoted and loyal Catholic growing up with him during our pre-teen age and until his death, he remained a true and believer in the doctrine and teachings of Catholic principles.
We attended St. Paul’s Catholic Church, at Denton / Oyingbo, together. We particularly preferred the 6am mass because it gave us enough time to get back home and rush to Morocco for Seven Planners Youth club’s tournaments.
It was during this youth club participation that the founder of the club, Mr. Gomez, nicknamed us after the 1970s World Cup stars. Stephen was named after the England captain, Bobby Moore, while I was named after the Dutch great, Johnny Rep (not republic), Simeon Alada was “John Billy Bremna” Scottish great, Patrick Macauley was “Piedro Anastasia,” Italian great, Emmanuel Akpan, was Fabio Capello, Italian great, etc. Stephen and I thought that Raymond King, our goalkeeper at Seven Planners then and at St. Finbarr’s College, was given to him by Mr. Gomez.
We also played together for Greater Tomorrow under the Nigeria Football Association (NFA), as the curtain raisers to entertain the crowd before big named clubs and national teams played. We were sponsored by the NFA to attend the coaching clinic organised by Pele himself at the Liberty stadium. This was in 1976, when we, as a team, traveled from Lagos to Ibadan to meet with Pele of Brazil. He captained the team then as well.
We also served as ball boys with Henry Nwosu. Stephen was my captain at St. Finbarr’s College, Akoka, Lagos, where we stayed at the boys’ quarters in the school’s compound for two years consecutively, courtesy of the principal, Mr. Kpotie.
He took his education seriously then as he did at the primary school level. He would abandon vital games during soccer season for his classes. He was also my captain in the 1980s when we played for the then Green Eagles team B as the feeder to Green Eagles’ team A.
It was from the team B that he got a call in to the Green Eagles team A. He came in as a substitute during the 1982 World Cup qualifiers against Algeria, at the National Stadium in Lagos.
Since that very moment in time, and in his accomplished life, he went on to play and captained Nigeria for the next fourteen years. I can remember very clearly his excitement and thanksgiving to God when he was named the new Super Eagles coach in November of 2011.
I called to congratulate him when he was in Nigeria, and we were on the phone for over two hours. Sadly, that excitement later turned sour which brought him stress, sadness, despair, depression, distress to his personal and professional life and it proved deadly in the end. He expected to have been treated with reverence which every human being deserves.
“How come the things that make us happy make us so sad”? Frankie Beverly asked.
He was my teammate and captain during the 1984 African Cup of Nations, when we won the silver medal. The youth teams he and I played for together in addition to the aforementioned: Olaleye boys club, Iponri, Seven planners, Morocco, Seven Pillars, Mushin Olosha, Seven Scorpions,Masha, YSFON, etc. These teams kept us busy and off the streets.
He cared and helped the underserved children with their social, academic and physical development of which many were unnoticed because he didn’t want any credit for them. He was committed to humanity, to the less privileged children to be specific.
He supported, embraced and welcomed my initiative to bring to the forefront, the neglect and forgotten students of the primary schools, and their decapitating buildings with no technology or library to advance and enhance their education. That was why he suggested increasing the number of the computers that we donated to St. Paul’s.
As a result, Mainland local government  has converted and made the computer laboratory at St. Paul’s primary school accessible to all the entire students of the City of Mainland because until we donated the computers, they only had one computer laboratory in Sabo, where the students have to risk their lives two, three times a week, in public transportation to Sabo in the name of technology.
He valued education as evidently here, when he asked for the support of his world renowned star players in Joseph Yobo, Mikel Obi and Vincent Enyeama, to hold the Greater Tomorrow Children’s Foundation’s banner and take pictures with it to promote and support his dedication to his cause.
They obliged without any questions. Stephen was a virtuoso and an iconic personality, a great father, a loving and faithful husband to Kate, a devoted and loyal friend, a role model to his children, colleagues, friends and admirers alike, a father figure to many as well.
He was a God-fearing man, honest and humble. BUT AGAIN, WIDELY MISUNDERSTOOD BY MANY who never even got closed to him but was unfairly judged from a distance.
I can say all of these attributes and qualities that he possessed because I witnessed them growing up with him as pre-teens, through his adolescent living to his adulthood. These are facts.
Stephen ‘Bobby Moore’s’ humble beginning, he did lots of domestic chores for his parents, and as a child, he helped his mom to sell yam to put food on the table, other times, as a student at Premier College, before going to school in the afternoon, he would carry yam on his head, in the morning, trek miles through the railway line to Oke Ira, from Ojo Niyun street, Ebute-Metta, to deliver to his late mom at the Tejuosho market and then rushed home to get ready for school. This, he did, even when he was in primary school.
I was doing the same thing for my late mom, in my case, it was bread. There’s so much to talk about his humble beginnings that only a book with thousands of pages will suffice.
Stephen’s sense of humour and he had more of this. In 1979, during the St. Finbarr’s College’s senior lit, DJs Skelly Moore and Stevo Ree were blasting “Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough,” a track from Michael Jackson’s “Off The Wall” album. ‘Bobby Moore’ got up like every other male student in the hall to ask the girls for a dance. Unfortunately, every girl he asked to dance with refused him and so he carried a bench, took to the dance floor and started dancing with the bench. Yep, he did and we had a good laugh afterwards in our way home. That was Stephen. Betcha!
I am happy and pleased to see the public outpouring of condolences. It is a befitting and welcoming development, the one that sends a shock wave through my spine. He would have appreciated it even more in living, appropriately.
He seemed though that he was more popular in death than when he was living. Stephen’s happiest moments when he took charge of the Super Eagles was when he was with his childhood friends he trusted.
He executed his national coaching tasks, assignments and responsibilities flawlessly and professionally, with the utmost financial sacrifice that brought the nation a flood of relief when his team won the 2013 AFCON tournament after 19 years. He was our nation’s pride, the face of Nigerian football.
Just as he was about to get an opportunity for a chance to start all over he was called upon by the most high, Almighty God.
On Friday, June 10, 2016, I had driven out of my house basement garage, not realising how closed my vehicle was to the building. I was still absent minded, in a daze from Stephen’s demise, with heavy eyes from lack of sleep, thinking about him, I dented my vehicle, and left a stretch of huge and noticeable scratches. This vehicle has lost its value and will never be the same. I told Keshi. I will not fix the damage but instead, it will serve as a reminder of you.
Thank you for your friendship, your companion, your sacrifices and dedication to less privileged children, for humanity and Greater Tomorrow Children’s Foundation.
Say me well to Kate.
Rest well, sun re o, my bosom friend.
Paul Okoku is  former Nigeria international and Keshi’s associate.

 

Paul Okoku

Continue Reading

Sports

I Joined Saudi League To Win Titles – Senegal Keeper

Published

on

Senegal goalkeeper Edouard Mendy has said that criticism that he and other players chased money by moving to Saudi Arabia is wide of the mark.
The 33-year-old left Chelsea for Al-Ahli in a £16m ($21.4m) deal in 2023, and in May the Africa Cup of Nations winner helped his Saudi club win the Asian Champions League, making him one of the few players to win both that competition and its European equivalent.
But, like many others, Mendy has been criticised for playing for money rather than prestige in the lucrative Saudi Pro League.
When asked about such criticism, Mendy told a Tidesports source, “Al-Ahli’s project came along and they made me feel I had a big role to play.
“Two years later, we won the Champions League for the first time in the club’s history. So yes, that validates my choice. And I hope the coming years will validate it even more.”
He added: “Some people will quickly jump to conclusions and say the only reason is money. From the start, I always said that when I left Chelsea, I knew I was joining another team where I could win everything , which was no longer the case at Chelsea.”
The Blues have since won the Conference League, Europe’s third-tier club competition, under the ownership of Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital.
But it comes after the regime’s trophyless first two years, a period which has frustrated some supporters after the success enjoyed under Roman Abramovich’s stewardship in the previous 19 years.
Mendy has also been celebrating what he describes as a historical win with Senegal against England at Nottingham Forest’s City Ground, but days earlier he had been in Dakar delivering a different kind of win.
He is the sponsor of Yakaar, a school in Keur Massar, which seeks to improve funding and access to digital learning tools for local children from underprivileged backgrounds.
Famously, as Mendy grew up in France, he was unemployed, aged 22, while struggling to find a club, with members of his family still living on the outskirts of Dakar.
That is why Yakaar, a word meaning “hope”, was chosen, a word Mendy has carried with him in his career.
“Hope is what kept me going. When I was without a club, it was the hope of getting that first professional contract.
“Then the hope of playing for the national team. The hope of making my family proud by doing the job I had always dreamed of.
“Indeed, hope is the best word to describe my career.”
Mendy was also asked whether the responsibility of being an African goalkeeper had weighed heavily on him.
“Of course. When I was in England, there weren’t many African goalkeepers in top clubs,” he admitted.
“Whether nationally or internationally, I had that responsibility. It’s the same for other African goalkeepers like Andre Onana [Manchester United] or Yassine Bounou (Al-Hilal).”

Continue Reading

Sports

Spanish Football Fires Entire Refereeing Committee

Published

on

The entire refereeing committee has been fired by the Spanish Football Federation (RFEF), with structural reforms soon set to follow.
According to sources, the Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) has dismissed the entire refereeing committee in response to mounting pressure from clubs demanding structural reform. A major shake-up aimed at modernising Spanish refereeing from top to bottom has now been set in motion.
Head of the Technical Committee of Referees (CTA), Luis Medina Cantalejo and Head of VAR, Carlos Clos Gomez, have been removed from their positions. They are joined by several senior officials, including Antonio Rubinos Perez and three vice presidents, who are also stepping down. A new leadership model will be introduced, led by a CEO and a sporting director, aiming to overhaul how refereeing is managed covering assessments, promotions, and daily operations. While the leadership changes are sweeping, the current pool of referees in La Liga and the second tier will remain, ensuring continuity on the field during the transition.

Continue Reading

Sports

Ronaldo Renews Stay With Saudi Pro League

Published

on

Cristiano Ronaldo has signed a new two-year contract with Al-Nassr that means he will stay with the Saudi Pro League club until beyond his 42nd birthday.
The Portugal captain, 40, joined the Riyadh-based team in December 2022 after leaving Manchester United in acrimonious circumstances, having criticised the club and said he had no respect for manager Erik ten Hag.
Ronaldo’s Al-Nassr deal had been due to expire at the end of June and there was speculation he could leave, but that has now been quashed.
In a post on X, Ronaldo wrote: “A new chapter begins. Same passion, same dream. Let’s make history together.”
Although Al-Nassr have not added to their nine domestic titles during Ronaldo’s time at the club, they have benefited from a flood of goals from the five-time Ballon d’Or winner.
Ronaldo scored 35 times in 41 matches across all competitions last term and was the league’s top scorer for a second consecutive season.
He has managed 99 goals in appearances overall for Al-Nassr and is well on his way to reaching 1,000 senior goals in his career, with a current tally of 938 for club and country.
Having helped Portugal win the Uefa Nations League a little over two weeks ago, the former Manchester United, Real Madrid, Sporting and Juventus forward will almost certainly now be targeting a sixth World Cup appearance next summer.
Only a month ago, Ronaldo posted on social media to say “the chapter is over”.
That came after the Saudi Pro League wrapped up with Al-Nassr finishing third and trophyless once again.
The comment fuelled rumours that Ronaldo was ready to leave the league where he reportedly became the best-paid player in football history with an annual salary of £177m when he joined.
Fifa president Gianni Infantino raised the prospect of Ronaldo joining a team involved in the Club World Cup after Al-Nassr failed to qualify for the extended tournament which is being held in the United States.
Ronaldo said he had received offers from participating teams but had turned them down.
The decision to stay until at least 2027, which is certain to be highly lucrative, appears to rule out any future prospect of Ronaldo returning to play at the highest level in Europe.

Continue Reading

Trending