Tag: Ezekiel Odera

  • Recalling Kasarani doomsday amidst promotion joy

    Recalling Kasarani doomsday amidst promotion joy

    30th October 2016 – exactly four years back – was certainly a black Sunday, for it was the day Nairobi City Stars received a 3-1 hiding from Kakamega Homeboyz at Kasarani to be relegated from the Kenyan Premier League after 12 straight seasons.

    City Stars conceded two goals in the opening half through David Okoth and Hedmond Mauda before Ali Bai sealed the win in the 52nd minute. Gambian Pa Jassey Mulie’s long range cracker with nine minutes left was City Stars desolate consolation as the team suffered its 16th loss of the season.

    And the headlines read; “City Stars relegated . . . ”

    One starting line popped in a local daily; “Finally Nairobi City Stars have been put out of their misery,”

    In the lead-up to the fall into the second tier trap door, City Stars had flirted with the chop for close to five straight seasons. But it was all over in 2016 as the football gods were no longer generous with survival favors. It was time to pack and drop down.

    In the 2010 season, the team beat Sofapaka 2-0 at City Stadium in a round 27 game to preserve their place in the Premier with three games to spare.

    In the 2011 season, City Stars hit Karuturi 4-2 at Hope Centre on final day to stay afloat. Francis Thairu’s hat trick in that game could have counted for nothing had Chemelil not held Bandari to a barren draw. It meant the coastal side went down by virtue of that draw as City Stars survived.

    In the 2012 season, City Stars hang on to their status after squeezing a barren draw out of Posta Rangers at the City Stadium during the penultimate round of matches.

    The script on the final day of the 2013 season was a replica of 2011. The team needed a win away to Chemelil Sugar but went down 1-0 only to be spared the relegation red zone after Homeboyz lost 2-1 to AFC Leopards at Bukhungu.

    While it was a lucky escape in 2013, the team eventually went down at the end of the 2014 season after being held to a barren draw by Mathare United at Hope Centre.

    However, wrangling between the league managers KPL and the overseers of the game in the country FKF meant no promoted teams were fronted to take up the place of relegated teams.

    And with that City Stars was reinstated for the 2015 season where they continued with their survival script. Ebrima Sanneh’s goal against Sony Sugar – that forced a 1-1 draw – on the final day ensured another season in the top flight.

    But the nine lives fizzled out at the end of 2016 when the team was escorted out by Homeboyz at Kasarani in the third last game of the season.

    In the squad that lined up on the fateful day at Kasarani was a quintet that are still part of the team four years on.

    John Amboko, the current assistant coach, was the skipper. He partnered Arthur Museve in the heart of defense. Museve is now trainer at the club.

    The trio of Calvin Masawa, Ezekiel Odera and Oliver Maloba are still in the playing ranks of the team now christened Simba wa Nairobi. While Masawa and Odera clocked the full 90 minutes on that day, Maloba came on as a second half substitute.

    All five have painful recollections of the eventuality at Kasarani on Sunday 30 October 2016.

    Jimmy Bageya is one other players still at City Stars who was part of the 2016 squad but did not feature  in the relegation game.

    “That was the worst feeling ever. I remember we had prepared very well and had hoped to win the match. But we started on a wrong footing by letting in some quick goals and we knew that was the end of it all.” Said Amboko who joined the club back in 2002

    “It was painful. We were at a great loss. We had always survived relegation fights but on this day it was all but over. We stayed at the stadium for a while longer pondering into an uncertain future. We were no longer sure of our careers, and the life of the club in the lower divisions. It was a sad ending.” Said Museve who joined the club in 2007 from Kangemi AllStars

    Striker Odera, who top scored for the club in that final KPL season with four goals, said;

    “30th Oct 2016 was a dark day. After being relegated from the premier league after so many years in the top tier we didn’t know what was going to happen to the club. As players we knew that we had let our management, fans and the club as a whole down. Coming to terms of playing in the second-tier league was a disaster.”

    For Masawa, City Stars longest serving player – in the club books since 2011 – that day was coming.

    “There was that sad feeling. It was not particularly nice on my end but again it was not the biggest surprise. I had seen it coming after a few years of flirting with relegation. After some few days, weeks of crying I had to accept the reality. I almost quit football but had to put on a brave face and move on knowing that all was not lost.”

    For young Maloba, it was too much to take. And after that relegation he was off to Gor Mahia.

    “We had done what we needed to do. We were annoyed after that game. We felt robbed, helpless. Worse still, imagine being part of a unit that ended up being relegated. It killed the dreams of some players and some ended up quitting the game completely.”

    Chairperson Peter Jabuya, lost to the relegation pain, said it was important for the team to go down to find itself. He vowed that the club would exist rather than die, with a rebrand.

    After years of being bedeviled by finances, lack thereof, fortune struck in March 2019 when Eldoret-born Real Estate mogul Jonathan Jackson bought out Jabuya to wholly own the team.

    Check one was a quick restructure and application of the survival antics that saw the team stay afloat prior to the 2016 Premiership fall.

    At the time of capture, City Stars sat 19th in the 20-team second tier National Super League (NSL) with a paltry 14 points from 22 games. 25 points from the final 16 games saw the team end a respectable 14th.

    What followed was a calculated 2018/19 NSL season, with further restructuring that saw the arrival of Eastern Europe EUFA Pro coach Sanjin Alagic and careful player recruitment. The team went on to win the league with a ten-point buffer to regain their Premiership status after four seasons in the cold.

    The quintet that fell with the club in 2016 have the exact opposite emotion from the one at Kasarani.

    “After four long years in the dark now we are back in the premier league thanks to the support from the chairman Jonathan Jackson,”

    “He has ensured the club has excellent coaching staff, quality/good training facilities, hardworking and dedicated playing unit with salaries coming on time. Not to forget our beloved and passionate fans who have been for ever present in good and bad times. Now am happy to say that we are back to where we as a big club belong.” muted Odera who returned to the club at the start of 2019 after a two-season detour

    “The feeling is unbelievable, personally I am incredibly happy to be back at the topmost league in the country. This is where everyone wants to be and to make it more interesting, we are coming back with a well-organized team, sponsor, new players and new technical bench. I am just excited and can’t wait for the league to start.” Said Masawa who arrived at the club from Migori Youth back in 2011

    Assistant coach Amboko, whose only time out of City Stars was a small detour to AFC Leopards in 2013, added;

    “After being out for four years we are back in the Premier League. The feeling is amazing and it’s my hope and belief that we are going to be worthy competitors. With the help of our sponsors, an amazing office,  able technical bench, talented players and passionate fans, I know we are going to give our opponents a run for their money.”

    For Museve, nothing beats a return to the big league; “It’s a wonderful feeling. I was in the relegation band, and now in the lot that got the team back to where it truly belongs – in the Premier League. It’s such a good feeling.” Added the team stalwart who hang his boots at the close of the 2018/19 season to join the technical bench.

    For Maloba, being up means being up, there’s no looking back down.

    “Now that we are back, the morale we have is at its highest. We never ever want to go back down. It was trauma while in the lower leagues. We want to give it 200% now that we are back up and stay up there for good.” He opined.

    After the relegation loss to Homeboyz, the team forced a barren draw against Ushuru – who also got relegated, before bowing out of the Premiership with a 2-1 loss to visiting Sony Sugar at Ruaraka in their 240th and final top flight game.

    The lineups on Sun 30 Oct 2016

    City Stars: Victor Odhiambo (GK), Franklyne Osama, Calvin Masawa, Arthur Museve, John Amboko (c), Peter Mwangi (Peter Musiime 61’), Pa Jassey Mulie, Joseph Sakwa (Benson Iregi 38’), Ezekiel Omulo Odera, Festo Omukoto, Robert Ndungu (Oliver Maloba 55’)

    Kakamega Homeboyz: Michael Wanyika (GK), Athman Buki, Eric Ambunya, Charles Momanyi, Moses Chikati, Stephen Wakhanya, Hamisi Mwinyi (Andrew Murunga 66’), Ali Bai (Andrew Kulecho 53’), Keiphas Mutuu, Hedmond Mauda (Victor Matete 88′), David Okoth.

  • Davis Agesa top scores for City Stars in NSL

    Davis Agesa top scores for City Stars in NSL

    After tallying and verification, lanky striker Davis Agesa Amuyunzu emerged as Nairobi City Stars top scorer with 17 goals in four seasons the club featured in the second tier National Super League (NSL) from 2017 to 2019/20.

    After 12 seasons in the top tier Kenyan Premier League (KPL), Nairobi City Stars was relegated at the end of the 2016 season.

    In their first season in the NSL, in 2017, Agesa scored seven goals that included the only NSL hat trick by City Stars registered during a 4-1 blitzkrieg of FC Talanta at Camp Toyoyo in September.

    The hat trick followed his first ever brace in City Stars colors two weeks earlier that delivered a 2-1 win over Isibania FC at the same venue.

    He added one more the next season before departing for a stint in Asia. Upon his return  months later he added three goals in the shortened and transitional 2018/19 season and another six that helped the team gain promotion in the Corona-disrupted 2019/20 season to tally up his NSL strikes to 17 .

    With 17 NSL goals for City Stars, Agesa is ahead of Gambian Ebrima Sanneh and Ugandan Sande Katumba who both scored 15 goals over two NSL seasons.

    Ezekiel Odera and Peter Mwangi Wainaina are the next best NSL scorers for City Stars with 14 and 10 goals, respectively.

    “Well I can say it’s a day to day progress that I challenge myself to be better than yesterday so hopefully I keep my name more on the score sheets and keep raising City Stars flag high,”

    With City Stars now back for the 2020/21 Premier League season, Agesa will be seeking his maiden top-flight goal, and more;

    “Yes I feel I am ready and more hungry for the KPL challenge.” he said

    Agesa has ten premier league appearances all gained while on a short-term loan at Thika United in the 2018 season.

    Agesa committed to two more years at City Stars and will be angling for more premiership games, and goals, in the upcoming season.

    Summary – City Stars NSL (2017 – 2019/20 seasons) Top Scorers

    1. Davis Agesa (Kenya) – 17
    2. Ebrima Sanneh (Gambia) – 15
    3. Sande Katumba (Uganda) – 15
    4. Ezekiel Odera (Kenya) – 14
    5. Peter Wainaina (Kenya) – 10

    Davis Agesa
    Davis Agesa
    Davis Agesa (No. 11)
    Davis Agesa in a past NSL game against Migori Youth at Camp Toyoyo, Jericho on Sat 2 November 2019
    Davis Agesa scored a race to lead City Stars to a 3-1 come-from-behind win over host Modern Coast Rangers on Sat 23 Nov 2019 at Serani Sports Club
  • ‘Chale’ at 86%, Buliba steady

    ‘Chale’ at 86%, Buliba steady

    Nairobi City Stars box to box master Charles Otieno Oduro aka Chale is now as good as fit after completing four months of attentive rehabilitation.  

    A knee injury – a complex tear to the lateral meniscus – had seen Chale miss games in February and March.

    As Chale gets clearance, defender Edwin Buliba who suffered a patella tendonitis and IT band syndrome back in February, is also getting closer to recovery.

    The two have been undergoing weekly rehabilitation at the Muchatha Health Care, a renowned Physiotherapy & Sports injury clinic, since mid-March.

    Brian Otieno Odongo has been keenly attending to the two, among others, and he gave his comments on their progress.

    “Chale has highly improved and at the last stage of recovery. We grade his injury at 86% recovered.” said Brian Oduor who attended to him

    Edwin Buliba
    Edwin Buliba (left) in a past game against Nairobi Stima on Sat 14 Mar 2020

    On Buliba he said; “He is still on rehab with an appreciated progress.” added Brian

    Speaking to City Stars news desk, team coordinator Samson Otieno noted the progression of the players with glee.

    “We are happy to see a number of players now leave the Doctor’s perch. And now we are down to the last two. By the time we kick off preseason we will have a fully fit squad.” said

    In March, winger Jimmy Bageya, strikers Vincent ‘Jamaica’ Otieno and Ezekiel Odera, defender Wycliffe Otieno, keeper Levis Opiyo were all being treated for varied injuries. They are all fully healed.

  • One on one with striker Ezekiel Odera

    One on one with striker Ezekiel Odera

    The allure to join Gor Mahia in 2011 was too good to turn down, but in hindsight, Ezekiel Omulo Odera regrets it.

    In 2010, while at KCB, he had hogged all the headlines, for he scored 11 goals in his first year in the Premier League. His knack for goals earned the apprentice from Buru Buru’s Sports Connect Academy a consideration to the National team for a game against Uganda.

    A step-up, or what he thought was, to the big boys Gor,  indeed turned out to be weighty on his young shoulders. Luckily, KCB welcomed their prodigal son back from his setback the next season but let him go for a stint at Thika United in 2013 before ushering him back home in 2014.

    Before KCB he could have been in the ranks of Ulinzi Stars. That move came to a cropper in 2009 due to a lost ID.

    In early 2011 he could have been part of Zedekiah Otieno coached National team for the Nile Basin tournament in Egypt. He missed out due to lack of a passport.

    In 2016 he arrived at City Stars after journeys to KRA (Ushuru), Thika once again and Sofapaka.

    He top scored with four goals that were however not enough as City Stars earned relegation from the topflight for the first time since the 2004/5 season.

    Lower tier football in 2017 turned out to be a blessing in disguise as, for the first time in six years, he found goals in double digits, again. He was back! 11 of them made him the club’s top scorer which earned him a contract with top dogs AFC Leopards.

    But after scoring ten goals for ingwe in 2018, he was, rather bizarrely, shipped out and sent back to KCB for a fourth stint, on a loan deal he is yet to digest to date.

    With 177 Premier League games, and 41 goals under his belt, Odera – whose first love was cricket and not football – has tasked himself to lead City Stars back to the Premier League.

    Very conspicuous in his after-football menu is the desire to be a youth coach.

    City Stars; Give us your background from primary to high school

    Odera; I schooled at Tumaini Primary School then moved my Secondary education to Kangundo Complex School.

    City Stars; Talk to us about your football journey after high school – your early days at academies, KPL, the various clubs to date

    Odera; In 2007 and 2008 I turned out for a local team called Ujwanga Fc in a Wazee Pamoja league. The next year I moved to Sports Connect Academy in BuruBuru. This is where KCB found me.

    City Stars; Tell us how you first arrived at City Stars and why you are back for a second time

    Odera; Nairobi City Stars held trials in 2016 January at Hope Center Grounds in Kawangware. Thereafter, I was picked by the then coach John ‘Bobby’ Ogolla, on a one year contract.

    The experience was great and that’s why considering the team for the second time was never in doubt. This is why I signed my second contract with the club in January 2020.

    Reasons for leaving the club in 2017 was because my contract ended and I had to look for new challenges in other teams. The experience was good and I enjoyed my journey, until my contracts ended. And now am back with the aim of taking the club back to the Kenyan Premier League.

    City Stars; If it wasn’t football what sport would you be playing?

    Odera; You’d have found me at the crease playing Cricket. That was my first love. However associated costs of playing it were prohibitive. Hence football.

    City Stars; Your biggest regrets in football?

    Odera; Signing for Gor Mahia in 2011. Being the young player that I was then, I had a lot of expectations. I guess the pressure was too much for me at that time.

    If I had stayed in KCB for another year that time, it would have been better for my career.

    I don’t particularly regret missing out on Ulinzi and Nile basin tournament as those events shaped me in different ways.

    City Stars; As a player its a dream to play for the national team. Do you still hope to be considered?

    Odera; It is every players dream to play for the national team. I’m happy I had the chance to get a call up to the game against Uganda in 2010 as well as to the Nile Basin squad of early 2011. For now I have retired from the national football.

    City Stars; How different is the team now compared to back then?

    Odera; Back then we had difficulties in payment of the players and technical bench, but thanks to Mr Peter Jabuya who always found his way to ensure that our needs were met without a sponsor. (God bless him).

    Now, things are different; we have a sponsor in the Jonathan Jackson Foundation that’s paying us well through the chairman /owner, Mr Jonathan Jackson who has invested in the club. And it is paying off.

    City Stars; We’ve seen you recently play in various positions upfront.  But what is your preferred position?

    Center forward (striker)

    City Stars; Tell us some of your sad moments as a player

    Odera; Has to be when the AFC Leopards management sent me on loan to KCB FC in 2019 for reasons unknown to me yet I was the club’s top goal scorer. It was heartbreaking for me as a player.

    City Stars; As a forward you have to contend with mean defenders. Who are some of those that cause you nightmares?

    • Eugene Asike – (KCB FC/ Tusker/Sofapaka)
    • George Owino – (Mathare United/Sofapaka)
    • Rodgers Aloro – (Sofapaka/Tusker)
    • Bethwel Warambo – (KCB FC)
    • Haron Shakava – (Gor Mahia/Nkana FC)
    • Musa Mohammed – (Gor Mahia/Nkana FC)

    City Stars; And who is that keeper that you have never wanted to face on one v one?

    Dancun Ochieng – Former Mathare and Tusker keeper and Kenyan International

    City Stars; Who inspires you most at the club?

    Calvin Masawa

    City Stars; Which players do you look up to locally?

    • Chrispinus Onyango (Tusker FC)
    • Kepha Aswani (Sofapaka FC)
    • Peter Wainaina (Formerly at City Stars)
    • Allan Wanga (Kakamega Homeboyz)

    City Stars; In your football journey there’s that coach whose an inspiration, one that brings the best out of you. Name a few

    The current City Stars coach Sanjin Alagic who has brought a different dimension to my game.

    Others are;

    • Ghost Mulei – (Former national team coach / Liberty Academy)
    • Robert Matano – (Tusker Fc). He coached me at City Stars in 2016
    • Rodolpho Zapata – (Former AFC Leopards’ coach.)
    • John Kamau – (Former Thika United coach)
    • Habil Nanjero – (Sports connect Academy)
    • Leonard Saleh – (Former KCB Coach)

    City Stars; When not training and playing football what else occupies your time?

    Odera; I spend a lot of my time with family. If not, I am playing pool

    City Stars; Finally, when you hang your boots someday, when will you venture into?

    I would like to venture into coaching at the lower levels at Nairobi City Stars i.e Under 20’s.

  • Forced break a blessing in disguise

    Forced break a blessing in disguise

    A number of Nairobi City Stars players have been handed lifelines to return to near, or full fitness, following indefinite cancellation of the leagues from mid-March due to the Corona Virus outbreak.

    As the league wore on, some players were falling off from starting berths to the bench, or out of the squad all together, following varied injuries.

    Defensive midfielder Charles Chale Otieno, strikers Jimmy Bageya and Vincent Jamaica Otieno, defenders Wycliffe Otieno and Edwin Buliba are some of the players who would have otherwise missed games had the Corona Virus disrupt not arrived.

    Under treatment

    For Chale (pictured), a atural deep 6, his season was as good as over had matters not reset from the norm following the arrival of the pandemic.

    A knee injury – a complex tear to the lateral meniscus – diminished enforcer and spoiler Chale’s performance to an extent he had been asked to sit out the rest of the season. He’s been undergoing weekly observation and rehabilitation at the Muchatha Health Care, a renowned Physiotherapy & Sports injury clinic.

    According to team trainer Grace Wang’ondu, “Chale may not be fully fit on time as his case is about managing the injury and pain. With strengthened muscles around the injury he may get to a point where he can play with rehab and physio”.

    A take-two to a rebound in Kericho, in a game against AP Bomet at the Green Stadium on Sunday 8 March, left Bageya with a complex tear to his medial meniscus on his right knee.

    Left to limp dangerously after, Jimmy missed the next game against Nairobi Stima on Saturday 13 March – his first miss of the season. He would have only returned, if all went well, after three to four weeks.

    Teenage striker Vincent had been part and parcel of games 2 to 25 between September 2019 to early February but an acute knee injury during a friendly game in early February saw him off the squad for a month. He was to start normal training in readiness for league games.

    Buliba suffered a patella tendonitis and IT band syndrome on his left knee during a crucial game against Nairobi Stima. He did not complete the match and has been undergoing physio sessions since then.

    Big defender Wycliffe,a regular starter since match day 6 back in September 2019 has been playing while on rehab to a mild-Achilles tendon pain. Chances are he would have missed some games to fully recover.

    Lesser cases

    Away from those five cases, two other players; keeper Levis Opiyo and striker Ezekiel Odera are expected to fully recover from minor concerns suffered from recent games; patella tendonitis and mild Achilles, respectively.

    Collectively, and baring any new developments, the seven players are expected to be on equal footing to contest for playing places once the league resumes at the end of the sporting lock-down due to Corona Virus.

    Recovered

    Right back Kevin Okumu, who missed out the last two games, had only recovered from grass burn around the knee and hip area and was rearing to reclaim his position in the team.

    Two strikers; Ebrima Sanneh and Davis Agesa had had exited the physios desk by the time the league took a break.

    Sanneh, the club’s top scorer had only featured once in four games but came off the bench to power in a winning header – for his ninth season goal – during the last game against Nairobi Stima.

    It confirmed he had fully recovered from a patella tendonitis that had slowed him down since the turn of the year.

    In that game Agesa clocked the whole 90 minutes for the first time in a month following the full healing of soreness and swelling around his knee.

    Though league games were brought to a halt due to the corona virus pandemic, the new situation brought about by the forced break has since turned out to be a blessing in disguise for players seeking to recuperate.