Tag: Sanjin Alagic

  • Promotion excites Coach Sanjin

    Promotion excites Coach Sanjin

    On the final day of April 2020, the Football Kenya Federation (FKF) announced the promotion of Nairobi City Stars to the top tier Kenyan Premier League (KPL).

    In their official communication later, FKF confirmed the promotion following their cancellation of all league’s countrywide due to the ongoing Corona virus pandemic that ended football activities in mid-March and has complicated return of games in the near future.

    By the time of stagnation of the Betika National Super League (NSL), City Stars topped the 19-team log with 64 points with a ten-point buffer over Bidco United who are also promoted to the top league for the first time ever.

    The news was icing to head coach Sanjin Alagic cake that he started baking from the beginning of the season in September 2019.

    Speaking from his base in Sarajevo in Bosnia and Herzegovina where he recoiled from the start of the Covid-19 partial lock down, the deliriously happy coach said;

    “I’m very delighted and proud of being Champions of NSL and securing promotion to the KPL, the place where NCS belongs,”

    “First of all I wish to congratulate my players for the amazing job they did throughout the season, they are most deserving for this success!”

    “This achievement was result of hard and dedicated work and it will not be possible without great support of our owner Jonathan (Jackson), CEO Patrick (Korir), coordinator Samson (Otieno), Foundation CEO Mwenesi (Musalia), and my coaching staff, our fans and all people in the Club who believed in us.” he added

    Sanjin arrived at City Stars in the first week of July 2019 for the season. He kicked off with organizing careful recruitment and a seven-week preseason.

    Of the 26 games he took charge off before the league prematurely ended, Sanjin led City Stars to 20 wins, four draws and two losses. That included an incredible 13-game unbeaten away run.

  • One on one with keeper Levis Opiyo

    One on one with keeper Levis Opiyo

    They call him Levis Opiyo Omondi, aka Lovae, a lad schooled by Thika United back in the years at Tetu High. In 2015, in his third and last year at the club, he was handed his big break by Briton Tim Bryett to debut in the Kenyan Premier League.

    Detours to Western Stima and Posta Rangers in 2016 matured him to become Mathare United’s lead goalkeeper in 2017, his best season yet, which earned him a nomination to the end-of-year awards after tending goal in 27 of 34 games.

    He may have missed on a podium finish in the awards but that firmly squeezed his resume through to Kenya’s rated keepers’ list.

    If he wore no gloves you wouldn’t identify him as a keeper, for he is your perfect server and passer of the ball; he’s one that dribbles – at the back!

    In August 2019 he arrived at Nairobi City Stars – a club he picked ahead of AFC Leopards – laden with new experience from Germany and Vihiga United.

    His role model is Peter Pinchez Opiyo, his elder sibling, and incidentally, a current teammate at Nairobi City Stars.

    He is discrete on what he wants in the near-turn – a place in Harambee Stars. And he’s crystal clear on one thing; he can never be a coach!

    City Stars: Share with us your football journey while in school (Pri, Sec) and how you arrived at club football

    Levis: I schooled at the Kenyatta Primary School in Thika before moving to Kabuyefwe Friends High School. In form 2 I moved my schooling to Central Province soccer powerhouse Tetu High.

    My football star started shining while at Kenyatta Primary School where I was the only one to reach the National ball games, twice. That made me an attraction to High Schools that all offered me scholarships.

    At Tetu High, we emerged champions of Central region in 2010 and 2011 to qualify for the National school games.

    City Stars: Your early years were at Thika United. How was that initiation for you into Premier League football and at what point dd you start looking beyond Thika for playtime?

    While at Tetu High School there was this Safaricom Sakata Ball tournament that was played in 2010 and 2011. I featured in the two tournaments and emerged as the best goalkeeper on both occasions (with Shimanzi in 2010 and with AC Thika in 2011).

    That convinced my home team Thika United, who had been watching me keenly, to snap me up. They offered me a full Scholarship. And that’s how I joined the Premier League.

    During those days the Kenyan Premier League was very tough. And for a lad straight out of High School it was even tougher.

    Thika officially registered me for the Premier League in January 2013 and to help me grow, considering goal keepers Lukas Indeche, Zamu Adisa and Joel Bataro were in their ranks, they sent me to second tier side Mahakama FC (together with winger Francis Chege, midfielder Michael Bodo, striker Fahim Mohammed) on a six-month loan to gain experience.

    At Mahakama it never took me time before I started featuring in games and by the end of my loan the team was firmly at the top of its league. But the loan was not renewed and I returned to Thika where I slowly began to make the bench in second leg games.

    In my last season at Thika United (2015), British coach (Tim Bryett) was announced as head coach and it didn’t take him long to realize my capabilities. He handed me valuable games and I ended that season having featured in 13 games.

    After that season I moved to Posta Rangers for six months then to Western Stima for the remainder of that season. In 2017 I graduated to become Mathare United’s lead keeper. I then returned to Rangers for the 2018 season onward.

    City Stars: What has been your best season yet while in with the Premier League

    Lovae: Definitely 2017 in one of the best-known club in Kenya – Mathare United.

    While at the club I met the best coach in Kenya (Francis Kimanzi) who likes to play ball from back. That really made me happy because that is my strong point. He gave me confidence and encouraged me every time to play that way.

    So game by game I grew my performance and ended up playing 27 of the 34 games that season and it was little wonder I got nominated for the season-ending goalkeeper of the year award. I emerged fourth.

    City Stars: At some point you left the local scene to join a club in Germany. When was that and what was the experience like? Why did you return back to Kenya?

    Yes, that was in 2018. I left Posta Rangers and headed out to Germany for trials and signed for a club known as Fortuna Babelsberg which was playing in the lower tier.

    The experience was good; I learnt a lot but the league was not competitive enough because of the tier they were playing in. Due to funds, lack of, I decided to return home after the season to join Vihiga United on a short-term deal to the end of the 2018/19 season.

    City Stars: Why a keeper? You look like you could slot into any position upfield

    Ha ha. I started football as a midfielder at 10 years of age at Islamic Youth Academy (later named Fullchester). One day in a certain tournament our goalkeeper didn’t appear and my coach Beto asked around; “Who can play as keeper?”

    “I can,” I said. And I found it so interesting. And that’s how I transformed from an upfield player to a goalkeeper.

    City Stars: You arrived at City Stars weeks into their preseason in July 2019. Why the late arrival and what informed your decision to join them? What was the attraction in the NSL?

    Yes. That time I was at AFC Leopards waiting to seal a deal but I heard about City Stars targets and how they were recruiting experienced players. I was made aware they had a good structure, a good set plan, and that’s when I decided to join.

    Interestingly the coach (Sanjin Alagic) was convinced I was the kind he wanted during a friendly game against AFC Leopards at Hope Centre.

    At City Stars I met many players whom I had worked with in different teams earlier, others that I had played against. That made it easy for me to settle.

    City Stars: As a keeper, you are judged by your command from the back and a key indicator of your performance is clean sheets. Name some of the defenders that have helped you fail to concede goals

    Levis: Yes as a keeper you must have a good understanding with your defenders so that they protect you well. I am happy I have heard a chance to play with top brave defenders in the league. They include Joash Onyango and Maurice Ojwang at Western Stima, George Wise Owino at Mathare United, Collins Okumu, Joakins Atudo, and Charles Odete at Posta Rangers, Bernard Ochieng at Vihiga United (now Wazito) and Salim Shitu Abdalla at City Stars.

    City Stars: You are known to be a ‘dribbling’ keeper. Is that your style of play? Isn’t it risky to keep passing the ball at the back?

    Levis: Hahahahaha. Yes that’s my style of play. Of course, it’s risky but again you have to believe in your capabilities, and for me that’s what I believe in; playing from back although you must be very keen.

    Luckily, I have found coaches (Francis Kimanzi and Sanjin Alagic) who encourage their keepers to play like that.

    City Stars: Share some of the objectives you aim to achieve while at City Stars

    Levis: At the moment in City Stars we are doing good and topping the NSL. My aim is to see them maintain the top spot, win the league and earn promotion to the Kenyan Premier League.

    City Stars: As a keeper, some forwards just keep you on edge. Name some of the nightmarish strikers who have come up against you

    Levis: Michael Olunga, Meddie Kagere, Jacques Tuyisenge, and Dan Sserunkuma are certainly on that list.

    City Stars: Who do you look up to?

    Levis: My brother, always my brother (Pinchez). Because he advises me all the time and he pushes me a lot. When I make mistakes, he corrects me. And when I make the right decisions, he applauds me.

    City Stars: Your personal targets as a keeper?  

    Levis: To play for the National team – Harambee Stars. I believe in myself and I know I have all it takes to be there.

    When I was in Germany recently I couldn’t land a higher-tier team as I had no international caps. That kept me thinking and I promised myself I would shift extra gears to break into the national team.

    In the last few international games, we have seen a regular interchange of goalkeepers at the National front which gives me hope that with improved performance I can also contest a position at Harambee Stars. That will crown my career as well as give me a better chance of breaking abroad.

    City Stars: What do you do on your rest days?

    Levis: I don’t particularly have off days as I always go to the gym and then later I relax at home.

    City Stars: Favorite food?

    Levis; Kuku, Chapati, Ugali, Rice and Goat meat. And fresh juice

    City Stars: Which goalkeepers do you look upon and why?

    Levis: Marc-Andre ter Stegen (Barcelona) and Ederson (Manchester City) – because we play the same style

    City Stars: Football comes to an end one day. When that day comes what will you venture into and what initiatives have you made towards that course?

    Levis: We have seen some players end their careers miserably, but I don’t want to end mine that way.

    One thing is clear; I do not want to be a coach, but plan to be a manager in a team, or in a business. Soon I will head to school to pursue what will help me manage people.

  • Second schedule of home workouts

    Second schedule of home workouts

    City Stars players have been put on a second schedule of work-from-home exercises as Corona Virus pandemic continues to render normal programming an impossibility.

    With Covid-19 still in our wake, and with league games still suspended indefinitely, head coach Sanjin Alagic has rolled on to a second set of home workouts for all players.

    Stabilization exercises such as various planks, strength exercises ranging from weighted squats, push ups, etal, running as well as selected technical exercises for the rest of April, are all part of the second schedule which is an advancement of the first schedule issued out in the third week of March. The fresh one overruns the former.

    In observation of Ministry of Health guidelines, no player is allowed to visit any public places to have their workouts.

    According to the coach, home workouts “will continue till a time when normalcy returns.”

  • One on one with fullback Calvin Masawa

    One on one with fullback Calvin Masawa

    No player in the current lot understands Nairobi City Stars better than one Calvin Okoth Masawa.

    The right footer, who recently extend his stay by another two years to the end of the 2021/22 season, surprisingly prefers to play as a left back – he tells us why – has been in the ranks of the Kawangware based club since 2011 after joining from Migori.

    In his decade at City Stars, Masawa has featured for no less than 18 coaches. He started out under tactician Kennedy Odhiambo and is now under the eyes of Bosnian Sanjin Alagic.

    Beyond the lengthy instructions he has soaked in form the endless list of coaches, he has seen players come and go, was in the team when it suffered relegation from the Kenyan Premier League, and almost from the second tier during the transitional 2018/19 season.

    Why hasn’t he ever moved from City Stars ten years later even when things were at their worst?

    And when he finally calls hangs his boots, what next?

    Give us your background from primary to high school

    I am Calvin Okoth Masawa and my early primary days was just a normal one; that’s from 1998 to 2005 at Assar Johansson Primary School back in Migori town.

     Later I joined Migori Boys High School where I studied for free as I was on full scholarship due to football

    Share with us your football journey in high school and how far that took you (provincials, nationals)

    My football journey in high school was a good one because we used to dominate up to the District level where we faced stronger opponents in the likes of Kanga High School, Kodero Bara Secondary and Manyata High school. 

     But there came a breakthrough year in 2007 where we beat fancied Manyata High at the district level to represent Migori District at the provincials.

     The following year we followed suit and  beat Migori Day Secondary for a second stab at the provincials where we fell to St. Marks Mokorogoinwa from Kisii in the semi-finals having eliminated powerhouse and national defending champs Kisumu Day Secondary where Enock Agwanda scored the winning penalty.

    Tell us how you arrived at City Stars and how your early years at the clubs were

    I arrived at City Stars in 2011 as an amateur. I remember it was through a friendly match organised by one Mr Samson Obonyo (Aspirant Nyatike Constituency) – who later became the club Secretary – and former Nairobi City Stars Chairman Mr Peter Jabuya.

     We had traveled from Migori for that one friendly to give is a taste of what a Kenyan Premier League opposition was like. The match was played at City Stadium and we lost 6-0. I remember coming on as a substitute in the 75th min and 15 mins was all I needed for the then Coach Ken Odhiambo to notice me. And that’s how I joined City Stars.

    Being an amateur and inexperienced it wasn’t easy getting in the first 18 because we had established and seasoned players in the team. That made me gain some experience. In the meanwhile, I featured for the u19s side where we played in the first edition of KPL U19. I was the Captain.

    You have featured under no less than 17 coaches at City Stars. Tell us some of your favorites coaches from that lot

    Indeed I have featured under so many coaches at City Stars. Some of the best being Coach Ken Odhiambo, Paul Nkata, Robert Matano, John “Bobby” Ogola, Bai Wadda, Jimmy Kintu and my current coach Sanjin Alagic

    City Stars was relegated in 2016 after just surviving in 2014. What was the feeling?

    In football relegation is always players lowest moments and it wasn’t different with me being that since I started playing professional football, I only knew one level and that was Kenyan Premier League.

     I was so devastated by the relegation and even thought of quitting football because I couldn’t imagine playing in the lower tier. But later on, through encouragement, I decided to go down with the team knowing that one day we will be back to the top tier.

     You have a lethal right foot but play as a left back. How comes?

    When we played City Stars in that particular friendly match in 2011 I had come in as a substitute for a left back because I had a good left foot too. Everyone including Coach Ken assumed that I was only left footed and as the years went by I perfected playing at the left back and could easily slot in when called upon to date

     I do confuse a lot of people and Coaches and coaches with that but the truth of the matter is I can comfortably slot at both left and right back as I am a right back by default.

     It’s been five seasons of trying to return to the KPL. Do you believe at the end of this season that will be the end of trying?

    It’s been hard actually playing in the lower leagues but we have been pushing each season knowing that at the end we will go back where we rightfully belong and that’s the Kenyan Premier League.

     Many a times they do say that “Numbers don’t lie” and indeed our numbers this season in points, goals and position justify that so I believe “WE ARE GOING UP”.

    From April 2019 the club management changed. Tell us how different it has been since then

    Honestly there has been a new breath of life at the club since the new management came on. I remember going for months without salaries, unsettled allowances and sometimes even lacking a training ground.

    That’s contrary to the present where we have the best kits, balls, equipment and proper motivation in terms of allowances and salaries. Personally, as the longest serving player now captain I say a BIG THANK YOU to Chairman Jonathan Jackson (JJ) and the entire JJ Foundation.

    I cannot fail to mention former Chairman Mr Peter Jabuya. He played a big part/role to make sure this mighty club stay afloat all those years without sponsorship until a time he handed it over to then new able management.

    As a fullback share with us the wingers that have caused you hell

    During my early days in KPL I remember I had I nightmare making Danson Kago; he was such a fast and skillful player. Others are Clifton Miheso, Moses Mudavadi and Lawrence Owino.

    Which players do you admire most in the local scene?

    Fast I admire myself (he laughs). Joash Onyango and Atariza Meja Amayi

    Will you retire at City Stars?

    Of course, yes I would love to retire at City Stars. I want to create a rare history in Kenyan Football as a one-man club and that can be made possible by hard work and with the help of the management.

     When not doing football what keeps you busy?

    I am not an outgoing person so mostly I spend my time at home on net digging and reading past football articles and archival material because when I hang up my boots I will venture into sports journalism, analysis and commentary.

  • Captains speak on WFH

    Captains speak on WFH

    From Monday 15 March 2020, all football activities were brought to a halt due to the global corona virus outbreak.

    With no clear line out sight to when matters will reset to the norm, Nairobi City Stars granted head coach Sanjin Alagic open leave at the close of that week.

    The following week, in the wake of all sporting facilities having been closed based on directives from the Ministry of Health, he unveiled a month-long work-from-home (WFH) program for all 25 Nairobi City Stars players.

    A week later, three captains in the team; Noah Abich (overall), Calvin Masawa (assistant) and Anthony Muki Kimani (field captain – pictured) have all spoken on the current situation and the dynamics of operating from home.

    “We are all trying to adapt to it. This morning I was at my local gym for a workout with (Jockins) Atudo. I am following the program as it says and I want to believe the rest of the lot are doing the same.” said Abich before adding;

    “But working from home is tough. It’s not what we are used to,” added the veteran dead ball specialist who captained the team to relegation survival last season

    Masawa who joined City Stars back in year 2011 from Migori, and is the club’s longest serving servant, said;

    “On my part I follow the schedule to the letter. It requires a lot of discipline to stick to the program. Those are the challenges that comes with working alone from home.”

    Muki, the club’s leading assist provider, added;

    “Working from home is a bit tricky because of this pandemic the World is going through. But again it’s fun at the same time because we get to tag along with our families who get to experience what we do on a daily.”

    With the head coach out in Bosnia on leave, team trainer Grace Wang’ondu has been put in charge to check on the players.