Quote:Alba if you never watched Mike Okoth playing, please just say so.
I watched Mike Okoth and I have not said a single bad thing about him. You are the one obsessed with besmirching Dennis Oliech
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On 2004 AFCON qualifiers, the crucial goal was the away goal scored by John Baraza in Praia, Cape Verde. Those 3 points are what made the difference.
Oliech scored the winning goal at the most critical moment when Kenya needed to beat Cape Verde in the last game. After the match he was carried shoulder high by fans.
At the 2004 ANC, Oliech was the best Kenya player. In the last game he scored one goal and set up the other two.
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Your argument that the French league is superior to the Jupiler does not hold any water especially.
On Uefa club performance coefficient ranking (2010 to 2014 ), RSC Genk is position 59 while Auxerre is position 110
We are comparing the French league to Belgian League. We are not comparing Auxerre to Genk. Therefore your argument is bogus. The French league is rated way above the Belgian league. This is common knowledge. There are no Belgian teams in the top 40 of UEFA rankings. And according to the rankings below, the French league is 9th in the world whereas the Belgian league is 15th
https://twitter.com/spor...638820508434433/photo/1
Also Belgian teams do very poorly in the champions league when compared to French teams. How many world class players play in Belgium ? Most likely none. Its a much lower calibre league. No wonder every top Belgian player leaves immediately and never returns until they are close to retirement
Quote:Perhaps you did not notice on the link I sent that Oliech was also pointed out as one to watch alongside Messi, Rooney and several others.
Obviously you dont understand football. Raw talent alone gets you nowhere. Players like Messi who are groomed in proper youth development schemes since they were 12 years old will always be better than players who grew up playing with ball ya jwala in a dusty street. At the Barcelona youth scheme, young players age 12 learn from the best coaches. They learn fundamentals such as shooting with both feet, positioning, tactical awareness etc.
Oliech and other Kenyan players are like brilliant mathematicians who never went to primary school to learn basic fundamentals addition and subtraction. So anyone who thinks Oliech would have been as good as Messi does not know anything about football.
Quote:May be I should give a comparison of Rooney and CR7 for you to understand what under achievement means.
Quote:Rooney and Ronaldo arrived at Man U as raw talents, but Rooney had an immediate impact. They were signed and coached by the same coach. Rooney was hailed as one of the best young players in the world.
I am sorry but I have to laugh at this. It shows how clueless you are. Ronaldo has been groomed by qualified youth coaches since he was 9 years old. He was already in the Sporting Lisbon youth scheme when he was 12. he has been learning proper fundamentals since he was 9 or 10. So the idea that he arrived at man U as a raw talent is just incredibly laughable. At man U he simply polished the skills he had been learning since he was 9
Wayne Rooney joined the Everton youth scheme when he was 9 !!!!!
These players have trained by qualified youth coaches since they were pre-teens and you are trying to tell us that they were raw when they joined Man U. This must be a joke.
Quote:Rooney has undoubtedly worked hard - The Oliech way of working hard where you accept that just remaining the best in your club is enough.
You are talking as if you have actual proof that Rooney worked hard and Oliech did not. Where is your evidence ?
Quote:In 2005, the youth world cup was held in the Netherlands. The finals was contested by two teams riding on their talisman, Messi in the case of Argentina and John Obi Mikel captaining Nigeria.
I watched the final and those 2 players were outstanding. Messi scored 2 penalties in the final and Argentina won 2-1.
While Messi won the golden boot, John Obi was voted the second best player and took the long winding road to Chelsea.
Messi has won the ballon dor 4 times since while John Obi struggled to hold a place in the Chelsea starting XI. Again to remain at Chelsea, John Obi must have worked hard. But how much harder do you think Messi worked to get where he is now? Surely the gulf in class was not that huge in 2005.
Once again you are clueless
1. How well a player does in youth tournaments is not always a good indicator of how well they will be as seniors. Some players do well in youth tournaments simply because they matured early. Look at Freddy Adu. Everyone thought he was the next Pele when he was 14. Now he is a nobody.
2. Mikel Obi has been stifled since he joined Chelsea because they insist on playing him in a defensive role. This has stifled his attacking instincts. Its the same thing happening to Wanyama now.
Quote:About Nyamweya and co mismanaging soccer, in fact it was worse when Mike Okoth played in Kenya and players were routinely denied international transfer certificates to satisfy the whims of personalities.
Are you joking ? Football management in the 1980s and 1990s was much better than now. Job Omino, Peter Kenneth and co may have denied transfer certificates but football was efficiently run. There were no wrangles. Money was not routinely disappearing as it does now. Kenyan teams were generally doing much better. As recently as 1994, Tusker almost won the Africa cup winners cup.
Quote:But that is neither here nor there, good people can never be kept down. In soccer, George Weah is a perfect example, in rugby, Daniel Adongo is a good example, in cycling, Froome proved that its not where you are born that matters.
Eti good people can never be kept down ? Citing some examples of people who succeeded against odds does not mean good people always succeed. For every Chris Froome who succeeded, there are literally hundreds who were just as good but never made it.
Froome has succeeded because he had money to fund his own training. His British roots also helped him. As a British citizen he has access to sponsorship, and excellent equipment. Britain is the leader in engineering racing bikes.
There are dozens of Kenyans in Rift Valley who have enough endurance to beat Froome. But they are
kept down by lack of government support, nonexistent facilities etc. So your "good people are never kept down" argument is rather bogus.
Daniel Adongo is a freak of nature. But his lack youth development is precisely what caused him to fail in New Zealand and South Africa. His former coach Tana Umaga said as much. In American football, his role is limited to being the equivalent of a wrestler. He likely will never be asked to touch the ball. Had Adongo and others had proper youth development, he would have been one of the best rugby players in the world.