The South
African Football Association (SAFA) President Dr Danny Jordaan, Bafana Bafana
coach Ephraim Shakes Mashaba and Technical Director Neil Tovey have been left
devastated by the untimely death of former Super Eagles of Nigeria coach
Stephen Keshi.
One of
African football’s best known individuals, Keshi (54) is suspected to have died
of heart attack on Wednesday morning.
“Words
cannot describe this shocking loss. Keshi was not only a giant of African
football but was a global football icon.
“At a time
when we are still reeling from the loss of Muhammad Ali and now this; one
wonders what is happening to this world. Only a few days ago, we lost one of
our own giants, Ted Dumitru and hardly have tears dried up that we woke up to
the shattering news of Keshi’s death,” said a sombre SAFA President.
Dr Jordaan
said by virtue of SAFA’s close links with the Nigerian Football Federation, his
association with Keshi was equally strong and intimate.
“At 54,
Keshi was one of the bright young coaches coming out of this continent and
having been a captain and solid player during his playing days, you can’t find
a better individual whose life was wholly dedicated to the game of football.
“He recently
lost his wife and now this. We wish that the family left behind remains strong
in these difficult times,” mourned Dr Jordaan.
Bafana
Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba who is also mourning his young brother Victor
George Mashaba who passed away on Tuesday, a day after he returned from Gambia
said he was at a loss to comprehend Keshi’s sudden death.
“What is
really happening in the world of coaching? Not long ago it was Ted Dumitru and
now Keshi; two giants in a space of a week!”
Mashaba said
in Keshi, Africa had lost one of its greatest prospects in the coaching world.
“This is not
only a loss for the family, the Nigerian community but the entire African
continent and world at large. Personally, I am gutted as it comes at a time I
am preparing to bury my young brother who died on Tuesday,” said Mashaba.
SAFA’s
Technical Director Neil Tovey who played against Keshi as opposing captains
said apart from being a football ‘animal’, Keshi was a true gentleman of the
game.
“They say
good people don’t live long and this is a prime example of the saying. I still
can’t believe Keshi has left us.
“Here is one
son of the soil I interacted with from the playing days till the time he passed
away. I said to myself on hearing the news ‘not again’ but the truth is we are
never masters of our own destiny when it comes to death. May his soul rest in
peace,” said Tovey.
A former
captain of the Nigeria national team, Keshi was one of only two men to win the
Africa Cup of Nations both as a player and a coach
He also
managed Togo and Mali, and his playing career included a spell for Belgian club
side Anderlecht.
As a player,
Keshi was part of the Super Eagles team that won the Nations Cup in 1994 and
narrowly missed out on a World Cup quarter-final place the same year.
He coached
the national side over three spells, leading Nigeria to the 2013 Nations Cup
title in South Africa and the last 16 at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.
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