Victor Wanyama, from playing barefoot to Champions League finalist

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Harambee Stars skipper Victor Wanyama (centre) attends a training session in Cairo on June 19, 2019 ahead of their Africa Cup of Nations Group C opener against Algeria on June 23. PHOTO | FKF |

By AFP
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Victor Wanyama, who played until his bare feet bled on the streets of Nairobi as a child, will on Sunday make his Africa Cup of Nations bow, a few weeks after helping Tottenham to the Champions League final.
Wanyama is the figurehead of a Kenyan team that has its work cut out to advance from a group including Algeria, Sunday’s opponents, and Senegal as well as Tanzania.
Kenya's former Prime Minister Raila Odinga (second left) is presented with a jersey by Harambee Stars skipper Victor Wanyama (left) and head coach Sebastien Migne after paying the team a courtesy call at a Cairo hotel on June 20, 2019. PHOTO | CHARLES NYENDE |
Kenya’s former Prime Minister Raila Odinga (second left) is presented with a jersey by Harambee Stars skipper Victor Wanyama (left) and head coach Sebastien Migne after paying the team a courtesy call at a Cairo hotel on June 20, 2019. PHOTO | CHARLES NYENDE |NATION MEDIA GROUP
The uncompromising midfielder is an icon in his homeland, where football fanatics number in the millions but whose players rarely reach the highest level of the club game.
“Victor is a very popular guy because he is a bit laid back, not too flamboyant. He doesn’t like showing off,” says Kenyan journalist Elias Makori. “He earns a very tidy sum from Tottenham, but you don’t see it showing around.”
Because of the rugged midfielder, Tottenham have become fashionable in Nairobi, where fans traditionally support Arsenal or Manchester United.
“He has remained very humble, and he has not forgotten his humble origins,” said his cousin, Harrison Osotsi, noting that Wanyama is always keen to help young footballers back home, providing equipment, or welcoming them to London in groups.
‘PLAYED BAREFOOT’
The Nairobi native, raised in a family of 11 children, made his debut on the dirt streets of Land Mawe, a neighbourhood at the time reserved for employees of the Kenyan railway company, for whom his mother worked.
“He used to play barefoot, and sometimes he would bleed, but he kept going,” his cousin recalled. “When he got his first shoes, he had trouble getting used to them … he wanted to take them off, but he got used to them in the end.”
His father, Noah Wanyama, a former Kenya international, remembers Victor following along to training in his early days.
“Victor and the other boys would accompany me to the stadium and carry the sports bag for me when I went for football training or playing (matches),” he said. “They were quick to learn the tricks in the sport.”
“I am happy I did instil a lot of discipline and hard work in my children,” said Noah, who can boast of raising two sons that reached the Champions League final. Victor’s elder brother, Macdonald Mariga, was part of Jose Mourinho’s Inter Milan squad that won the title in 2010.
Inter Milan players, Kenya’s McDonald Mariga (left), Esteban Cambiasso (right), Ivan Cordoba (second right) and Sulley Muntari celebrate after qualifying for the final of the Uefa Champions League. Photo/REUTERS
Inter Milan players, Kenya’s McDonald Mariga (left), Esteban Cambiasso (right), Ivan Cordoba (second right) and Sulley Muntari celebrate after qualifying for the final of the Uefa Champions League. PHOTO | FILE
Victor’s rise was rapid – his first call-up to the national team came at just 15 for a friendly against Nigeria.
SCORED AGAINST BARCELONA
A precocious, yet raw, talent, he was sent to Sweden to toughen up before moving on to Belgium. At 20 he signed for Celtic, where fans still fondly remember a goal he scored during a 2012 Champions League victory over Barcelona.
A year later, he became the first Kenyan to play in the Premier League at Southampton, before switching to Tottenham in 2016.
After a strong debut season with Spurs injuries hampered the next two seasons, though he returned to start both legs of Tottenham’s dramatic semi-final against Ajax only to watch the loss to Liverpool in Madrid from the bench.
Tottenham Hotspur's Kenyan midfielder Victor Wanyama controls the ball during a training session at the Wanda Metropolitano Stadium in Madrid on May 31, 2019 on the eve of the Uefa Champions League final match against Liverpool. PHOTO | OSCAR DEL POZO |
Tottenham Hotspur’s Kenyan midfielder Victor Wanyama controls the ball during a training session at the Wanda Metropolitano Stadium in Madrid on May 31, 2019 on the eve of the Uefa Champions League final match against Liverpool. PHOTO | OSCAR DEL POZO |AFP
Despite that setback, his journey “is a source of inspiration and motivation for other players in the national team”, says Makori.
“People look up to him as a good leader, a mature person, somebody who knows how to invest your money and how to behave as a leader.”
Kenya, ranked 105th in the world, will need their captain and best player to lead as in their first Africa Cup of Nations since 2004.
“For me, the coach, and for the rest of the staff, we are happy to have a player who is able to compete at this level,” says Kenya boss Sebastien Migne.
“It will help us to send a message to our opponents. We have one of the finalists of the Champions League in our team. In terms of confidence, it will be perfect for us.”

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