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Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Why Dennis Oliech Is Having Problems Adapting To Professional Top Flight Soccer In Europe

Dennis Oliech is perhaps the best thing that Kenya football has ever produced but while watching his team Nantes narrowly beat Sochaux 2-1 in a French league encounter televised on DTSV on Sunday night, I was left wondering as to what happened to the promising striker who is a big hero back home.

For starters Oliech did not play for most of the game and was brought in late in the second half in a scrappy match that Nantes barely won as they fight looming possible relegation to the second division.

Oliech was a pale shadow of himself and his pacy moves and striking power were nowhere to be seen with obvious frustration showing on his face as he found himself frequently in his own half defending. I don’t want to look like a prophet of doom but I don’t think the lad has a future in the French club.

Worse of all, Dennis has a serious attitude problem he has never shaken off from his growing up days in seedy Nairobi estates and has failed to deal with not to mention a temper that makes a rhino look humble. While on holiday in Kenya he has constantly been in the news for all the wrong reasons including getting involved in ugly brawls with his childhood rivals.

At one time, a newspaper photographer approached Oliech at Nakumatt Nyali, in Mombasa but was attacked and viciously kicked with the ferocity Oliech would kick a football in a long range effort for goal. The hawk-eyed journalist had spotted Oliech with some young girl who was not his regular girl friend. The journalist pressed charges but later withdrew them under circumstances that were not clear. It is suspected that he may have been paid off in some sort of out-of-court settlement.

At another incident, the Kenyan professional soccer player was rushed to the Nairobi hospital with body injuries after an ugly brawl in the tough neighborhood of Eastlands only to reveal later in the press that he got injured while playing a 'friendly match' and there was no cause for alarm. Later it emerged that he had fought with childhood rivals who were making fun of his well-known stammering problem.

Oliech is known to have a very bad temper, which is aggravated by his stuttering problem to the extent that he does not do press conferences and leaves all the talking to his elder brother who doubles up as his manager. He has never considered taking anger management courses or better still, speech therapy to cure the condition.

It seems that the soccer star is being haunted by his violent past where physical fights was the only way of settling differences but he has to break from this sordid past as he is now a public figure with scores of youngsters looking up to him as their role model, but most important of all, he has a promising career which he should not throw away just because he can't control himself.

It is obvious that Oliech's attitude has greatly affected his progress in professional top-flight soccer where discipline and the enthusiasm to learn quickly have lifted the likes of Ivorian striker Didier Drogba to the top. It is clear that Oliech still has the Kenyan-ghetto mentality where if the coach does not field you then it has to be something personal.

Dennis, take some advice from me; Get a serious girlfriend, probably the marrying material, attend anger management classes and throw in speech therapy sessions. Ignore your childhood rivals and stop visiting these tough neighborhoods where you grew up.
Concentrate more on your football and in helping and encouraging youngsters on how to be professional footballers in future.

If you do all the above, you will not only be a successful soccer professional but you will also be judged well by history. If you chose to ignore this, you will be just another bum who can kick a ball and has lots of cash to waste on philandering.

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8 comments:

  1. Chris, have u heard of the saying: You may take a man out of the village but you cannot take the village out of the man? Remember the brag at JKIA about tickets refunds?

    Oliech's problems stem from the fact that control of all aspects of his professional activities are tightly controlled by his mother (albeit through his other son, Deno's brother / Manager). She has the mistaken feeling any people are jealous of her son's exploits and a manager wants to 'eat' from him. Typical Kenyan way of thinking.

    Bob Munro of the MYSA fame tapped Deno's talent and he could have easily moulded Deno into a world class soccer professional had he been allowed access by Deno's mum....

    Deno's problems are compounded further by the so called 'celeb' culture that has caught up in Kenya over the last few years. Celeb culture in Kenya is equal to (=) night clubbing, night clubbing and more night clubbing.

    Today's international sports professional is an asset that is very carefully managed. Soccer players only enjoy their peak to early thirties. The players not only train hard to improve their fitness and skills but are also trained in areas like PR and business investments. Of course, family life brings about stability just as you have suggested.

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  2. Fully agree. Oliech should strive to earn the respect he deserves from us.Excellent post.

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  3. This Oliech saga turns ugly every time. Some time in 2003, we were told that he was to attend trials at Man United or Arsenal. The two clubs distanced themselves from the player and one of the top managers in the UK said 'We have never heard of the name. Kenyan? Noo...
    But Oliech was spoilt by the Kenyan press in trying to get a star out of the soccer world was a botched one from the word go!
    Take an example of Oliech stopping school to play footall. Was it not ill advised? It was. And when the mum lectures Kenyans about soccer management? It was equally bad. And another spin that he is joining Portsmouth. Another bad one. and the off the pitch celebrity status that he imagines narrows his ambition it nothing. Yes, he is truggling at Nantes, but chances of him making it big in Europe are dim, if the off-field lifestyle is to count. Give us another star.

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  4. oliech can be what he is,but advicing not to visit where he grew uo is utter nonsense.

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  5. I also grew up in the non-formal settlement and very soon will be leaving it but do not agree with you telling Denno to avoid visting 'mtaa' that's just wrong... live or grow up there and you will realize the essence of giving back, nnot manufacturing poverty. Denno you are doing it well with your Oliech foundation, supporting daggoretti Santos, 'endelea kuinua ndimu mtiachaa'
    It's because he understands that nearly 60percent if am not allowed to say 80percent of this city's success stories have got their roots in non-formal settlements.

    I agree that you need to control your temper to make it in soccer. you can make it coz it is still early for a positive improvement. I have a quarell woth those opportunistic fellows who chokoza Dennis because they know if things become sour he will pay, shame on you! He is a human being prone to getting angry like you do, he is not a supernatural being, even jesus once got angry in the temple at Jerusalem.

    Oliech's mum has all rights to talk about soccer management in this country coz she's a stake holder; she's given birth and raised all her children against a background full of challenges. Just remeber when Oliech's brother, a brillinat footballer of the 90's steve Okumu died in the United States, who among the soccer managers helped to bring the body back home if really you value soccer players and their rights as any other employees in this country?! You are driving sports men into temptations, no wonder we have lots of them in Kamiti today.

    If you think you will make it through Education, fine! work hard, but some of us our parents cannot afford this rich man's education system, so what are we left with to explore if not our talents? Not that we don't have brains turn, read and understand the several pages of books.
    We are clever that's why we can curve freekicks, isn't that ojives, mathematics?
    Denno shikisha we will park grounds to genuinely celebrate your victory.
    biGtOTO!
    Korogocho slums.

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  6. you know is it so funny this article...kenyas are the fakest ever...first of all i dont think anyone shuld blame this guy...to see one of our own is very uplifting you know...i mean he has to imporve his attitude but who are we to judge the guy when our own government stinks with so m uch corruption.......please.....i agree the kenyan celeb culture is fake and not good for younmg people....it gets to their heads....but his mom has the right to lecture the soccer governemnt ...infact anyone has the right to lecture it in seeing the current state of the kenya football federation...we as africans have a gift of natural sporting ability and we should encourage our youth to play the beatiful game....but when you have a check given to the coach and it bounces....that shows u how we treat sports...the west africans have realised this..but anyway i tedn to blame our governemnt for everything these days...if they were more organized then these ghetto areas would have a better living condition ...not everyone has the money to achieve good education and sports is what elevates us...let us please respect the game

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  7. Don't look down on him everyone...

    In order to be a world renowned star, he's got to improve the way he thinks but Dennis is talented and no one can deny that!

    The best way is to get to the root of the problem and things may change for the better!

    May god bless him and his family. Things will change...have faith.

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