'Mashemeji Derby' Champions League Final Puts Kenya On The Map
31st May 2019
Liverpool showdown with English rivals Tottenham has excited the football mad East African nation that hopes Divock Origi and Victor Wanyama will play a key role

- Liverpool striker Divock Origi and Tottenham Hotspur's Victor Wanyama are the talk of Kenya ahead of Saturday's European Champions League final in Madrid
- In football-mad Kenya, a nation of 50 million in East Africa, there is hope the two athletes can shine a positive spotlight on it as fans relish the prospect of a key Kenyan role, even if Origi is Belgian born
- While Kenyan fans already have the feast of the Africa Cup on Nations to look forwards to in June the Champions League final is dividing opinion on the training ground at Nairobi club Ligi Ndogo
NAIROBI, Kenya-
Liverpool striker Divock Origi and Tottenham Hotspur's Victor Wanyama are the
talk of Kenya ahead of Saturday's European Champions League final in Madrid.
In football-mad
Kenya, a nation of 50 million in East Africa, there is hope the two athletes
can shine a positive spotlight on it as fans relish the prospect of a key
Kenyan role, even if Origi is Belgian born.
While Kenyan fans
already have the feast of the Africa Cup on Nations to look forwards to in June
the Champions League final is dividing opinion on the training ground at
Nairobi club Ligi Ndogo.
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"This is the
first time two players of Kenyan origin will take part in a Champion's League
final," says 28-year-old youth coach Kenneth Amolo.
"Wanyama and
Origi will represent Kenya on the world stage, it's great."
Another youth coach
taking a break from action, Lawrence Omondi, tells AFP he'll be supporting
Spurs.
"Wanyama is the
captain of our national side, and he is our best player, so we have to back
him."
"We have to
back the captain of the national side, right," he insisted of Wanyama, a
role-model who won his first Kenya full international cap at 15.
Wanyama is a solid
central midfielder but is also the first Kenyan to score in the European
Champions League back when he starred for Celtic, netting in an unforgettable
win over Barcelona.
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The stocky Wanyama
has only started 13 Premier League games this season but has turned out six
times so far in the Champions League and is highly thought of by the Spurs
faithful.
Origi, for his part,
has already made a huge Champions League impact at Anfield, scoring two goals
in Liverpool's sensational comeback against Barcelona in this year's
semi-final.
And while Origi, who
transferred from Lille to Liverpool in 2014, plays for Belgium, he also enjoys
huge support in Kenya as the son of a former Kenya football captain Mike Okoth.
His dad is famous
for making the unusual transition from 'keeper to striker in a lengthy career
for Kenya.
"He was born
and bred in Belgium, but he still has a link with Kenya," says Austin Oduor,
Origi's uncle and himself a former Kenya international.
"He comes here
regularly and he speaks good Swahili," he added of the language that along
with English is the nation's official tongue.
The pair also
represent different ethnic groups in a highly diverse nation.
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"Origi from a
Luo family, and Wanyama from a Luhya family," says sports journalist Elias
Makori.
These two ethnic
groups are historically associated with football in Kenya, with the Luo
and Luhya supporting rival clubs, Gor Mahia and AFC Leopards respectively.
The Champions League
final has even been renamed the "Mashemeji derby" by Kenyans in
reference to the derby between those two clubs.
"Previously
people have been saying the Champions League is a tournament for foreign
players, but now it is coming closer to home," said Makori.