• Nigeria's legend dies at 54

    Stephen Keshi at the 2013 Afcon where he led Nigeria to victory. PHOTO/Amani Media
    Stephen Keshi at the Afcon Whrer he Led Nigeria to Victory. 
    Photo/Amani media 
     
    Nigeria 2013 Afcon winning and 2014 World Cup coach and iconic former captain Stephen Okechukwu Keshi has suddenly died at 54, his family announced.
    Emmanuel Ado a brother to the late coach told Nigeria’s Premium Times the revered Super Eagles captain died of Cardiac arrest in the early hours of Wednesday, June 8.
    “With thanksgiving to God, the Ogbuenyi Fredrick Keshi family of Illah in Oshimili North Local Government Area of Delta State announces the death of Mr. Stephen Okechukwu Chinedu Keshi,” Mr. Ado said in a statement.
    He continued “Our son, brother, father, father-in-law, brother-in-law, has gone to be with his wife of 35 years (Nkem ), Mrs. Kate Keshi, who passed on on the 9th December 2015.
    “Since her death, Keshi has been in mourning. He came back to Nigeria to be with her. He had planned to fly back today Wednesday, before he suffered a cardiac arrest. He has found rest.”
    Though deeply mourning the shock exit, Mr. Ado said the family remained grateful to God for the life spent by the Big Boss.
    Keshi had lost his wife of 35 years, Kate, to cancer last December.
    Keshi, popularly called the Big Boss, is the only Nigerian coach to have won the Africa Cup of Nations.
    He also became the second person in history to win the competition as a player and as a coach after Mahmoud El-Gohary of Egypt when he led the Super Eagles to win the tournament in 2013 in Johannesburg, South Africa.
    He rose to national prominence when debuted for the Super Eagles in 1981 at age 20. The late Central Defender withdrew from the national team in 1994. He had 64 caps and scored nine goals.
    As coach, he qualified an unlikely Togolese national team for the 2006 World Cup in Germany but was sacked and replaced with German Otto Pfister, just before the tournament.
    He however, achieved his dream to manage a team at the World Cup when he coached the Super Eagles side to the tournament in 2014.
    He is the fifth member of the glorious 1994 Super Eagles team to die, after Uche Okafor, Thompson Oliha, Rashidi Yekini and Wilfred Agbonavbare.
    He is survived by four children and his mother.
    Report by Premium Times/Nigeria
    Curtesy of citizen digital.
     
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