kaka2za wrote:This is a problem with sports and it's global and not limited to Kenya. The main issue is that money and fame come a bit to early and sportsmen usually retire in mid-thirties when their contemporaries in other professionals are just taking off. Blacks fare much worse because they often come from tough backgrounds and they are unable to handle the thrills that come with money and fame.
Many retired boxing champions are languishing in debt in USA and some have attempted ill advised comebacks to try and end their penury.
A player known as Djemba Djemba had more than 25 bank accounts but was later so broke he could not even move out of UK .In Nigeria,Rashid Yekini was a nut case in the later stages of his life and spent his time loitering barefoot in the streets of Ibadan.
You are not listening to what we are saying.
If a motherf***er was earning 1 million a month and spent it in Karumaindo, no one would give a damn.
But we are talking about Kenyan sportsmen who were used and abused and later used....as tissue by the so called "officials"
It is sad, very sad, that we allow waste to happen.
All we do is make "suspects" presidents, recycle "old men", elect "bling bling malayas", and put them on a pedestal.
This story in Kenya is sad.
If you love your country. Sacrifice your talents. Do right for the common Kenyan.
We shall f*** YOU!
Then the rest of us can call others "kiash". The story here is that
There is no good that comes out of doing something good for Kenya. Infact, we shall make sure that you are as broke as Peter Dawo to prove a point.
This is Kenya @50
Jose: If I make it through this thug life, I'll see you one day. The Lord is the only way to stop the hurt.