Austin Odhiambo: The flame Kenya trusts to torch Angola

As Kenya braces for a high-stakes showdown against Angola on Thursday, Harambee Stars’ mercurial playmaker Austin Odhiambo has issued a fearless vow: to rise higher, strike bolder, and carry the weight of a nation on his shoulders once more.

After conquering DR Congo with a moment of magic, the young maestro has declared war on Angola in pursuit of CHAN 2024 glory.

His goal against DR Congo was the spark. He lit up Kasarani with a moment of magic—but Odhiambo reckons he is far from finished. Angola, he says, will feel the fire.

He didn’t just score—he stirred a nation. And now, with Angola looming like a stormcloud on Thursday, the dreadlocked fleet-footed Gor Mahia skipper has thrown down the gauntlet.

The fearless boy from Babadogo who lit up Kasarani with a stroke of genius has vowed to do more. To burn brighter. To strike harder. And to carry Kenya on his back once again.

Angola is no small mountain. But Odhiambo doesn’t deal in small things. Not anymore. After slicing through DR Congo with a goal spun from silk and steel, the Harambee Stars’ new heartbeat has turned his eyes to the next beast in the path—and made a promise few would dare whisper.

“I’m not done,” he says, calm as thunder before the crack. “There’s more in me, and Angola will feel it.”

That goal against Congo? Just the spark. The beginning of something raw and rising. And now, with forty million hearts pounding in rhythm with his boots, the midfield sorcerer is not just chasing a win. He’s chasing fire. He’s chasing immortality.

The Foot That Stirred a Nation

In the 45th minute of Kenya’s opening match, when nerves began to fray and Kasarani held its breath, Odhiambo carved space where none existed. A deft touch, a glance at goal, and a curling finish that arched like a stanza of song. The net danced. The crowd trembled. And somewhere in that rapture, Kenya remembered what it felt like to believe. “I’d seen it in my mind before I saw it on the pitch,” he said. “It was instinct and rhythm. It was a prayer answered.”

What followed was more than a celebration. It was communion. Strangers embraced. Flags became wings.

Angola awaits

Now comes a sterner test. Angola—compact, physical, ruthless—presents a different kind of storm. But Odhiambo, now cloaked in calm authority, refuses to blink.

“We’ve studied them. They’re organised and aggressive. But we’ll fight with intelligence and courage,” he said. “We play not just with our feet, but with our hearts. That’s something no opponent can prepare for.”

He believes Thursday’s clash will reveal Kenya’s truest character. “This is a test of identity. Of belief. We have something to prove—and we will.”

The McCarthy Renaissance

Behind the tactical elevation of Harambee Stars is head coach Benni McCarthy, whose arrival has turned doubt into discipline and potential into performance. “Coach Benni has changed everything,” said Odhiambo. “He teaches you to honour the shirt, not just wear it. He tells me, ‘Play your music, but let it speak for your people.’ That stuck with me.”

McCarthy has handed Odhiambo a creative license in midfield—freedom that has become fire. “He trusts me,” said the playmaker. “That’s everything. He’s made me fearless.”

Brotherhood beneath the crest

Odhiambo is quick to deflect praise toward his teammates, especially Alpha Onyango, his midfield partner.

“Alpha is the engine. He runs the hard miles, cleans up the chaos. Without him, I don’t shine,” he said. “We’re a team stitched together by sacrifice.”

He spoke of a team that eats, prays, and bleeds together. “This is more than football. This is family.”

A nation believes again

Since Sunday, Kenya has found its voice again. Social media sings his name. Young fans wear No. 10 shirts scrawled with chalk and marker pens. The streets echo with a renewed confidence.

“When I saw a girl in Dandora wearing my jersey, barefoot and beaming—I knew this isn’t about fame,” he said. “It’s about giving people a reason to smile, a reason to dream.”

#OdhiamboDelivers has become a digital anthem. But for Austin, the only chant that matters is the one sung from the stands when Kenya takes the field on Thursday.

A battle for supremacy

Both Kenya and Angola sit on three points in Group A, but Thursday’s contest may determine who finishes top, who takes control of destiny. “We’re not afraid of pressure,” Odhiambo said. “Pressure is proof that the people care. That we matter.”

With a place in the quarterfinals on the line, Odhiambo remains laser-focused.

 

by TONY MBALLA

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