Satish Sekar

April 28, 2021

A Tragic Waste

African football has suffered more than its fair share of tragedies. April 28th will always be a difficult day for Zambians, as sixteen years ago on that day Zambian football awoke to the news that it had been dealt a crippling blow. The Zambian team, bar one of Africa’s greatest players, Kalusha Bwalya,[1] Johnson Bwalya and Anderlecht’s Charles ‘Charlie Cool’ Musonda, were killed in a plane crash in Gabon, shortly after leaving Gabon’s capital, Libreville.
April 28, 2021

Broken Promises

Imagine a national football team, say Spain in 2007, or England in 1965 that was tipped for great things, were killed in a plane crash before they achieved their potential. Now imagine successive governments over two decades promising to release the report of what happened and each of those governments broke their promises. And somehow, despite the tragedy, the players that replaced them reached the final the following year, losing narrowly.
April 8, 2021

The Beautiful Game and Ugly Regimes

Football and corruption seem constant bedfellows now, but, in fact, it dated back decades. The Federation of International Football Associations (FIFA) fell into disgrace in 2015 with the arrests and indictment of many officials, but the flaws were deep-rooted, and it wasn’t just about trousering riches.
March 25, 2021

Hero Footballers

Tonight Zambia take on Group H leaders, Algeria, in a vital qualification match – a must win for the Chipolopolo. The Desert Foxes are currently unbeaten in 22 matches – three years – under coach Djamel Belmadi. The venue is fitting – National Heroes Stadium.