Late Coach Shuaibu Amodu |
Just three days after the death of another Super Eagles (Nigerian senior national football team) coach, Stephen Keshi, another Super Eagles coach, Shuaibu Amodu, died in the early hours of Saturday, 11th June, 2016. The four-time coach of the Super Eagles was said to have complained of chest pains the night before and died in his sleep a He had driven himself in the afternoon of the day before to drop his friend with his car and so was expected to be in good health.
However, reports have emerged speculating what may have led to his death. of one of Nigeria’s prominent football coaches.
According to reports, one of his cousins, a legal practitioner identified as Ankari Afegbua who claimed to have been with him throughout Friday, said he believed Amodu died out of frustration as a result of outstanding debts being owed him by the Nigerian Football Federation (NFF) and the Edo state government. Speaking after the burial (the ex coach was buried on the same day according to Islamic rites) Afegbua had this to say: “Apart from that pain he said he had on his chest, he was okay only for us to wake him up this morning to do the normal fasting and he was met dead, I think he died out of frustration because his financial status was not okay. “He was complaining of not being paid and he was having difficulties to maintain himself and his immediate family. I think the purpose of his being in Benin was to put up a bill for his payment. He is being owed by NFF and the Edo state government.”
Afegbua went on to say Amodu must have known he was going to die soon, as the last conversation he had with him largely consisted of mentions of funeral rites of a proper Muslim: “While talking yesterday, he was talking about how a Muslim should live his or her life and how he should be buried. He is a true Muslim. He believed in Islamic faith and that is why we said we will not leave him in the mortuary because by Islamic faith, you are not expected to be embalmed or be put in the mortuary.” Also speaking exclusively to NAIJ.com, a colleague of the late coach Greg Ihenoba said Amodu probably would not have died now if he had money, adding that the late tactician is being owed for two years. “Just imagine, this man has not been paid for two years. He has been suffering. He has been doing everything to reach the governor of the state, but somehow, he got frustrated. “The governor and his people are yet to pay. If this man was paid half of what he was owed, he won’t have died. He was forced out of his house in GRA. He is my boss, I worked with him for two years and I am being owed as well.” Late Amodu is survived by his mother, his wife and seven children.
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