Football Star JAY JAY OKOCHA Biography
|FULL NAME:
Augustine Azuka Okocha
DATE OF BIRTH: 14 August 1973
OCCUPATION: Athlete: Ex Footballer.
MARITAL STATUS:
Married
INTRODUCTION
Okocha is a Nigerian former professional footballer.
He is widely regarded as the best Nigerian player of his generation. He
is also known for his stepovers, skill, technique, and being ‘so good
that they named him twice’ (a line immortalised in a terrace chant while
Okocha played for Bolton Wanderers). He is a dual Nigerian-Turkish citizen, having acquired Turkish citizenship as “Muhammet Yavuz” while playing for Süper Lig team Fenerbahçe.
EARLY LIFE AND BACKGROUND
Okocha was born in Enugu, Enugu State.
His parents were from Ogwashi-Uku, Delta State, Nigeria. The name
Jay-Jay was actually passed down from his older brother James, who
started playing football first. His immediate older brother Emmanuel was
also called Emma Jay-jay, but the name stuck with Okocha. He began
playing football on the street just like many other football stars,
usually with a makeshift ball.
In an interview with BBC Sport
he said “as far as I can remember, we used to play with anything, with
any round thing we could find, and whenever we managed to get hold of a
ball, that was a bonus! I mean it was amazing!” In 1990, he joined Enugu Rangers.
In his time at the club he produced many spectacular displays including
one where he rounded off and scored a goal, against experienced
Nigerian goalkeeper William Okpara in a match against BCC Lions. Later that year, he went on holiday to West Germany, the country that had just won the 1990 FIFA World Cup, so he could watch German league football. His friend Binebi Numa was playing in the Third Divison for Borussia Neunkirchen,
and one morning Okocha accompanied Numa to training, where he asked to
join in. The Neunkirchen coach was impressed with Okocha’s skills and
invited him back the next day before offering him a contract. A year later, he joined 1. FC Saarbrücken, but stayed only a few months with the 2. Bundesliga side before a move to the 1. Bundesliga with Eintracht Frankfurt.
CAREER AND LIFE
Okocha joined Eintracht Frankfurt in December 1991, where he linked
up with many well-known players including Ghanaian international striker
Tony Yeboah and later Thomas Doll. He continued to shine for the German side, one highlight being a goal he scored against Karlsruhe, dribbling in the penalty box and slotting the ball past goalkeeper Oliver Kahn even going past some players twice. The goal was voted Goal of the Season by many soccer magazines, and also voted as 1993 Goal of the Year by viewers of Sportschau (an ARD German TV sports program). In 1995, Okocha, Yeboah and Maurizio Gaudino were all involved in a feud with manager Jupp Heynckes, which led to their departure from the club.
Yeboah and Gaudino later left for England, while Okocha stayed until
the end of the season when Frankfurt were relegated to the 2.
Bundesliga, before signing for Istanbul club Fenerbahçe.
Okocha joined Turkish club Fenerbahçe for approximately £1 million
following Eintracht Frankfurt’s relegation to the 2. Bundesliga.
In his two seasons with the team, he amassed 30 goals in 60
appearances, many of them coming from direct free kicks, which became
something of a trademark for him at the club. While at Fenerbahçe, he also became a Turkish citizen as “Muhammet Yavuz”.
In 1998, French side Paris Saint-Germain spent around £14 million on Okocha,
making him the most expensive African player at the time. During his
four-year stint with PSG, he played 84 matches and scored 12 goals. He
has also served as a mentor, at the time, for young Brazilian footballer
Ronaldinho during his time in Paris.
Okocha joined Bolton Wanderers on a free transfer after leaving PSG in the summer of 2002 after the FIFA World Cup.
His debut season, despite being hampered by injury, made him a
favourite with the Bolton fans, with the team printing shirts with the
inscription “Jay-Jay – so good they named him twice”. He steered the
team away from relegation with seven goals, including the team Goal of
the Season in the vital league win against West Ham United. This was voted Bolton’s best Premier League goal in a fans vote in 2008. The next season saw Okocha receive more responsibility as he was given the captain’s armband following Guðni Bergsson’s retirement. As captain he led Bolton to their first cup final in nine years where they finished runners-up in the 2004 Football League Cup.
In 2006, he was stripped of the captaincy – something he said he had
seen coming, as there had been a change in attitude from some staff
members. This had probably been due to his proposed move to the Middle
East, which had been growing in speculation. At the end of the season,
he refused a one-year extension in order to move to Qatar.
Following Bolton’s relegation from the Premier League in 2012, Okocha
stated that his time at the club was a waste of time, saying the club
had not improved since his time there
After just one season in Qatar, Football League Championship side Hull City signed Okocha on a free transfer in 2007, after the player had been linked to Real Salt Lake and Sydney FC.
It was a move he made saying that “God had told him to do so”. He
however was not able to contribute greatly to Hull’s promotion campaign
due to fitness and constant injury problems, playing only 18 games and
scoring no goals. Hull still succeeded in grabbing promotion to the Premier League,
for the first time in their 104-year history. At the end of the season,
after changing his mind on a proposed retirement due to Hull’s
promotion, he was released by the club, which sent him into retirement.
On 21 February 2015, Okocha was elected as the Chairman of the Delta State Football Association.
In April 2015, Okocha expressed his interest in becoming the Nigeria Football Federation president; and he is vigorously pursuing it.
Okocha made his official debut for Nigeria in their 2–1 1994 FIFA World Cup Qualifier away loss against Ivory Coast
in May 1993.It was not until his second cap and home debut that he
became a favourite with the Nigerian supporters. With Nigeria trailing
1–0 against Algeria,
in a match they needed to win, he scored from a direct free kick to
equalise, before helping the team to a 4–1 win, eventually securing
qualification to their first World Cup. In 1994, he was a member of both
the victorious 1994 African Cup of Nations squad and the World Cup squad who made it to the second round before they lost in a dramatic match against eventual runners-up Italy.
In 1996, Okocha became a member of an arguably more successful Nigerian side, their Olympic gold winning side at the Atlanta Games, later nicknamed Dream Team by the Nigerian press after the USA 1992 Olympic gold winning basketball team. In the 1998 FIFA World Cup
hosted by France, Okocha played for a disappointing Super Eagles side
who failed to live up to expectations again reaching the round of 16,
albeit with less impressive performances save for their 3–2 opening win
against Spain.
This did not destroy interest in Okocha, who had entertained fans with
his trademark skills and dribbles and went on to be named in the squad
of the tournament.
Okocha again joined the Super Eagles in the 2000 African Cup of Nations co-hosted with Ghana. He scored three goals in the tournament, two in the opening game against Tunisia, and a left-foot blast from outside the penalty area into the top corner in the final against Cameroon,
which equalized the score 2–2 and ultimately would send the match into
extra time. There was no change in the score during the supplement, so
the winner was decided on penalties; Okocha converted his shot but
Nigeria lost the shootout to earn the silver medal.
After a disappointing Nations Cup in 2002 where Nigeria ended up finishing third, Okocha was named Nigeria captain after Sunday Oliseh and Finidi George were axed from the side. His first tournament as captain came that summer in the 2002 World Cup co-hosted by Korea and Japan. Playing in Group E, the ‘group of the death’ alongside Argentina, Sweden and England, Nigeria failed to make it to the next round gaining only one point in their final game, a goalless draw against England.
Okocha later led the Nigerian team to a third-place finish at the 2004 African Nations Cup in Tunisia,
with some breathtaking displays, scoring four goals which include a
spectacular free kick against Cameroon in the quarter finals and most
notably the 1000th goal in Nations Cup history against South Africa, and winning the Player of the tournament and joint Golden boot winner.
After failing to help Nigeria qualify for the 2006 World Cup, Okocha
announced that he would retire from international scene after the Cup of Nations in Egypt.
Injury prevented Okocha from featuring in any of Nigeria’s opening
fixtures and he did not regain fitness until the semi final loss against
Ivory Coast. He then played in his final international appearance in a
2–1 victory in a third place playoff against Senegal, he was then given a standing ovation by the nearly 60,000 attendance when he left the field.
He made a return to the Super Eagles in his testimonial against an African select side in Warri. The game featured former players Daniel Amokachi, Alloysius Agu and John Fashanu, as well as current players Benjani and Sulley Muntari. Nigeria won the game 2–1 with Okocha scoring the winning goal after appearing for the side in the second half.
In March 2004, he was named among the top 125 living footballers by Pelé.
His older brother Emmanuel was also a former international for the Nigerian team. Okocha is also a member of the Anioma, a subgroup of Igboethnic group. Jay Jay lives in west Lagos, Nigeria. He has a house within walking distance of fellow Nigerian football star Nwankwo Kanu.
AWARDS
Okocha never won the African Player of Year award, becoming arguably
the best player never to win the award despite coming second twice in
1998. He did however win the inaugural BBC African Footballer of the
Year and the successive one, becoming the only player to retain the
award and win it more than once. In 2004 he was listed in football
legend Pelé’s
FIFA 100 (a list of the greatest 125 living players of all time). In
2007 he was voted number 12 on the greatest African footballers of the
past 50 years list, on a poll conducted by CAF to coincide with their
50th anniversary.
- 1995, 1997, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 Nigerian footballer of the year
- 1996 Nigerian footballer of the year runner up
- 1998 African Footballer of the Year runner up
- 1998 FIFA World Cup All-Star Team (Reserve)
- 2003, 2004 BBC African Footballer of the Year
- April 2003 Goal of the Month (England)
- November 2003 Premier League Player of the Month
- 2005 Bolton Wanderers footballer of the year
- FIFA 100
RUMORS AND SCANDALS
No real scandal.
Okocha and family |