Victor Wanyama

Victor Wanyama
Victor Wanyama.jpg
Wanyama training with Celtic in 2012
Personal information
Full nameVictor Mugubi Wanyama[1]
Date of birth 25 June 1991 (age 24)[1]
Place of birthNairobi, Kenya
Height1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)[2]
Playing positionDefensive midfielder
Club information
Current team
Southampton
Number12
Youth career
2006–2008JMJ Youth Academy
2006Nairobi City Stars
2006–2007AFC Leopards
2007–2008Helsingborg
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
2008–2011Beerschot51(2)
2011–2013Celtic61(10)
2013–Southampton80(4)
National team
2007–Kenya42(4)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 9 April 2016.
† Appearances (goals)
‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 29 May 2016


Victor Mugubi Wanyama (Kenyan English[ˈvɪktɜr muˈɡubiː wɑˈɲɑːmɑ]; born 25 June 1991) is a Kenyan professional footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder for English club Southampton and captains the Kenya national team.[3] On the field, Wanyama is known for his sportsmanship and leadership qualities.[3]
Wanyama became the first ever Kenyan player to score in the UEFA Champions League when he scored the first goal in Celtic's 2–1 win over Barcelona on 7 November 2012.[4] On 11 July 2013, Wanyama moved to Premier League club Southampton for £12.5 million making him the most expensive player sold by a Scottish club, surpassing the £9.5 million Russian club Spartak Moscow paid for Aiden McGeady in 2010.[5]
He has earned over 30 caps for the Kenyan national team since making his international debut in May 2007 at the age of 15.

Contents

Early life

Wanyama attended Kamukunji High School, which fields a successful football team. Upon leaving High School, he also played with JMJ Academy for three years during which time he also joined Kenyan Premier League clubs Nairobi City Stars and AFC Leopards.[6] In 2007 he joined Allsvenskan club Helsingborg but after the departure of his brother McDonald Mariga to Serie A side Parma in 2008, Wanyama returned to Kenya.

Club career

Beerschot AC

After a successful trial, Wanyama signed for Beerschot AC on a four-year contract in summer 2008. He made his debut in a League match at the end of the 2008–09 season. In September 2009, he was fined €100 and given a three-match suspension for a violent tackle on Matias Suarez of Anderlecht.[7]
In the summer of 2010 Scottish Premier League club Celtic attempted to sign Wanyama but Beerschot did not allow him to leave. Russian club CSKA Moscow also attempted to sign him, but they failed as well.[8]
Wanyama scored his first goal for Beerschot on 11 December 2010, a 77th-minute equaliser against Westerlo. In April 2011, he received another three match suspension after video evidence showed he had elbowed Brecht Dejaeghere of K.V. Kortrijk.[9]

Celtic

Wanyama playing for Celtic in 2012
On 9 July 2011, Wanyama finally completed a £900,000 move to Celtic from Beerschot AC, after the Scottish club had failed to sign him the previous year.[10][11] He signed a four-year contract and in doing so became the first ever Kenyan to play in the SPL. Wanyama chose 67 as his squad number to honour the Lisbon Lions, Celtic's 1967 European Cup winning team.[12][13] Wanyama made his Celtic league debut in a 1–0 loss to St Johnstone on 21 August 2011. He played in central defence rather than his favoured central midfield role.[14] He came on as a late substitute in a 4–0 win over Motherwell,[15] and played for the whole second half in a 2–0 League Cup win over Ross County.[16] On 29 September 2011, he started in Celtic's 1–1 draw with Italian team Udinese in the Europa League. This was his first European match for the club.[17] On 10 December 2011, Wanyama scored his first goal for Celtic in a 1–0 win over Hearts at Celtic Park, a tremendous 25-yard strike which hit the top corner.[18] His performances during December earned him the Scottish Premier League young player of the month award.[19] He scored his second Celtic goal on 2 January 2012 in a 3–0 win against Dunfermline at East End Park.[20] Wanyama scored in Celtic's 2–1 win against Dundee United at Celtic Park[21] and in the 4–0 victory against Hearts at Tynecastle.[22]
In October 2012, Wanyama scored twice against St Mirren at Saint Mirren Park, the second of which was a half volley from 25 yards out.[23]
On 25 October 2012, Wanyama's agent released a statement saying that he had turned down an improved contract offer from Celtic, stating that his wage demands could not be met by the club amid speculation of interest from clubs in England.[24] On 7 November, Wanyama opened the scoring with a powerful header as Celtic shocked Barcelona in the Champions League group stage, by beating them 2–1 at Celtic Park.[25]

Southampton

Wanyama with Southampton in September 2014
After much speculation and a previous breakdown in talks, on 11 July 2013, Wanyama signed for Premier League side Southampton for a fee claimed to be £12.5 million,[26] making him the first Kenyan to ever play in the Premier League.[27]
Wanyama said:
He made his debut on 17 August 2013, in 1–0 away win against West Bromwich Albion.[28] Wanyama made 24 appearances in his first season, but injuries hindered his efforts to make much of an impact in the team.[29]
Under new manager Ronald Koeman, Wanyama came into his own in the 2014–15 season.[30] He scored his first goal for the club in a 1–0 league victory over Swansea City at the Liberty Stadium on 20 September 2014, after replacing James Ward-Prowse in the 69th minute.[31] His next goal came in an 8–0 trouncing of Sunderland on 19 October 2014.[32] Wanyama would score his third goal for the Saints in spectacular fashion, a 40-yard shot after Eldin Jakupović's poor clearance fell straight to him, in what proved to be the only goal in a win over Hull City.[33] His performances saw him awarded the league's African Player of the Month for September,[30] with him stating "It is wonderful being recognised as someone who has done well for his club."[30]

International career

Wanyama made his debut for the Kenyan national team in May 2007, aged just 15 in a friendly against Nigeria.[6] He also played in all six of Kenya's 2010 FIFA World Cup qualifiers. He became the captain of his national team in 2013.

International goals

As of match played 29 May 2016. Kenya score listed first, score column indicates score after each Wanyama goal.[34]
International goals by date, venue, cap, opponent, score, result and competition
No.DateVenueCapOpponentScoreResultCompetition
126 March 2011Nyayo National Stadium, Nairobi, Kenya11 Angola2–12–12012 Africa Cup of Nations qualification
215 November 2011Nyayo National Stadium, Nairobi, Kenya18 Seychelles4–04–02014 FIFA World Cup qualification
37 June 2015Stade Amahoro, Kigali, Rwanda34 South Sudan1–02–0Friendly
429 May 2016Moi International Sports Centre, Nairobi, Kenya42 Tanzania1–11–1Friendly

Career statistics

As of 9 April 2016[35][36]
ClubSeasonLeagueCupLeague CupEuropeTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Beerschot AC2008–091010
2009–1020010210
2010–1130240342
Total51250562
Celtic
2011–12294404050424
2012–133265120102499
Total611091601529113
Southampton
2013–142301000240
2014–153232040383
2015–16251200030301
Total804504030924
Career Total1941617110018223919

Honours

Club

Celtic

Individual

Personal life

Wanyama comes from a very sporting family. His brother McDonald Mariga is also a professional footballer,[37][38] while his other brothers Thomas and Sylvester Wanyama are also footballers in the Kenyan Premier League. His father, Noah Wanyama, was a footballer for A.F.C. Leopards in the 1980s,[39] and his sister Mercy is a professional basketball player in the USA.[40]
Wanyama is managed by ExtraTime[41] and has a boot sponsorship deal with Nike.[41]
In 2015, Wanyama participated in the production of a short film about soccer in Kenya called Mdudu Boy, written and directed by actress Ella Smith. [42]


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