Even in a game K’Ogalo largely controlled, that lightning-fast equalizer, just a minute after Jackson Duang’s 21st-minute opener, briefly shifted belief. Shabana walked into halftime with heads held high, convinced they were scripting an upset, as if the Pharaoh had momentarily defied destiny.
But football, like folklore, has its turning points.
The second half felt symbolic, wave after wave of pressure from K’Ogalo, relentless and suffocating. The “nine plagues” had been unleashed on the Tore Bobe faithful, and yet, one decisive moment still lingered in the air. Then came the tenth.
Alpha Onyango.
In the 78th minute, a corner kick presented itself, an opportunity wrapped in tension. Jackson Dwang stepped up, calm yet purposeful, as if guided by something greater.
Inside the box, it was chaos. Shabana’s defense scrambled, marking everything in green, players, space, even shadows, yet missing the one movement that mattered most.
And Alpha? He wasn’t just playing; he was calculating.
With perfect timing, he peeled away from his marker and ghosted toward the near right side of the goal. The delivery from Dwang looked harmless at first, short, almost underhit, but that was the deception.
In the blink of an eye, the ball was flicked, an instinctive, almost improvised touch in a sea of bodies. Whether by design or brilliance, it found Alpha in exactly the right space.
The net rippled. For a split second, confusion. Then, eruption.
Shabana defenders stood frozen, unsure of what had just unfolded. K’Ogalo players, meanwhile, were already wheeling away in celebration. A goal born out of intelligence, movement, and pure audacity.
Alpha Onyango. What a name. What a moment.
