- Mohamed Abdelwahab
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Mohamed Abdelwahab Personal information Date of birth October 1, 1983 Place of birth Faiyum, Egypt Date of death August 31, 2006 (aged 23)Playing position Left back Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† Aluminium Nag Hammâdi Al-Zafra ENPPI El-Ahly National team 2004–2006 Egypt 13 (1) * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. † Appearances (Goals). Mohamed Abdelwahab (October 1, 1983 – August 31, 2006) was an Egyptian footballer. He played in the defensive left back position. He was an important part of the Egyptian squad that went on to win the 2006 African Cup of Nations. He died during training with his club El Ahly on 31 August 2006.
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Early life and career
Abdelwahab was born in the rural town of Faiyum. He began his professional career with Aluminium Nag Hammâdi and whilst there caught the eye of then national youth team coach Hassan Shehata, who included him in his squad. Abdelwahab went on to be part of the Egyptian youth team that won the 2003 African Cup of Nations in Mali.
His excellent form in the World Youth Championship in the United Arab Emirates encouraged UAE side Al-Zafra to sign him on a four-year-contract. However, Abdelwahab did not make any appearances at Al-Zafra and spent his first year on-loan to ENPPI. Whilst there, he was called up to the Egyptian national team by Italian coach Marco Tardelli. Abdelwahab scored on his debut in the national team's opening 2006 World Cup qualifier against Sudan.
He then joined El Ahly on a two-year loan but failed to secure a starting place in his first season with the club since coach Manuel José depended mainly on Angolan international Gilberto. Abdelwahab's break came in the 2005 African Champions League final against Etoile Sahel of Tunisia when Gilberto left the pitch injured after ten minutes. Abdelwahab was brought on and went on to set up Osama Hosny for El-Ahly's second goal in the 3-0 win that saw the club crowned African champions.
Abdelwahab became a pivotal member of Hassan Shehata's national squad and helped Egypt win the 2006 African Cup of Nations on home soil by scoring the second penalty in the penalty shootout against Côte d'Ivoire. His steady performances helped Al Ahly secure their second consecutive local title, the Egyptian Cup and CAF Super Cup in the same season.
Ahly then moved to land Abdelwahab on a permanent basis from Al-Zafra, who turned down the offer. However, a clause in the player's contract with the UAE side allowed him to annul it and sign for Ahly, triggering a tug-of-war between Ahly and Al-Zafra and leaving the player inactive for the entire summer, causing him to lose his place in the national side. FIFA had still not determined the outcome of the disagreement when he died on August 31, 2006.
Death
Abdelwahab collapsed during Ahly's morning training session on 31 August 2006. He was rushed to 'Egypt International Hospital' in Dokki, Cairo, but the 23-year-old winger died before he could be revived. According to Egyptian doctors, the cause of Abdelwhab's death was a heart defect.[1] National coach Hassan Shehata and the players traveled to Abdelwahab's hometown, Faiyum, to attend the funeral proceedings. His #3 jersey was retired.
References
- ^ Shaheen, Amr (August 21, 2006). "Heart defect kills Egypt defender". BBC Sport. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/africa/5301282.stm. Retrieved October 3, 2006.
External links
- Mohamed Abdelwahab at National-Football-Teams.com
- Mohamed Abdelwahab – FIFA competition record
- CAF announcement of death
Egypt squad – 2006 Africa Cup of Nations Winners (5th title) 1 El-Hadary • 2 A. El-Sayed • 3 Abdelwahab • 4 Said • 5 El-Saqua • 6 Mostafa • 7 Fathy • 8 Eno • 9 H. Hassan (c) • 10 Moteab • 11 Shawky • 12 Barakat • 13 T. El-Sayed • 14 Ali • 15 Mido • 16 Abdel Wahed • 17 A. Hassan • 18 Sabry • 19 Zaki • 20 Gomaa • 21 Abdel Malek • 22 Aboutrika • 23 Abdel Monsef • Coach: ShehataCategories:- 1983 births
- 2006 deaths
- Egyptian footballers
- Association football defenders
- Egypt international footballers
- Al-Ahly S.C. players
- Association football players who died while playing
- Sport deaths in Egypt
- Cardiovascular disease deaths in Egypt
- People from Faiyum
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