Freddie998
JF-Expert Member
- Apr 13, 2018
- 675
- 370
Borussia Dortmund
captain Marco Reus is
increasingly becom-
ing famous in Kenya
and Tanzania as he
continues to don
Puma boots with the
Swahili phrase ‘Hakuna Matata’
on them. The German midfielder
first showed off his orange New
Levels Future Puma boots last
month, sparking a string of reac-
tions from both Kenya and Tanza-
nia with each claiming the phrase.
Reus donned the boots again
(white and green in colour this
time) during last Saturday’s Der
Klassiker ‘German Clasico’ against
Bayern Munich which Dortmund
won 3-2. The boots seem to be a
good omen for Reus as he netted
a brace against bitter rivals Bayern
when Dortmund came from two
goals down to win the five-goal
thriller at Signal Iduna Park to
open a seven-point lead over the
Bavarian giants. Dortmund have
been uploading photos of the
boots on their Twitter handle
to the delight of excited fans
from the two East African
nations. "The phrase which
translates to ‘no worries’ has
largely and popularly been
used by tourists in Kenya." How
about that? Asante Marco!
captain Marco Reus is
increasingly becom-
ing famous in Kenya
and Tanzania as he
continues to don
Puma boots with the
Swahili phrase ‘Hakuna Matata’
on them. The German midfielder
first showed off his orange New
Levels Future Puma boots last
month, sparking a string of reac-
tions from both Kenya and Tanza-
nia with each claiming the phrase.
Reus donned the boots again
(white and green in colour this
time) during last Saturday’s Der
Klassiker ‘German Clasico’ against
Bayern Munich which Dortmund
won 3-2. The boots seem to be a
good omen for Reus as he netted
a brace against bitter rivals Bayern
when Dortmund came from two
goals down to win the five-goal
thriller at Signal Iduna Park to
open a seven-point lead over the
Bavarian giants. Dortmund have
been uploading photos of the
boots on their Twitter handle
to the delight of excited fans
from the two East African
nations. "The phrase which
translates to ‘no worries’ has
largely and popularly been
used by tourists in Kenya." How
about that? Asante Marco!