The Late Lamin Manneh Memorial Tournament sponsored by Jean and Biram Manneh ended on Sunday at Lamin Village with Out Law Boyz out-clashing Bakau Youths by 2 goals to nil.
Jim Hadim nodded in the opener midway into the game after receiving a cross from team mate Ramis Colley and beating pass his maker by header the ball in between the open hands of Bakau Youths goalkeeper Yaya Sidibeh.
The Bakau Youths were not to be cowed by the goal and noise emanating from the crowd of the Lamin Out Law Boyz supporters as they surged forward for an equaliser on numerous occasions only for defender Pa Alieu Mboge to quell every attack of theirs.
As tension was mounting from the attacks and counter attacks by both teams, tempers flared up only for 18 players to remain in the game at the end of the last whistle, after both teams lost two players due to unsporting behaviour with the always smiling referee Noah Manneh stamping his authority at each given time.
Barely five minutes to the end of the game, the provider of the first goal, Ramis Colley, blasted in a left-footed cracker to bring the curtain down and earn his team the much-needed victory in the first ever Lamin Manneh Memorial Tournament which the organisers vow to hold annually.
The Late Lamin Manneh who was the bread winner after the death of his father in October last year was in his mid twenties before he met his untimely death in a tragic car accident along the Coastal Road on May 22, 2008.
He was the son of the late Dodou Manneh and Sirreh Bojang, sister to the GFA secretary general Jammeh EK Bojang who was one of the dignitaries to grace the occasion. Jean Manneh, who organised the event, thanked all those who contributed in one way or the other to make the tournament a success. She extolled the unflinching support of his brother in the UK, David Trylen, who sponsored the Trophy and Medals as well as Yaya Manneh, who co-ordinated the whole tournament.