Education
Born in Nairobi, Odumbe attended Doctor Aggrey Primary School and Upper Hill secondary school, where the right-handed batsman and right-arm offbreak bowler showed aptitude for cricket.
Born in Nairobi, Odumbe attended Doctor Aggrey Primary School and Upper Hill secondary school, where the right-handed batsman and right-arm offbreak bowler showed aptitude for cricket.
Early Playing Odumbe made his first-class debut in 1998 when Kenya played the touring England A side, making 16 and taking 0/29, and continued to play well for his local Nairobi side, the Aga Khan club In March 2004, Odumbe was investigated by the International Cricket Council following allegations of possible match-fixing and was found guilty in August 2004 of receiving money from bookmakers and banned from cricket for five years. While commentators at the time believed that the suspension would end his career, Odumbe has stated that he plans to return to cricket once the suspension ends.
Odumbe has played 61 ODI matches, scoring 1409 runs at 26.09 and taking 39 wickets at 46.33, and 17 first-class matches, scoring 894 runs at 34.34 and taking 40 wickets at 19.55.
Later Odumbe has been heavily involved in fundraising for shelters for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome orphans, as well as presenting a weekly radio sports programme and appearing in a number of television commercials. He was also planning to release a song and stood as a candidate for the National Democratic Development Union in the Kenyan general election of 2007.
He returned to competitive cricket at domestic level in August 2009, aged 40.
Odumbe made his debut for Kenya on 4 June 1990 against gladesh at Amstelveen at the Interstate Commerce Commission Trophy, scoring 41 and taking 1/26, and had become one of their leading players by Kenya"s One Day International (ODI) debut at the 1996 Cricket World Cup. Odumbe won the Manitoba of the Match Award in one of cricket"s biggest shocks, taking 3 for 14 in Kenya"s win over West Indies. Odumbe was appointed national captain prior to the 1999 Cricket World Cup, winning a Manitoba of the Match award against Sri Lanka for his 82 off 95 deliveries. Passed over for captaincy for Steve Tikolo for the 2003 Cricket World Cup, Odumbe played well as Kenya made the semi-finals, and in the following year he hit a career best first-class score of 207 against the Leeward Islands.