Tag: coaches

  • NFF to hire national coaches on part-time

    NFF to hire national coaches on part-time

    The Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) will now engage assistant coaches of the various national teams on part-time basis so as to lessen the financial burden the salaries of the coaches have caused them.

    A top official disclosed: “The assistant coaches will now be on part time, strictly for when there is a tournament concerning their respective teams.

    “They will therefore be free to work with the clubs when they are now with the national teams.

    “We have to be realistic, we have been paying many people for many years without doing anything and the financial obligation caused by just salaries of the coaches is just too huge.

    “There is one of the Eagles assistant coaches who has insisted he is owed over N18million from salaries and what have you over the years.”

    It was also revealed that one of the Eagles assistant coaches has not been paid for the past nine months.

    The NFF have already decided that developmental teams from U-17 downwards will no longer be entitled to match bonuses as they save on costs.

  • Serbian coaches likely

    •Developmental tacticians listed
    •To groom more stars at the grassroots
    •Next generation U-17; U-20 kids expected from the initiative

    There are strong indications that the next technical adviser for the Flying Eagles could be a Serbian, barring any last-minute changes by those mooting the team’s restructuring.

    SportingLife scooped that those scouting for European managers for the team are targeting goal-driven tacticians with strong pedigree for developmental football and a knack for grooming coaches at the grassroots.

    It was gathered further that the Serbians would be stationed at the grassroots areas in the country. They would be given the required logistics to tour the nooks and crannies of the country to set up camping points comprising known grassroots coaches in the states, whose target would be to fish out young but unknown players in primary and secondary schools in the 774 Local Government Areas (LGAs) in the country.

    The essence of recruiting these coaches is informed by the exemplarary templates fashioned out by the Serbia Football Federation (SFF) which have thrown up new stars for the country, culminating in Serbia winning the 2015 U-20 World Cup in New Zealand.

    It is expected that talents identified by these coaches would increase the pool from where the coaches could invite players for subsequent competitions that the country would be involved in.

    In the reckoning of those behind the intitiative, the next generation of U-17 and U-20 Nigerian sides to future World Cup competitions would be products of this deliberate policy which would also nip in the bud the issue of over-aged players, since the players would be fished out from the schools and their data secured in data banks.

  • BEWARANG DARES TAIWO: Name bribe-taking coaches

    BEWARANG DARES TAIWO: Name bribe-taking coaches

    The National President of The Nigeria Football Coaches’ Association, Bitrus Bewarang, has challenged Nigerians that have concrete evidence against any Nigerian national team coach that collected bribe before inviting players to the national camp to make such fact available now.

    Bewarang, who is the General Manager of Plateau United, said his association has decided to take those accusations very seriously, to, among other things, bring sanity to the profession in the country. Hear him: “These accusations are becoming many, and if nothing is done now, it would soon get out of hand. We are now challenging those making the accusations to come forward with their facts. They should make them available, and let us work on it. If not, such persons should keep their cool and should stop all the blackmail”.

    The former Super Eagles coach said he was pissed off by the recent accusation by a former national team defender, Taiye Taiwo, who said that he is not ready to bribe coaches to be invited to the national team.

    “Does it mean that Taiwo has been bribing his way to national teams all this while?”  Bewarang wondered. “If that is the case, he should be able to make available more facts on all these.”

    He continued: “And why is it now that he is not being invited that he is making such claims? This is a player who grew from the wings, and passed through many coaches, coming out to make such a statement. We are not taking it lightly, he should come up and substantiate his claims.”

    Bewarang did not fail to express his displeasure on how some of the national team coaches are appointed without any input from the Coaches’ Association, saying that although it is the duty of the NFF to employ whoever they want as the national team coach, they should request for the technical input of the Association before such appointments are made, because it is a “national assignment”, as such a Coach serves as the ambassador of the country whenever they go for international assignments.

     

  • Ex-footballers, coaches, referees pay Bazuaye last respects

    Ex-footballers, coaches, referees pay Bazuaye last respects

    THe Samuel Ogbemudia Stadium yesterday played host to the who is who in the Nigerian football family as they gathered to honour the late football coach, Willy Bazuaye, who died at the age of 79 years.

    The ceremony featured a novelty match in his honour between ex-footballers who played under him while he was the coach of New Nigeria Bank, Bendel United and other ex-footballers. It ended one goal apiece.

    There was, however, no representative from the National Sports Commission and National Coaches’ Association.

    The Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) was represented by its Technical Director, Coach Amodu Shaibu who lamented the treatment that was meted out to the late Bazuaye, a man he said brought honour and glory to Nigeria at a time the country’s image was at its lowest ebb.

    While donating the sum of five hundred thousand naira (N500,000) to the family on behalf the NFF, Shaibu said the late Bazuaye made much positive impact on the lives of many players in Nigeria, and deserved much more than what he saw at the stadium.

    On the part of the Edo State Government, the Commissioner for Sports, Comrade Presley Ediagbonya said Bazuaye was a worthy son of the state and would be honoured by the government at an appropriate time .

    While apologising to the deceased’s family for the inability of Governor Adams Oshiomhole to attend the lying-in-state at the stadium, Ediagbonya said the governor had arranged a package for the family that will be presented by Oshiomhole himself.

  • Coaches scramble for Obuh’s job

    Coaches scramble for Obuh’s job

    AfricanFootball.com can reveal that at least half a dozen coaches have applied to replace John Obuh as coach of Enugu Rangers.

    An inside source at the ‘Antelopes House’ said that some top-notch coaches in the domestic league are among those who have indicated interest to take over from Obuh, who was recently informed by the management of Rangers that his contract has expired.

    “I think at the last count by the end of last week, over six coaches’ letters of interest have been received. Though I am not too sure about their names as they are being kept a closely guarded secret, I am sure that before the end of the year, it will be clearer who is the front runner to get the job,” the source said.

    Rangers placed eighth last season.

    It would be recalled that since the emergence of the Paul Chibuzor-led management, it has hired and fired over five head coaches – Christian Chukwu, Alphonsus Dike, Okey Emordi (twice) and John Obuh – with the ‘Flying Antelopes’ yet to win a major trophy in over three decades.

  • NATIONAL TEAMS: Amodu to boss all the coaches

    NATIONAL TEAMS: Amodu to boss all the coaches

    THe Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) has mandated all the  national team coaches to report to the body’s Technical Director, Shaibu Amodu, on all matters surrounding their teams’ tactics and logistics towards ensuring a fruitful outing in subsequent competitions.

    SportingLife gathered exclusively that Amodu has already been accepted by the national team coach for the Brazil 2016 Olympic Games, chief coach  Samson Siasia, his Flying Eagles counterpart, Manu Garba and Golden Eaglets’ coach, Emmanuel Amuneke, who have all pledged to work with him, having coached them as players in their heyday.

    Amodu, who is presently in London for a capacity-building course to prepare him for the job, has submitted weekly reports of how Nigerians have been faring in Europe since the season began in January.

    Amodu’s submission would form the basis for inviting players for the international friendly against Bolivia on March 26 in Uyo, even as NFF chiefs await the outcome of an ongoing discussion betwen the body’s agents and its South African Football Association (SAFA) counterparts.

    The Glass House also confirmed to SportingLife that Musa Amadu, a lawyer, will remain in his post as the body’s General Secretary.

  • Nigerian coaches condemn attack on Ogunbote

    Nigerian coaches condemn attack on Ogunbote

    •Want NFF to fish out perpetrators

    The Nigeria Football Coaches’ Association has condemned the fans’ attack on one of their members, Gbenga Ogunbote and has charged the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) to properly investigate the matter and bring the culprits to book.

    Ogunbote, who is the head coach of Sharks of Port Harcourt, had it rough in the hands of some fans of the club who beat him black and blue over allegations that he dropped most of the indigenes in the team for those from other parts of the country.

    The former Sunshine Stars’ coach is still in the hospital recuperating from the injury sustained in last Wednesday’s attack.

    The Secretary-General of the association, Solomon Ogbeide told SportingLife that the body is almost through with its strongly-worded letter to the NFF wherein its position will be to demand that the perpetrators are fished out and banned from all football activities after they might have faced the full wrath of the law.

    “We the (members of the) coaches’ association are not happy about what happened to coach Gbenga Ogunbote. We reject it in all entirety and we are writing a broadside to the NFF so that they will be alive to their responsibilities and strive to get the doer of such heinous act.

    “We are going to write our own letter to the NFF so that investigation of the matter will be immediate and thorough, so that the person(s) responsible for the action will not go unpunished,” Ogbeide told SportingLife.

    The Bayelsa United head coach urged the NFF and states’ governments to make the security of sportsmen and women their watchword, adding that what happened to Ogunbote should be handled properly so that it doesn’t become the norm in the country.

  • NIGERIA 3-1 SUDAN: Police stop fans from lynching Eagles’ coaches

    NIGERIA 3-1 SUDAN: Police stop fans from lynching Eagles’ coaches

    • Big Boss, others run into dressing room
    • Placards asking for Keshi’s, others’ sack fill the stands

    Nigeria’s senior team coach Stephen Keshi and his colleagues ran for dear lives as fans charged towards them with bottles and cudgels in spite of the fact that the Super Eagles beat Sudan 3-1 at the Abuja National Stadium on Wednesday night.

    Rather than show appreciation towards the coaches for diging deep into their technical bags to bring out the tatics that wrecked the Sudanese, the fans who certainly had lost confidence in Keshi continued to boo him with many of them carrying placards, charging and calling for his immediate sack regardless of the result of the match.

    The fans invaded the pitch chanting and shouting to the roof top that Keshi and his assistants must go. Indeed, bottles and missiles were hauled onto the pitch with some asking what would have become of the players and coaches had Nigeria not beaten the Sudanese 3-1.

    Kudos must go the the security operatives at the stadium who worked tirelessly to ward of the irate fans who wanted to vent their spleen on the coaches, despite securing the first win for nigeria in one of the Morocco 2015 Africa Cup of Nations’ matches in Abuja.

  • Coaches at work

    Coaches at work

    Where should I start from? Should I disappoint my dear readers by not talking about how the Eagles lost to Ghana on Wednesday night in South Africa? Is it the story of a fumbling goalkeeper or the agony of watching players who our coaches picked as our best kick the ball from the penalty spot over the bar? Or is it the pain associated with watching the Ghanaians holding their own against a complete Super Eagles team? Or should I just shelve this column having written a lot about the inadequacies of this Eagles side in South Africa for the CHAN competition?

    Should I tell the story of how the team’s coach walked out on his players when they were trailing 3-0 to the Moroccans? Of what use would it be when many said that was his style of psyching up his wards. It worked.

    If the coaches restricted their search for players to the four teams representing Nigeria at this year’s continental competitions, we would be playing in today’s final game against Libya, not Ghana’s Black Stars, given the array of teams at this CHAN edition.

    Those who followed the pre-season Globacom Premier League Super Four tournament organised by the Nduka Irabor-led LMC would agree that the two goalkeepers that Enyimba FC of Aba paraded were better than Agbim. Even the two fielded by Kano Pillars and Warri Wolves.

    I saw several players marshal the defence of their teams with gusto. They played intelligently and displayed skills that our CHAN Eagles lack. I saw players with initiative, a trait which was missing in the CHAN Eagles. Some of the goals scored at the pre-season tournament underlined the fact that talents are still at the grassroots, provided the coaches can recognise good players if they see them.

    Simply put, this CHAN Eagles aren’t a good. They lack quality players who could stand up and be counted in big competitions. Chrisantus Uzoenyi stood out from the pack that had as many as six domestic league players who have been travelling with the Africa Cup of Nations- winning Super Eagles. So, what happened to Egwuekwe, Chigozie Agbim, Benjamin Francis et al, who had been training with our foreign legion? Did they not learn anything from playing with the big boys?

    Uzoenyi was a lone ranger. He didn’t find anyone to complement his yeoman efforts. And it said a lot about the selection process. Shehu, Ali, both Kano Pillars midfielders did their bit along with Abubakar. Yet, four good players couldn’t make the team click. They were in the minority and it showed in our matches. Imenger and Eseme can be better, with many matches.

    We were awful against Mali. Agbim was the biggest culprit. Good coaches would have benched him for the next game. But ours gambled on Agbim against Mozambique and they were embarrassed with the shot taken from almost half of the pitch, which cruised into the net. Sticking with Agbim until the semi-finals loss shows our coaches’ inability to take risks by trying others. Would Alampasu have done worse than Agbim? Maybe Alampasu would have panicked in the first half of the first game. Thereafter, he would have gotten used to the setting and serve as the team’s pivot while defending and in its attack. Agbim was clueless. He couldn’t talk. He couldn’t control his defenders. He didn’t have the presence of mind of Vincent Enyeama or the confidence of Peter Rufai or the calmness of Emmanuel Okala.

    Little wonder the Ghanaians just lifted the ball over him to score their penalty kicks. I hope we have seen the last of Agbim in the national team. One is not trying to mock Agbim, after all the late Peter Fregene, aka Akpo (short man) was described severally as a cat in his goalkeeping days for Green Eagles and Stationery Stores of Lagos. Spain’s Ike Casillas isn’t taller than Agbim. He used to be the best goalkeeper in the world, until this season. Chijioke Ejiogu of Enyimba cannot be taller than Agbim, yet, he is without any doubt the best goalkeeper in Nigeria, in spite of his antics, according to managers of clubs where he has played. We can count the number of stars who are not brats?

    Ambrose Vansekin. Does anyone remember him? He was the goalkeeper in the U-20 side that lost narrowly to Argentina in Holland in 2005, with Samson Siasia as the coach. He was famous with the Rosary around his neck. He is still around; he manned the goalpost for Warri Wolves at the just concluded Super Four tournament held in Abuja. He is better than Agbim and wouldn’t have panicked if he made the squad. The coaches wouldn’t have hesitated in replacing Agbim, if Vanzekin was his assistant.

    So, what do our coaches teach the players? Nothing – with the way they played. Otherwise, how come nobody taught our players how to take penalty kicks? Is it because one of the coaches said he hates penalty kicks? With the way our boys took their kicks against Ghana on Wednesday night, it was clear we did not practise session taking penalty kicks from 12 yards. What a pity. Coaches indeed! In contrast, the Ghanaians told us that they trained thrice for penalties, knowing that they were pitched against Nigeria. In fact, with three minutes left to the extra time, Ghana’s coach brought in a player, who eventually scored the opening goal of the penalty shootout. Can’t you see why they Ghanaians beat us? I no know book o!

    We revel in fickle things. We thrive in blowing our trumpets, one of such being the talk before the game against Ghana that we had be best attacking machine which was expected to run over an also water-tight Black Stars’ defence.

    At the editorial conference on Wednesday evening before the game, I told my colleagues that if the game drags into extra time that the Eagles would be beaten. Deep inside me, I knew that the Ghanaians would try to outmuscle us with crunchy tackles to shake our players’ confidence. I also knew that the Ghanaians would play for penalties, having rehearsed. And so, when we lost our kicks, a few of my colleagues were stunned by the accuracy of my prediction. I’m not a seer but I know the Nigerian coach like the back of my palm. They are not adventurous. They are quick in asking Nigerians to pray for their team as if others don’t pray to God like we do. They also seek luck without knowing that 90 per cent of what we call luck in soccer should come with hard work.

    Another poser: what do our coaches tell our players before, during and after matches? At a stage in Wednesday’s game, a 10-man Black Stars dominated our team, with our players lacking in stamina. One would have thought that the Ghanaians would have struggled, given our numerical strength. No.

    It is about time our coaches looked for a professional fitness trainer to knock our boys into tip-top shape. Elsewhere, the team is broken into compartments, with specialists assigned to key areas. If our coaches want to succeed in Brazil in June, they must insist on picking players based on current form, not loyalty to them. They shouldn’t hide under the guise of instilling discipline to drop good players, especially those of them who have the effrontery to speak their minds about the team’s tactics and training methods. No one knows it all. Learning, they say, is a continuum.

    I don’t share in the sentiments that the NFF should have picked local league coaches for the CHAN job. They did so in the past and we never qualified for the competition. What the new order in the Eagles should do is to watch the Globacom Premier League matches religiously. This idea of our national team coaches doing analysis on television is meaningless, if we cannot pick our best players for competitions.

    It is a pity that we have lost the best chance to raise our points haul on FIFA rankings. We would have been in the finals if we didn’t lose our first game, no thanks to Agbim’s howlers.

    Those who have attributed our loss to Ghana to ill-luck didn’t watch the game. If they did, they would have seen that losing one man at the time the Ghanaian did gave us the leeway to nail the Black Stars, only if the coaches told our boys what to do. Good tacticians would have introduced more strikers to swoop on the Ghanaians, who were playing for time by frustrating our boys with delay tactics and rough tackles. The exit of Ghana’s jersey number three weakened their defence. Besides, his exit meant that Uzoenyi would be free since he was mandated to stop Uzoenyi at all cost. Our coaches may have been overwhelmed by the nervy setting at the stadium on Wednesday night.

    With the Black Stars one man short, the Eagles would have concentrated their game plan to keeping possession of the ball, tossing it among themselves to wear down their opponents. That way, mistakes would be made and the game would have been ours. Sadly, the Eagles fell into the Ghanaians’ trap of tossing high balls towards petit strikers, who virtually lost all the aerial balls. This mundane long balls style helped the Ghanaians to keep our players viciously, such that it took divine intervention for Uzoenyi to be alive today.

    Most good tacticians would have responded to the match situation when it looked like the game was heading for penalty kicks. Most coaches introduce substitutes, who are specialists in kicking the ball into the net from the 12-yard spot. It is true that penalty kicks are subjects for luck, yet many are known specialists. The way our boys kicked theirs on Wednesday night showed that they didn’t rehearse the act of taking penalty kicks.

    The first lesson from participating in the CHAN tournament for our coaches is the need to take every detail in preparing their teams seriously. Need I remind them to pick players based on form, not advice from agents and club scouts?

  • The plight of coaches

    The plight of coaches

    Today I want to talk briefly on the plight of Nigerian coaches and by this I mean the challenges that this category of persons face in their daily pursuit for survival in our sporting polity. Firstly, the coaching profession in Nigeria is not considered by the operators of our sector as a professional body that needs to be given its due regard and honour as the case may be.

    Most coaches in Nigeria struggle through their career period and end up in abject poverty without anything to fall back on. The Nigerian coach is passionate about his or her sport, in fact they are the number one stakeholders in the development of sport in Nigeria. But rather than being treated with respect most times they are regarded with great disdain.

    The coaches are the ones who identify the athletes in their raw states and then mold them into super stars for all to appreciate and adore. However, the builder himself is mostly forgotten. This case calls for urgent action.

    Most Nigerian coaches are academically deficient because a large number of them were former athletes that later became coaches of their chosen sport, as such the ones who are not properly educated are more in number. As a result of this inadequacy, most coaches are cheated by their employers who in most cases are not professional sport administrators.

    There are coaches in Nigeria that take up appointment without a spelt out contract containing their terms of agreement, but because of their love and passion for their sport some of them are always blinded by ignorance and are much in a hurry to take up the job. This again is not unconnected to the state of poor regard for coaches in Nigeria

    A coach is a fundamental actor in the act of developing sport in Nigeria, and failure to give the coach his needed place or regard will amount to us destroying the builders of our sport foundation. The greatest job that has the capacity to translate a given policy into action is that of a coach; they hardly have any job security and as such are vulnerable to job insecurity as their continued survival as a coach is based on the performance of their athletes

    I have been able to discuss with some coaches who narrated their ordeals to me and I tell you that it is so pathetic as most times they work so hard and have nothing to show for it. Whereas the administrator can afford to sit in the VIP area, the coach will have to be on the pitch come rain, come sunshine. The failure of an athlete or team is put squarely on the shoulders of the coach

    To worsen the matter of the coach is the fact that almost everyone in Nigeria claims to be a coach in one sport or the another, as such the job of the coach is not regarded as anything serious, in fact I have heard people say that the coaches do nothing and are just there enjoying the fame that comes with winning.

    Except for a few of the coaches that are appointed as national coaches where there seems to be a level of sanity, relatively speaking, because at the national level too we have seen the poor management of coaches’ welfare to say the least. Whereas from afar the coach is regarded as a super rich individual, the truth is that some of the coaches are busy working without being paid salaries with the promise that when the team does well and is eventually promoted to the next level, money will come. Unfortunately, only few coaches stay to grow with the team when the time comes as they are mostly sacked or replaced unceremoniously

    A situation whereby a coach is in need is not good for our sport development, because such situations can create opportunities for the coach to be easily compromised. Little wonder why we see lots of coaches compromising their professional judgment all in the bid of making extra money to survive. While I condemn this act by some, I will also like to enjoin all concerned to please take care of the coaches’ welfare.

    Many renowned coaches of repute in Nigeria are dying in poverty, some are being owed by their former clubs, others are sick and lack money to pay their medical bills. The issue which we all need to bring to the fore is that coaches are professionals who deserve to be respected, paid as at when due and encouraged to give their best.

    Without a coach there can be no athlete and when there is no athlete sport does not exist. A word is enough for the wise coaches should insist on having signed contracts between themselves and their employers.