Tag: eagles

  • Super Eagles victory: Matters arising

    Super Eagles victory: Matters arising

    Against all expectations, the Super Eagles won the African Cup of Nations, (AFCON) at the Soccer City Stadium in Johannesburg, South Africa on Sunday night. Except, perhaps the coaching crew, nobody gave the team any chance of scaling through the group stage not to talk of wining the coveted trophy. Indeed, Nigerians had become so disenchanted with past failures of the team that nobody, except the real die-hard Super Eagles supporters thought the team could go far at the tournament.

    So what really happened at the AFCON in South Africa? How did a team of average Nigerian players, most of whom were playing in their first AFCON, surpass all the odds to rule the continent again exactly 19 years after we last won the trophy at Tunisia in 1994? How did the Super Eagles shove aside the usual administrative lapses of the nation’s soccer ruling body to put smile on the faces of Nigerians again?

    Well, one would like to start by giving credit to the coach of the team, Stephen Keshi. A veteran of many soccer battles on the African continent, he started his football career at the local scene playing for and captaining the defunct New Nigerian Bank of Benin (NNB) Football club. Together with talented soccer players such as Bright Omokaro, Austin Popo, Humphery Edobor among others, Keshi made the defunct NNB football club one of the most feared teams on the continent. He was to later lead the national team as captain for 10 years (1984-1994), a feat yet to be surpassed, in an era that has come to be referred to as the golden era of Nigerian football. Keshi later moved on to the pulsating world of football coaching qualifying the low rated Togo for the 2006 World Cup final in Germany as well as leading Mali to the 2010 edition of AFCON in Angola.

    From the foregoing, it is quite clear that Keshi came on board the Eagles job with a fair credential. However, the success he had led the team to attain in such a short time has little to do with his credentials. Rather, one would like to view his success with the team in relation to his determination to build a new team with a completely new mentality for the country. One of the banes of the national teams has been the over- reliance of previous national team coaches on the so-called established players who ply their football trade outside the shores of the country. Though, most of these players are good in their own right, but it has become quite clear that in view of the relative success they have recorded in their career, most of them have lost the zeal to play for the country again. This is usually seen in their lackadaisical attitude to national call. In some instances, these players often choose the kind of matches they want to play for the country while in most cases they don’t usually give their best. Without doubt, it was this nonchalant attitude towards the national team that partially led to the inability of Coach Samson Siasia to qualify the team for 2012 edition of AFCON in Gabon and Equatorial Guinea.

    Although most soccer pundits have tried to lay the blame of the players’ lack of passion for the national team on soccer administrators, one thing that is, however, clear is that our so called superstars are no longer committed to the national team. Hence, it is to the credit of Keshi that he chose the hard path of starting from the beginning rather than the usual lazy approach of coaches gallivanting across Europe to ‘meet’ with foreign based players.

    Right from the outset, Keshi did not hide his intention to call the bluff of some of these players whose ego has become a big threat to the aspiration of the national team. For instance, a player like Osaze Odewinge, in spite of his talent, has demonstrated over time, that his presence in the national team is more of a distraction. When he is not blaming his coach, he is either quarrelling with team mates or journalists. He has become the nation’s football modern day enfant terrible. Thus, it was eventually a blessing in disguise that Keshi decided not to take him and his likes to the tournament in South Africa.

    The relative peace that existed in the Super Eagles camp during the competition is, perhaps, because most of the players Keshi took to the event were green horns whose major interest was to do well for themselves as well as their country. Sunday Mba, Warri Wolves midfielder that scored, perhaps, the two most important goals for the team in the competition played with passion and grit thorough out. Together with the likes of Victor Moses, Emmanuel Emenike, Godfrey Oboabana, Kenneth Omeruo, Brown Ideye (all playing in their first AFCON competition) as well as Ahmed Musa provided the team with a new dimension that has been missing for long in the Eagles play for a long time. Though the team did not get its act together in the first three group matches, but immediately it got into the right gear, there was no stopping the team.

    What this victory does for the national team is that, henceforth, no player would dare snub the team again. Now that is clear that no player is bigger than the team, competition for shirts would become more intense and this would eventually augur well for the team. Again, the team’s success at South Africa would restore the wining mentality which it was noted for in the early 90’s. Equally, with this victory, the home based players, who had long been regarded as not too good for the national team would be encouraged to put in their best in the local league since they are now aware that national team selectors are interested in them. This, in itself, is a victory for the much vilified local league.

    Now that the Eagles have landed again, all hands must be on deck to ensure that the momentum is sustained. Relevant authorities should make sure that the team and its coaching crew are provided with everything that would make it remain the pride of all Nigerians. As the federal government prepares to roll out the drums for the team, it should equally remember the Super Eagles class of 1994 and fulfil whatever promises the government of the day made concerning the team. It is in doing this that we can encourage our sportsmen across the world to remain dedicated and committed to the course of the nation.

    Ogunbiyi is of the Features Unit, Ministry of Information & Strategy, Alausa, Ikeja.

     

  • AFCON: Jonathan charges Eagles to beat Mali

    AFCON: Jonathan charges Eagles to beat Mali

    President Goodluck Jonathan has charged the Super Eagles to beat Mali and qualify for the final of this year’s African Nations Cup in South Africa.

    Nigeria battle Mali in Wednesday’s semi-final in Durban.

    President Jonathan has promised to be at the final this weekend if Nigeria qualifies.

    President of the Nigeria Football Federation, Aminu Maigari, said the Super Eagles are ready to fulfill President Jonathan’s desire to travel to South Africa for the championship game.

    “I have just spoken to the head coach (Stephen Keshi) and the captain (Joseph Yobo), and they have assured me that they will fulfill Mr. President’s desire. It is rare to have this kind of support from a Head of State,” MTNFootball.com quoted Maigari as saying on Tuesday.

    “On our part, the NFF has motivated the team enough to do Mr. President and the nation proud by not only winning on Wednesday, but lifting the trophy on Sunday.”

    The team arrived in Durban, venue of Wednesday’s semi final against Mali, to a glorious welcome by the people of Durban (Nigerian residents and other nationals) who desire to be compensated for the disappointment of Super Eagles’ group stage elimination from the FIFA World Cup finals 32 months ago.

    Needing only a win to reach the knock-out phase of Africa’s first FIFA World Cup, and backed by a vociferous full house at the Moses Mabhida Stadium, the Eagles played a 2-2 draw with Korea Republic and exit the tournament.

     

  • Eagles to get $15,000-a-man for Cote d’Ivoire duel

    Eagles to get $15,000-a-man for Cote d’Ivoire duel

    Super Eagles’ players will each receive $15,000 if they beat Cote d’Ivoire and qualify for the semi-final of the 2013 African Cup of Nations on Sunday.

    A top Nigeria Football Federation official reconfirmed an MTNFootball.com exclusive of several weeks ago when he also disclosed each player will be $20,000 richer if they triumph in the semi-final.

    For victory in the championship game on February 10 inside the National Stadium in Johannesburg, each player will pocket another $30,000.

    Each player received $30,000 a day after the team qualified for the quarterfinal on Tuesday.

    Team sponsor Guinness has also made a financial commitment for goals scored at the AFCON, while the Eagles are expecting billionaire Aliko Dangote to splash more cash after they reached the last eight.

    Each player was paid about $80,000 when Nigeria finished third at the 2010 Nations Cup in Angola.

    On Sunday afternoon in Rustenburg, the team will face 1992 champions Cote d’Ivoire.

    The winners of this match-up will clash with the winners of the quarterfinal between hosts South Africa and Mali.

     

  • Ethiopia’s Bishaw vows to ‘beat’ Eagles in group decider

    Ethiopia’s Bishaw vows to ‘beat’ Eagles in group decider

    Ethiopia‘s coach Sewnet Bishaw is not mincing words and he has vowed to beat Nigeria in Tuesday’s last group C encounter in the ongoing African Nations Cup in South Africa.

    Supersport.com reports that Ethiopia will advance to the last eight if the team beat Super Eagles in Rustenburg.

    The coach also knows Nigeria very well. Despite being mauled in Lagos by four goals during the last AFCON qualifications his team almost beat the Eagles in the return leg played in Addis Ababa.

    A last minute header from captain Joseph Yobo saved the Nigerians from an embarrassing defeat.

    Bishaw remembered this and actually claimed this draw denied the Nigerians their first AFCON ticket in 17 years.

    At least 15,000 Antelope fans have gathered in the city and will meet at the stadium to cheer Ethiopia and virtually make it a home game.

  • ZAMBIA, ETHIOPIA 1-1 FALLOUT Chipopolo wary of Eagles

    ZAMBIA, ETHIOPIA 1-1 FALLOUT Chipopolo wary of Eagles

    The Chipolopolo of Zambia may now be losing sleep as the temperature of the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations gets tensed.

    The defending champions face the Super Eagles of Nigeria in their next game on Friday after a 1-1 draw with Ethiopia in their opening game.

    Nigeria appears to be Zambia’s biggest challenge. .”We know Nigeria, we know their past, they are a very strong team who didn’t lose in 2012, we saw their friendly game, ” he said.

    Nigeria are seeking for a third title after 19 years, and qualification to the next stage could be a morale booster for the coach Stephen Keshi led side.

  • AFCON: Emenike leads Eagles’ attack against Burkina Faso

    AFCON: Emenike leads Eagles’ attack against Burkina Faso

    Russia-based striker Emmanuel Emenike is set to lead the Super Eagles charge for goals against Burkina Faso Monday night in Nelspruit, MTNFootball.com reports.

    Emenike is preferred to the prolific Ikechukwu Uche, who was the top scorer for Nigeria with three goals in the qualifying tournament for the 2013 African Cup of Nations.

    The Spartak Moscow centre forward has struggled to fire the goals in a green-and-white shirt since he made his long-awaited debut against Sierra Leone in Lagos in February 2011.

    However, Coach Stephen Keshi rates him very highly, even tipping him to match the exploits of the country’s most prolific international striker the late Rashidi Yekini.

    His power will stand him in good stead against the very physical Burkinabes.

    He is expected to profit from the quality wing play of Chelsea star Victor Moses and Ahmed Musa, while Mikel marshals a midfield that also includes Fegor Ogude and Nosa Igiebor.

    Vincent Enyeama will man the goal, while the defensive line up of Elderson Echiejile, Efe Ambrose, skipper Joseph Yobo and Godfrey Oboabona will strive to prevent the Burkinabes from hitting the Eagles’ net.

     

  • Fly Eagles, fly

    Fly Eagles, fly

    The battle line is drawn. The 2013 Africa Cup of Nations begins today with pomp and ceremony. At stake is the prestigious trophy for the best country on the continent. There is also a new vista for home-grown lads who will be competing for honours with the established stars.

    The talk among pundits is that Nigeria’s Super Eagles will be in South Africa to make up the numbers and not to wrest the trophy from the surprise winners in 2012, the Chipolopolo of Zambia. They are tipping Cote d’ Ivoire to lift the trophy as consolation for last year’s nail-biting penalty shoot-out loss to the Zambians in the final game.

    The cynics among these pundits mock the Eagles with the sobriquet Super Chicken and are beating their chests that the team, at their best, may shed the toga and emerge as the best entertainers when the curtains fall on the fiesta on February 10 in Johannesburg.

    Will anyone blame these cynics? Could they have made such unsavoury comments in 1996 when the Super Eagles were the toast of the world’s football community?

    Certainly not. Not with what the Super Eagles showcased at the USA’ 94 World Cup and the Dream Team 1’s flawless display of football artistry that fetched Nigeria the gold medal at the Atlanta’96 Olympic Games.

    Seventeen years ago when the last Africa Cup of Nations was held in South Africa, the Super Eagles were matchless in the quality and capacity of talents to deliver scintillating soccer – compared with any other African country.

    In fact, in 1996, the world waited with bated breath to see the mincemeat that the Super Eagles would make of their African foes. There was an armada of stars, such as the late Rashidi Yekini, Peter Rufai, Stephen Keshi, Emmanuel Amuneke, Nwankwo Kanu, Daniel Amokachi, George Finidi, Uche Okechukwu, Ben Iroha, Taribo West, Victor Ikpeba, Tijani Babangida, Chidi Nwanu, the late Uche Okafor et al.

    Pundits placed their last bets on the Eagles strolling to South Africa to lift the trophy. The Eagles were going to the 1996 edition as defending champions, having beaten a Zambian side that lost all the members of the senior side, the Chipolopolo, in a plane crash in Gabon.

    No one dared bet against the Eagles lifting the trophy in South Africa. But Nigeria’s head of state then, the late Gen. Sani Abacha, had other ideas. Abacha, for political reasons, prevented the Eagles from defending their title, despite appeals from the global body’s chieftains and leaders of thought in the world.

    South Africa’s Bafana Bafana won the trophy and not a few pundits felt that the Eagles would have swept other options away, if Abacha had listened to good advice.

    But on Monday, the Eagles have a date with history against the Stallions of Burkina Faso and we are back to our old ways of asking Nigerians to pray for the team’s victory as if the Burkinabes don’t worship God too. Our players must play to their potentials. Only the cup is what Nigerians want and they cannot be asking for too much.

    The truth is that the Eagles ought to be the default winners of any African football competition. The talk ought to be about likely opponents of the Nigerian side in the finals and not otherwise, if we had sustained the tempo of performance after the 1994 and 1996 feats.

    The Eagles attained the heights that the current Spanish senior side enjoys, such that many would easily tip the Spaniards to qualify for the finals of the 2014 World Cup, if they continue with their steady rise in the world’s ranking.

    Nigerians want to see against the Burkinabes, boys who are hungry to fight for the balls and beat the opposition at dusk. We want to see committed players who won’t disappoint us. Nigerians are tired of excuses. They want to sleep fulfilled, waiting for the next game against the Zambians on January 25.

    Nigerians want to return to their offices on Tuesday to savour some of the exciting moments of the defeat of the Burkinabes. They want to sit in their homes to analyse trends in the game and make projections.

    Whenever the Eagles are doing well, everything comes to a halt. We forget our ethnic differences and see ourselves as a united nation.

    The talk about the Super Eagles not getting funds early is cheap. The Eagles owe Nigerians a credible outing to atone for the pain and shame of previous heart-wrenching displays.

    The present bunch of Super Eagles must utilise the platform the Africa Cup of Nations offers to return the team to where it was before they came. The Eagles were world beaters. They played in some of the best leagues in the world. Nigerians were proud every time foreigners recognised them as Jay Jay Okocha, Nwankwo Kanu¸ Daniel Amokachi et al.

    They cherished such moments when foreigners asked after our sports ambassadors and talked about their exploits with glee. It made us proud. Soccer was our brand identity and the domestic game benefited from it as European scouts made our league centres their second home to get cheap talents for export.

    The European scouts’ invasion emboldened the domestic league players to give out their best. It changed the mindset of the local stars, who hitherto, relied on shylock middlemen to take their trade to Europe in search of the proverbial Golden Fleece.

    Nigeria’s Eldorado years in football witnessed our players making Belgium their home whilst other European countries were hustling to have some of our best in their country. The ripple effect of the star-trek to Europe gave the domestic game the impetus for growth that has now been corrupted by the failure of leadership at the Nigeria Premier League since its inception.

    The new dawn should start with the Eagles lifting the trophy. Anything short of that is a misadventure and absolutely unacceptable. So, can the Eagles fly in South Africa?

    Is Ejide jinxed?

    In the year 2000, Shuaibu Amodu informed this writer that Austin Ejide was the best goalkeeper he had seen in the domestic league. Amodu moved five steps; punched the air and prayed that Ejide should stay out of injury.

    Ejide was then a goalkeeper at Gabros International. Amodu was convinced that he would be Nigeria’s greatest. In fact, Amodu confirmed Ejide as a specialist in catching penalties – a trait many Nigerian goalkeepers do not have.

    Months later, I saw Amodu wear a forlorn look. He said: “Old boy, that Ejide has problems o! He sustains injuries, especially when you need him most. Anyway, I will help him. He has this recurring shoulder injury. I have contacted doctors who can help him.”

    Ejide’s story has been that of injury today; fit tomorrow. But when he is fit, he is best – a fact former German legend and Super Eagles coach Berti Vogts attested to by picking him ahead of fans’ favourite, Vincent Eneyam, at the Ghana’2008 Africa Cup of Nations.

    Is Ejide too fragile? Or is he jinxed? I don’t think so; not with his big physique that is his greatest asset. He needs to be very careful. He also should charge out of his goalpost like a lion. He should also expect those crunchy tackles and learn how to dodge them.

    Indeed, not many people know that Ejide was at the 2002 Korea/Japan World Cup as the team’s third goalkeeper behind Ike Shorunmu and Enyeama.

    One only hopes that Ejide gets well for the South Africa 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.

    Missing Super Eagles

    Stephen Keshi has picked his 23-man squad. We need to support him. Yet watching the European leagues last week, I was restless whilst watching Victor Anichebe play for Everton against Swansea at the Goodison Park Stadium.

    Anichebe troubled Swansea’s defence for the 83 minutes he played. The game ended on a barren note, yet you could see delighted Swansea players hugging the Nigerian.

    He will surely be missed by Keshi and the Eagles. He missed out due to recurring injuries. We expect him back for the 2014 World Cup qualifiers.

    Another lad the Eagles would miss is Inter Milan’s Joel Obi, who returned to full fitness last week. If he had returned two weeks earlier, Keshi would have picked him. He held Eagles’ midfield in matches where others tottered.

    Joel Obi was Keshi’s pick-of-the-pack in most matches. He too will be missed. The good news though is that Obi is available for Nigeria’s 2014 World Cup qualifiers.

  • AFCON: Eagles won’t underrate Burkina Faso – Yobo

    AFCON: Eagles won’t underrate Burkina Faso – Yobo

    Captain of the Super Eagles, Joseph Yobo, has warned Zambia, Burkina Faso and Ethiopia to expect tough confrontation, as the team will not underrate any team at the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations in South Africa.

    Nigeria will play its first game against Burkina Faso, and Yobo said he knows there are no more minnows in football, and will lead the squad out in full strength on Monday.

    “There are no more minnows in football.

    “We won’t underrate any team, but we will respect all teams and take one game at a time.

    “We have to take the game against Burkina faso and Ethiopia as serious as the final,” futaa.com quoted Yobo as saying on Wednesday.

    Nigeria will take on defending champions Zambia, before playing Ethiopia in the last group game.

     

  • KESHI BOASTS My Eagles can be better than  94 squad

    KESHI BOASTS My Eagles can be better than 94 squad

    THE LAST time Nigeria won the African Cup of Nations was back in 1994 and they also wowed the world at the World cup same year. The team’s captain was Stephen Keshi and he is now in charge of the Super Eagles at South Africa 2013 In an exclusive chat with supersport.com at the team’s Faro, Portugal camp Keshi believes that the potential in this team is good enough to match that of the country’s last winners of the competition.

    “Many Nigerians don’t know how good this team is, I see great potentials in them and they can go places.” He then added with a clear glint in his eyes that: “In Emenike I see a player who can be like Rashidi Yekini and Godfrey Obaobona will grow in his position”.

    Stephen Keshi as a player and captain of Nigeria played in five tournaments reaching the finals in three of them.

    These experiences should come in handy. “Maybe I might be able to help them handle the expectations. My playing will give me the insight in how to handle the younger players – those just starting out and making their way in the national team.”

    In the build-up to the camping and even during it Nigerians have been quite critical, as usual and in their views on the team and the squad make up. You wonder how Keshi handles the pressure of coaching a country where millions feel they can do a better job than the man employed for it.

    “I just make sure I concentrate on the players and make sure they understand and buy into what we want to do. Nigeria is a place that you can never satisfy every person so we just make sure we do our best.”

    However, it would appear that the team is better prepared unlike previous tournaments lately, and Keshi agrees, “we have had no distractions.

    “The NFF have been very supportive and we are just focused on the job at hand.” Since that famous 1994 victory, the team then lost on penalties to Cameroon in the 2000 finals at home, Nigeria has really not come close to winning the competition again. Is there pressure from within the group on the players to win this competition? “I would not put any pressure on my players; my duty is to make them relaxed but with high concentration levels so that they can carry out the tactical plans we have during matches.”

    As a player Keshi exhibited high levels of patriotism when it came to playing for Nigeria but he is aware that things have changed amongst the players who play for Nigeria. “I loved the attitude of the late Rashidi Yekini when it came to playing for Nigeria – he was always the first to arrive and was willing to do anything for the National team, I loved the man.” The current players are different and it is also the fault of the media who hype players to all levels because of what they do at their clubs when they have played probably four or five matches for Nigeria. You need to have played consistently for the national team for at least five years before you can be called a star.”

     

  • Akpoborie: Eagles stand outside chance

    Akpoborie: Eagles stand outside chance

    •Says team needs a big improvement in

    passing, possession

    •Tips Victor Moses to shine if…

    •Cautions Glasshouse over semi-final mandate

    GOAL.COM caught up with Jonathan Akpoborie, former Super Eagles and many (not from this generation) will remember him as the little guy who scored the second goal for the cadet team that won the inaugural FIFA U-16 Championship in China in 1985.

    He went on to play successfully abroad and was a huge hit in the Bundesliga where he played for Hansa Rostock, VFB Stuttgart and Wolfsburg between 1996 and 2001. He featured in 144 games and scored 62 goals. He also won 13 caps for Nigeria, scoring four goals.

    Can Nigeria win the Nations Cup? That was the first question that was posed to Akpoborie and there was a lengthy pause before he said: “That is a hard question to answer but I think all we have is an outside chance,” Akpoborie told Goal.com.

    “Because football is not Mathematics, it is possible for the Super Eagles to win but at the same time they could crash out in the first round.

    “People say I am always criticAising the national team, handlers and administrators but with the performances exhibited, I will continue to say the truth and if that is construed as criticism – so be it,” he added.

    Akpoborie has keenly followed the reign of Stephen Keshi as coach of the national team in the last 13 months but he is not quite sure that there has been any improvement in the tactical setup of the national team.

    “When Keshi came in, the slogan was that the team is in a rebuilding phase, agreed. But this team still cannot put together five accurate passes from defence to attack – so I ask what are we rebuilding?

    “We are still at the same stage even though we will continue to have talented players who do better with their European club sides. It says something about the national set up and this question must be answered speedily for us to move forward,” he reiterated.

    “When I saw the team against Venezuela and Catalonia XI, you see a huge chasm between the strikers and the midfielders and also a huge vacuum between the defenders and the midfielders which gives me cause to worry for the team.

    “We need a big improvement in passing and possession if we want to go all the way in South Africa.”

    Which of the current Eagles players is he looking at to be the x-factor for the Super Eagles? Akpoborie promptly answered, “[Victor] Moses”.

    “When you see that boy in training, you know that he has still got a lot in his locker to show-case for the national team. He is one player that is almost technically and tactically sound though he is still learning the ropes.

    “I am expecting a lot from him but I hope that the coach will deploy him correctly so that he will be able to hurt our opponents.”

    With the inclusion of six players from the Nigeria Premier League in Keshi’s final 23-man squad, some people are saying that the home-based lads are getting close to their European counterparts but Akpoborie begs to disagree.

    “I watched the Eagles in training before the match against Liberia in Calabar last year and seated where I was, I was able to point out local players when they touched the ball, by their movement and the intensity of their actions.

    “I will say that there is still a big difference between someone that has been coached exclusively in Nigeria and another player who plays in Europe.

    “There is still a lot that the local coaches miss out in training our players which must be addressed before we say players from home and abroad are now at par,” he added.

    Akpoborie then told Goal.com what he expects Keshi to think of achieving at the Nations Cup.

    “First of all, the Nigeria Football Federation should come out and refute reports that they have given the coach a semi-final target.