Tag: Golden Eaglets

  • NFF protests Eaglets’ failure to land in Gabon

    NFF protests Eaglets’ failure to land in Gabon

    The Nigeria Football federation has protested to the Confederation of African Football after Gabonese officials prevented members of the Golden Eaglets from flying into Libreville to honour this weekend’s African U-17 Championship qualifiers, africanFootball.com reports.

    The Gabonese authorities disembarked the Golden Eaglets’ delegation from a Gabon –bound ASKY Airline flight having flown from their base in Calabar to Lagos and travelled by road from Lagos to Cotonou as a result of the cancellation of all Gabon –bound flights from Lagos.

    The delegation members were issued boarding passes on the ASKY Airline flight from Cotonou to Libreville, via Lome, only to be subjected to the harsh treatment after landing in the Togolese capital.

    The NFF has therefore sent a strong letter of protest to CAF over Friday’s unsavoury incident in Lome.

    The protest letter signed by NFF General Secretary, Musa Amadu, reads, “On getting to Lome, our delegation members were disembarked and their luggage brought out of the aircraft, and told that they would no longer be flown to Libreville, on the orders of Gabonese authorities.

    “We strongly protest this harsh, unkind and unfair treatment of players below the age of 17, who have had to go through this arduous and tiring journey only to further their career in football.

    “We are very much aware that the Confederation of African Football (CAF) has stated clearly that football matches should not to take place in only three countries, namely Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, as a result of the Ebola Virus Disease pandemic.

    “Our players have taken serious precautions and even have Ebola–free Medical Certificates.

    “The Nigeria Football Federation is sorely disappointed by this attitude of Gabonese authorities and we implore CAF to come into this matter and determine the issue of the qualifying fixture.”

     

  • Amuneke unimpressed with ‘wasteful’ Eaglets

    Amuneke unimpressed with ‘wasteful’ Eaglets

    Golden Eaglets’ coach, Emmanuel Amuneke, is not impressed with the team’s performance despite recording a 1-0 away victory over the DR Congo in the CAF African U-17 Championship qualifying game played in Kinshasa on Saturday evening.

    While evaluating the Eaglets’ performance in the encounter, Amuneke disclosed his disappointment in the side’s inability to utilize the many chances created against the hosts, kickOffNigeria.com reports.

    “I’m not happy despite the fact that we won this match,” kickOffNigeria.com quoted Amuneke as saying immediately after the game.

    “If we had taken our chances, the story would have been different because we had all the chances but we wasted so much.”

    Amuneke further praised the Congolese for their fighting spirit after conceding a goal, adding that his boys would have to up their game in the reverse fixture in a fortnight.

    “We have seen what the Congolese can do and that means more work for us in the second leg but we are positive of going through eventually,” he added

     

     

  • Eaglets to play Egypt in friendlies

    Eaglets to play Egypt in friendlies

    The Nigeria Football Federation and the Egyptian Football Association have firmed up arrangements for the Under-17 National Teams of both countries to play a series of international friendlies in Nigeria and Egypt, KickOffNigeria.com reports.
    NFF’s Director of Competitions, Dr. Mohammed Sanusi, said on Tuesday the Eaglets, who finished third at the just concluded WAFU B Under-17 Tournament in Togo, would host the first two matches in Nigeria on May 28 and 30.
    “The two teams will meet again in two more friendly encounters in Egypt during July, but we have not set the dates for those matches,” Sanusi said.
    The reigning world champions will in July take on the winner of a preliminary fixture between Democratic Republic of Congo and Burundi, for the right to take part in the 2015 African U-17 Championship in Niger Republic.

  • WAFU awards excite Eaglets’ handlers

    WAFU awards excite Eaglets’ handlers

    Members of the Golden Eaglets technical crew are still excited at the awards the team scooped up at the just concluded WAFU B Under-17 Tournament in Togo.
    The Golden Eaglets won the Fair Play Award as receiving the least cautions in the four games played at the competition, while Amos Benjamin was voted as the best goalkeeper of the tournament.
    “Personally, I’m happy that Amos was picked as the best goalkeeper of the tournament because he has improved tremendously since he came into the camp,” the team’s goalkeepers’ trainer and former youth international, Emeka Amadi told KickOffNigeria.com.
    “But more than anything else, I was impressed with his overall contribution to the success of the team and I think he can even get better.
    “From the indices, he was outstanding because we have some other good goalkeeper at the tournament; the Mali and Benin goalkeeper are equally good but I’m happy it was Benjamin that was picked as the best,” he noted.
    Benjamin conceded only one goal in the four matches played and his agility was there for all to see especially in the ill-fated 3-1 semi-finals’ penalty shoot-out loss to Benin Republic.

     

  • Togo test good for Eaglets – NFF

    Togo test good for Eaglets – NFF

    Nigeria Football Federation said that the WAFU B Under-17 Tournament in Togo is a good test for the Golden Eaglets ahead of the qualifiers for the 2015 African championship.

    Despite the wins recorded by the team in its friendly matches, a board member of the NFF, Alhaji Yussuf Fresh, believes the present team needs tough matches to prepare it for challenges ahead.

    “I have been following up on all the activities of the team right from the start of the screening, and the momentum is coming up,” Yussuf told futaa.com.

    “We are still expecting some good players to be integrated since this is a national team, all I can say is that there is progress.”

    While commending the coaching crew for the string of victories so far, Yussuf said the tournament in Togo would define the readiness of the team for the African qualifiers.

  • Golden Eaglets thrash Super Falcons 6-0

    Golden Eaglets thrash Super Falcons 6-0

    He Golden Eaglets handed out a 6-0 defeat to the Super Falcons in an early morning game at the NFF/FIFA Goal Project Pitch yesterday.

    The match was an opportunity for the Golden Eaglets’ coaching crew to watch their new recruits under match situation and they responded well despite having a week following their screening exercise.

    The lads would soon take the initiative after the Super Falcons had taken the kick off. Chidera Ejuke grabbed the curtain raiser in the 6th minute with a tap in off a pass from Kehinde Ayinde.

    He was back 10 minutes later when he rode through the Falcons’ defence for his second goal of the day to end the first half 2-0 in favour of the budding Eaglets.

    Coach Emmanuel Amuneke brought in some fresh faces in the second half leaving behind Henry Daniel, Kingsley Michael, Joshua Auta and Dauda Abdul-Ganiyu.

    Henry would turn to Falcons’ tormentor as he broke freely from the right flank. Six minutes after the restart, he fed new comer, Paul Obasi to score Eaglets’ third goal. It was Henry again that provided Michael with the pull out to slot the ball behind the Falcons’ net for the fourth goal in the 41st minute.

    He would later cap his fine performance barely a minute later when he guided the ball into the net after collecting a through ball from Orji Okoronkwo. But it was Okoronkwo who scored the final goal of the match when he got a through pass from Henry yet again.

    Speaking after the 60-minute duel, Amuneke said the lads have substance to build upon in the days ahead, insisting that nobody has been guaranteed a place in the team yet.

    “We are impressed not because of the number of the goals we scored but because the boys have started showing what they have been learning in the last few days,” said the former African Footballer of the Year.

    “The level of their performance is encouraging and it is our duty to demand more from them but there is substance to build upon from these boys.”

  • Kogi to honour two Golden Eaglets

    Kogi to honour two Golden Eaglets

    Governor Idris Wada has revealed to SportingLife that the Kogi State government will soon honour the two indigenes of the state who were members of the victorious Golden Eaglets squad that won the Under-17 World Cup in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) last year.

    The governor, who spoke to SportingLife at the weekend in Lokoja, said the U-17 players are currently out of the country in pursuit of their careers, and as soon as they are back, they would be formally honoured by the state government.

    Central defender of the Eaglets, Abubakar Aliyu and central midfielder, Akinjide Idowu are from Ankpa and Yagba-East Local Government Areas of the state, respectively.

    The governor said: ‘’In this country, we are so blessed that we take a lot of talents, and we should appreciate them. We are very proud of those our sons who were part of that history, and we would do everything humanly possible to encourage them, and produce more talents for the country. We have all the best of environment to produce those good players in all sports”.

    Wada, who was a player in the “Mosquito Rovers”, a junior team of Government Secondary School (GSS) Dekina in his days, remains optimistic that the country has all it takes to make a maximum impact at the 2014 FIFA World cup in Brazil.

  • The Nigerian Youth

    The Nigerian Youth

    NIGERIA may yet fulfill its promise of greatness, after all. The narratives of the country’s youths in various spheres in the outgoing year provide reassurance that it may hopefully reverse its steps from the verge of predicted failure. It is particularly heartwarming that these impressive strides of youth are happening as the country prepares to celebrate its centenary in 2014. Symbolically, therefore, this moving expression of youthful oomph could well be prophetic of the country’s next 100 years.

    To start with, what better way to highlight the country’s attraction of international respect than reference to its feat in sports, specifically soccer, which is rated as the world’s leading and most popular sporting activity? It was a November to remember as the Nigerian Golden Eaglets soared to win the 2013 FIFA Under-17 World Cup Tournament in the United Arab Emirates. In a historic triumph, the teenagers won the title for an unprecedented fourth time, and so dramatically too; and emphatically crushed defending champions Mexico 3-0 in the final after a dream run in which they outclassed otherwise eminent football-playing nations, including Sweden and Uruguay.

    Significantly, in addition to the fact that the team glittered in the competition and also won the FIFA Fair Play Award, individuals in the side shone brilliantly. Notably, Kelechi Ihenacho was the most decorated, winning the tournament’s Adidas Golden Ball Award for the overall best player, alongside the Silver Boot Award for being the second highest goal scorer. Remarkably too, the team’s goalkeeper who was adjudged the best won the Adidas Golden Gloves Award. Nigeria is now rated as the most successful team in FIFA Under-17 World Cup history.

    Still on the global stage, it was a year in which an 11-year-old US-based girl of Nigerian origin, Zuriel Oduwole, hugged the headlines even more spectacularly. Zuriel, undoubtedly the world’s most successful child celebrity interviewer, was listed among the Top 100 Most Influential People in Africa by the respected New African Magazine. Zuriel who once described herself as “An African child A Nigerian girl-child” was named among the elite group for her campaign for girl-child education in Africa. To appreciate the scale of her stature, it is noteworthy that her record of firsts includes being the youngest person to be interviewed by the well-known international business magazine Forbes in the August 2013 edition of Forbes Africa. “I am hoping that the parents of girls in Africa will see me as an example, and see that their girls have a lot of potential in life, and can achieve great things in life,” she told The Nation in an interview.

    An interview with Ghanaian ex-president Jerry Rawlings as part of a school project when she was nine opened her eyes to the educational disadvantages of the African girl-child, and inspired her to launch her Dream Up, Speak Up, Stand Up programme, aimed at lifting the African girl-child. It is a testimony to her phenomenal profile that at her age she has interviewed nine incumbent heads of state, including Nigeria’s President Goodluck Jonathan, all of whom are still in office today. She has also interviewed African billionaire, Nigeria’s Aliko Dangote, and American tennis queens Venus and Serena Williams among other prominent figures. Indeed, she has been likened to giant media interviewers Oprah Winfrey and Larry King for her striking ability in interviewing distinguished personalities. Interestingly, she enjoys an ambassadorial status in Tanzania, courtesy of the country’s first lady, Mrs. Salma Kikwete, who this year made her the first African child to be appointed honorary ambassador by a foreign government. And she has been named as Global Ambassador for the Ethiopian Airlines, which will be her official carrier across three continents to help her with the campaign for girl-child education.

    Youth impact on Nigeria’s ongoing war against terror is another arresting point underlining why they deserve an ovation. A particularly shocking incident mid-year, among others, spotlighted the invaluable role of the group of volunteer youths known as Civilian JTF (Joint Task Force) in the battle against Boko Haram Islamist fundamentalists in the country’s northern region. In an unexpected twist, members of the group apprehended two women in purdah with assault weapons concealed under their dresses at the Bulabulin entrance to the Monday Market in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital. This feminine involvement introduced a disturbing dimension to the anti-terror campaign in Borno, one of the three states under emergency rule, the other two being Adamawa and Yobe states.

    Their dramatic capture, as narrated by a member of the vigilante group, Malam Usman Ibrahim, speaks volumes about the alertness of the vigilantes. He said, “We were on a routine check at the gate when these women came with heavy veil. At first, we did not bother to look at them, but we realized that one of them was shivering, we said something must be wrong.” Then, after a search, according to him, “We found that each of them concealed an AK 47 rifle, a pistol and Improvised Explosive Devices (IED) in their veil. We were surprised at the discovery, so we took them to officials of the Joint Task Force (JTF) on Operation Restore Order (ORO) for investigations.” While this was just one notable instance of selfless informal contribution to the government’s anti-terrorism efforts, it nevertheless demonstrates the undeniable value of effective intelligence, which the committed youths continue to provide in the counter-terrorism campaign.

    Away from the theatre of destruction, emerging Nigerian home-based youth artistes are selling their creativity to audiences across the world. This circle of musical entertainers has imaginatively redesigned the popular Rap and Hip-hop genres with local flavour, especially slang and proverbs, creating exportable melodies. Among the high-flyers are Davido, Iyanya, Ice Prince, Omawumi, Chidinma and Wande Coal. A good number of them are magnetic ambassadors for big local and international brands, and are dazzlingly rewarded in foreign currencies. Their popularity abroad, particularly via international TV music channels, continues to open doors for them to perform at overseas concerts and win prestigious awards.

     

    A final thrust, this time concerning a field fundamental to the country’s development. Nigeria’s education system may not be as bleak as circumstances suggest, with the report in October of the distinction of a nine-year-old computer whizz-kid, Jomiloju Tunde-Oladipo, who set a record as the country’s youngest Microsoft certified professional. He is now a Microsoft office specialist in Office Word 2010. With an examination score of 769 out of 1,000, Jomiloju outclassed 20 others, performing excellently in Sharing and Maintaining Documents, Formatting Content, Applying Page Layout and Reusable Content, among other subjects. It is noteworthy that Microsoft Certified Professional, a certification programme of the reputable Microsoft Corporation, is aimed at building skills on Microsoft business solutions, focusing on client-end operating systems such as Windows XP, Vista and Windows 7, among others. Also worth mentioning is the international status of the certification.

    Young Jomiloju’s accomplishment is particularly significant in the Computer Age, with the uplifting implication that the country may not be such a terrible laggard, after all. Of relevance are the ambitious computer schemes of some state governments, notably, Ekiti and Osun states. In the former, Governor Kayode Fayemi is focused on the distribution of 33,000 laptops to students and teachers in public secondary schools under the administration’s e-School Project. In the latter, the groundbreaking computer-based educational project for public secondary schools, known as Opon Imo, introduced by Governor Rauf Aregbesola, promises a revolution in learning methods. These examples bring hope; and when considered in the context of Jomiloju’s feat, which he achieved within the private school system, optimism about the country’s future is understandable.

    In the last analysis, these are justification for the celebration of the promise of futurity, encouraged by the sterling performance by the country’s youth in the face of overwhelming odds.

  • Minister plays down Nigeria football success

    Minister plays down Nigeria football success

    Despite winning the African Nations Cup in South Africa and the FIFA U-17 World Cup in United Arab Emirates in the outgoing year, the Nigerian Minister of Sports, Bolaji Abdullahi, has rated the game four out 10 this year.

    The Super Eagles also qualified for a fifth World Cup in the outgoing year, and the country’s team of domestic league players would play in the Championship of African Nations (CHAN) for the first time.

    However, Abdullahi has maintained that even though the country has done well in football in the outgoing year, there was still a long way to go to take the sport to its best height.

    “For me, I thank God Almighty that we try to do our best and God is helping us achieve results. But for me, we need to do a lot more than we are doing,” MTNFootball.com quoted the minister as saying on Tuesday.

    “And I’m the first one to tell you that in a scale of one to 10, 10 being where we should be, where are we today? I would say four.

    “Yes! We won the AFCON, the U-17 World Cup, yes, very good, but until we are able to build a system that ensures that regardless of who is in the office, we can confidently say we will win or we can win, then we have not reached where we are supposed to be.”

     

  • Numa plays down Eaglets’ ‘transition’

    Numa plays down Eaglets’ ‘transition’

    Former Nigeria junior international, Binebi Numa, believes it is virtually impossible for the current set of Golden Eaglets to progress as a group to the senior national team.

    The Eaglets had been widely praised for their breathtaking performances that saw them conquer the world, and had been upgraded to the under-20 level as part of a gradual transition that is aimed at seeing the team evolve to the Super Eagles in future.

    While Numa recognised their individual talent and excellent team spirit, he insisted most of them would drop out of reckoning as they ascend the age-grade category, and that new players would also emerge.

    He predicted that not more than two or three of them would be in contention for places in Nigeria’s 2018 World Cup squad.

    “The Eaglets deserve all the accolades that have been coming their way for the way they dominated the 2013 FIFA Under-17 World Cup,” Numa told supersport.com.

    “It is only normal after such a brilliant performance that the entire team and the coaches should be promoted to the under-20s.

    “However, as regards the dream transition to the Super Eagles, there is no way a majority of them would make it.

    “They would face different challenges as their careers evolve. Some may drop out of the game; others may lose form, while some may turn out to be mere average players.

    “Of course there would be those who would turn out to be superstars, and it is mostly the super-talented that would make it to the Super Eagles.

    “There would also be talent outside this group that would emerge and could be considered ahead of them.

    “I see only about two or three of them (Eaglets 2013) being serious contenders for the 2018 World Cup.”

    Numa also pointed out that the age-grade tournaments become more technical and complex as they move to a higher category.