Tag: kelechi Iheanacho

  • Iheanacho, NNwakali  earn N72.9m for Nigerian Academies

    Iheanacho, NNwakali earn N72.9m for Nigerian Academies

    The Flying Eagles duo of Kelechi Iheanacho and Chidiebere Nwakali are poised to earn their parent soccer academies a windfall, following the move by English Champions, Manchester City, to formally close the deal on their transfer.

    Both players reportedly moved to Manchester City last season, but were not listed in any of the City teams.

    The club announced a couple of weeks ago that both will requested to join up with the team when they travel to the United States for pre season training in July.

    Now, reports from England is that Manchester City boss Manuel Pellegrini is poised to formally capture the Nigerian teenagers.

    The Blues will pay development compensation fees of around N72.9m (£270,000) each to Taye Academy and Shuttle Sports Academy respectively, according to the Daily Star Sunday.

    Striker Iheanacho, 17, signed a pre-contract with City in January and has now been granted a work permit ahead of his move.

    Nwakali, 17, a versatile midfielder, is also comfortable in defence.

     

  • Iheanacho senior gets half pay

    It has been learnt that Kelechi Iheanacho’s father and Taye Academy have received half of what was promised them by Manchester City.

    That would mean City have splashed at least 300,000 pounds to secure the talented Iheanacho, who was picked by FIFA as the best player at last year’s U-17 World Cup in the United Arab Emirates.

    MTNFootball.com specially gathered that City have rescinded a decision to make payments to the Iheanachos until January next year and both the player’s father and the academy that started him out have thus received half of what was agreed with them.

    “Iheanacho senior is now smiling to the bank as he has been paid half of what was promised him after his son signed for City. This shows how badly the EPL want the youngster,” a source familiar with this transaction told MTNFootball.com.

    Iheanacho, who was voted the CAF Most Promising Talent for 2013, could not honour a special invitation to the FIFA Awards in Switzerland is now working on his travel papers to England.

    Iheanacho’s U-17 teammate, Chidiebere Nwakali, has also secured a four-year contract with Manchester City.

  • Alfa, Bello  courted by clubs in Belgium,  Germany

    Alfa, Bello courted by clubs in Belgium, Germany

    From Tunde Liadi,Owerri

    Golden Eaglets stars at the last FIFA U17 World Cup in the United Arab Emirates, Alfa Abdullahi and Bello Zaharaddeen are both wanted by foreign clubs in Belgium and Germany, their FIFA licenced agent, Mohammed Babawo, has specially told SportngLife.

    Several of the Golden Eaglets’ players who won the U17 World Cup in the UAE last year have either joined or linked with clubs overseas with the duo of Kelechi Iheanacho and Chidiebere Nwakali sealing a contract with Manchester City among others.

    Mohammed in an interview with SportingLife hinted that Alfa is being courted by Genk of Belgium while a second division club in the German league is seriously considering signing Bello who manned the defence during the team’s victorious run in the UAE.

    Mohammed told SportingLife that he and the players are not into any rush at all and would only sign a contract when they have already considered the offers if it will be of short and long term beneficial to them.

    “We are in discussion with some top clubs in Belgium and Germany for Bello and Alfa. They are serious about it but we are trying to be careful before any decision is made,” Mohammed, a former player of JUTH of Jos told SportingLife.

  • Iheanacho senior:  Why my son signed City’s pre-contract deal

    Iheanacho senior: Why my son signed City’s pre-contract deal

    Nigeria Under-17 striker Kelechi Iheanacho has signed a pre-contract with Manchester City according to his father James.

    In an interview with Brila FM the player’s father confirmed that he signed a pre-contract with City but with him being 17 years old, a proper contract will be signed when his son turns 18. Only then will they get money from his deal. October 3 is the day when Kelechi turns 18.

    “The situation is that Kelechi hasn’t turned 18 yet and until he does, he can’t sign, but what he has done is sign a pre-contract with Manchester City pending his 18th birthday,” James Iheanacho told Brila FM.

    He also added that Kelechi left Nigeria to Switzerland for yesterday’s FIFA World Player of the Year award ceremony on invitation from FIFA.

  • Iheanacho seals City move

    Iheanacho seals City move

    • Awaits UK work permit hearing

    Manchester City have wrapped up a deal for highly-rated Nigerian teenager Kelechi Iheanacho and are applying for a work permit.

    The 17-year-old forward was the standout performer at the FIFA Under-17 World Cup in November, landing the Golden Ball with six goals as his Nigeria side stormed to the title.

    His performances led to an unseemly scramble between clubs, agents and even family members with claims that he had been kidnapped emerging at one stage, but it appears to have finally been resolved with City winning the race for his signature.

    A £250,000 transfer fee had been agreed, with a further £300,000 for the Taye Academy in Owerri, Nigeria where he was educated and £350,000 to Iheanacho’s father, James.

    The player is currently in Barcelona awaiting his UK work permit hearing after an incredible operation involving Spanish agents and contacts in Africa to get him out of the country where he was born.

     

  • Iheanacho’s Manchester City move back on track

    Iheanacho’s Manchester City move back on track

    Kelechi Iheanacho’s transfer to Manchester City is back on track after it looked like it had collapsed over a delayed payment.

    MTNFootball.com reveals that agents working on the move to the EPL side for the FIFA U-17 World Cup MVP are now working on getting the player and father to England for a meeting to address “some vexed issues.”

    “Both the agents in the United States and those in London are now co-operating to get visas to the United Kingdom for the Iheanachos so that they meet with Manchester City officials on the contract they have signed,” a top source informed MTNFootball.com

    “You could therefore say the transfer is back on track,” he added.

    Issues to be discussed would include the January 2015 payments to the player, his father and the Taye Football Academy in Owerri.

     

     

  • Kelechi Iheanacho declared missing

    Kelechi Iheanacho declared missing

    I don’t know my son’s whereabouts – Father

    The father of Kelechi Iheanacho has raised alarm over the whereabouts of his son, saying he has been taken away by agents without his consent.

    Iheanacho, 17, was the top star of the recent FIFA U-17 World Cup in United Arab Emirates and is wanted by several top clubs in Europe.

    However, controversies have continued to trail his next destination.

    This week, Golden Eaglets assistant coach, Emmanuel Amuneke, was reported to have manhandled a FIFA agent in Owerri over the youngster’s transfer, MTNFootball.com reports.

    “I don’t know the whereabouts of my son. I have not been able to reach him for the past three days,” MTNFootball.com quoted James Iheanacho as saying on Hot FM Owerri on Friday.

    Unconfirmed reports said two Golden Eaglets officials and a Portugal-based agent simply known as Graham may have taken the younger Iheanacho to Abuja to perfect his transfer to Europe.

    Graham was behind the summer transfer of Flying Eagles midfielder Chidi Osuchukwu to another Portuguese club, Sporting Braga.

    Portuguese champions FC Porto is believed to be in pole position to sign the player from Taye Academy in Owerri.

     

  • Eaglets’ whizkid, Kelechi Iheanacho – My parents flogged me because of football

    Eaglets’ whizkid, Kelechi Iheanacho – My parents flogged me because of football

    HE is undoubtedly the hottest teenage footballer in the world today after being voted as the Adidas Golden Ball Award winner at the 2013 FIFA Under-17 World Cup, but Kelechi Iheanacho has sensationally revealed how his parents nearly stopped him from fulfilling his dream.

    In his frankest and longest interview ever, Iheanacho told the The Nation Sport & Style his rag-to-riches stuff, adding that it was his faith that has carried him thus far.

    “I think it was God that gave me the mind to be strong enough to continue playing football because my parents nearly discouraged me at a time,” revealed Iheanacho.” I was very good with my education right from my nursery and primary school but at a point my attention shifted to football.”

    But his parents, who were not having any of that and only wanted the youngster to concentrate on his education, nearly broke his spirit by flogging him just to keep him on the straight path.

    He continued: “At a point, my parents did not want me to play football but I remember that it was one coach Ebere that is called Danish football in Nekede in Imo State that came to our house and told my parents to stop flogging me for playing football.

    “My parents did not actually listen to the coach initially, but later they started giving me some space after I entered Taiye Football Academy in Owerri. My parents were not convinced that I would make a breakthrough in life through football.

    “But they started believing in me after we went to a competition in Abuja and I helped Imo State win the tournament, and it was after this that they now gave me the blessing to start playing football,” explained Iheanacho, whose favourite hit track is Freedom as sung by Akon – the Senegalese-American R&B and hip-hop artist.

    Iheanacho in the meantime is still revelling in the joy of being crowned as the most valuable player at the just-concluded Under-17 FIFA World Cup UAE 2013 after winning the Adidas Golden Ball as well as the Silver Shoe for emerging second best top scorer, even as he gave a glimpse of what he has passed through before arriving on the podium on October 8 in Abu Dhabi. He speaks with MORAKINYO ABODUNRIN. Excerpts:

     

    What were your objectives going to FIFA World Cup in the UAE?

    Our objective right from the start of this campaign was to become world champions; every day we were told that we could become champions and we really thank God that we were able to do it. Though we knew we had a very good team, we had to fight for victory because we lost several good players before coming to the World Cup. The credit has to go to the coaches and other officials who believed in us.

    Did you think you would be this successful when you first joined the team to the extent that you would be the best player in the world at this level?

    Sincerely, I thought the coaches were not going to pick me when I first joined the camp because we had so many good players in the team. It was not as if I didn’t believe in myself but I was small physically, compared with others. I had the same fear when I first joined the Under-13 national team because I was so small. In fact, I thought it was a joke when they were telling us that we would play for the Under-17 team then but as fate would have it for us, we are here and I really thank God.

    I know you love scoring goals but you came second behind Success Isaac at the CAN Championship in Morocco, how did that affect you?

    It did not really affect me because we play as a team in the Golden Eaglets and we were always told to pass to the person who is in the best position to score. Being the highest goal scorer or the best player in a competition is not important if your team did not win the trophy. I actually had an injury during the Nations Cup in Morocco but I had to keep on working because I knew what I was looking for and I thank God I was able to score five goals. I have strong faith in God and I know that whatever it is for me, no matter how long, I’m going to get it.

    Earlier, you said you knew what you were looking for and that was why you endured the pains in Morocco, what were those things?

    Right from when I joined the Golden Eaglets’ camp, the coaches were always telling us that we wanted to qualify and win both the African Under-17 and FIFA U-17 World Cup because Nigeria have not done so since 2007. So we were all dreaming of how to achieve such glory and they really encouraged us to be able to carry it in our minds. So, we were all driven in the same direction and we thank God that we have been able to achieve it.

    How did you feel when you scored four goals in the first match against Mexico?

    I wasn’t surprised that I scored four goals against Mexico in our first match at the World Cup and I have to thank my team-mates for providing with the assists. Having said that, I think when you ask something from God, you must have the faith that he is going to do it. I was so happy after I scored the first goal because I actually prayed to God to give me two goals against Mexico, not knowing he was going to help me score two more goals. I was surprised and shocked too that I scored four goals in a single match and at the world cup for that matter.

    You talk about faith, what is faith and how strong is your faith in God?

    Faith is having the belief that you will get whatever you ask from God. I have a very strong faith in God and he is a living God because when you ask for something with faith, you are going to get it. My faith in a living God is very strong.

    Generally, how do you feel emerging as the best player of the tournament?

    I feel very great. I can’t describe the feeling and it is only God that can see and know how I feel. I didn’t believe that I would come to this championship and play to the extent that I would be picked as the best player as well as the second top scorer. What I know is that it was God that made it possible.

    What were you saying when you knelt down after receiving your awards from FIFA President Sepp Blatter?

    Christians would know that I was actually dedicating the award to God because he made it possible. I was just thanking God because anybody with God is a majority. It is God that gives us life as well as the talent and ability to play.

    Why do you like playing football and how did you develop a strong interest?

    When I started schooling, right from my nursery and primary school, I loved playing football and I was very good in my study too because I was always coming between first and third. But at some point, my focus was only on football and my mother (of blessed memory) was always telling me that I had to focus more on my education. But I realised that the only thing I wanted to do was just to play football and I was not bothered even when they started flogging me for paying too much attention to football. I didn’t stop playing football because my parents were flogging me. I think this was mapped out for me by God because if not so, I would have listened to them and stopped playing football a very long time ago.

  • Eaglets to face wounded Mexicans — Iheanacho

    Eaglets to face wounded Mexicans — Iheanacho

    • Urges Nigerians to pray for team

    Golden Eaglets’ Kelechi Iheanacho has stated that the Mexican U-17 team would be difficult and his colleagues should not expect a repeat of the first round encounter when they clash in the final of the FIFA U-17 World Cup holding in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

    The Eaglets were rampant against the El Tri who incidentally are the defending champions of the competition when they clashed during the first round. Nigeria won 6-1. But the Mexicans clawed their way back into the competition and are now in the final after a resounding 3-0 thrashing of Argentina in Abu Dhabi.

    Speaking with SportingLife at the Mixed Zone of the Rashid Stadium in Dubai, Iheanacho said the Eaglets would be ready for the Mexicans and would step out in Abu Dhabi as if they have not met them before.

    The Imo-born youth prodigy said it would be a thing of joy for him to lift the trophy with the Golden Eaglets so that he would be remembered along greats such as Kanu Nwankwo, Wilson Oruma, Nduka Ugbade among others.

    “We are in the final and we do not want to toil with our chances against Mexico. We have played against them before and we beat them. It is very easy to say that we would beat them but we have to realise that they are like a wounded lion and we must take them seriously.

    “We need the prayers of Nigerians to achieve that. It is not by our power and I must also tell my colleagues that it is not yet a done deal; we must continue the fight in the final to ensure we write our names in gold too like other great players that won the cup for Nigeria,” Iheanacho told SportingLife in Dubai.

    Iheanacho has scored five goals but his inspirational play has been very exemplary for the Nigerians who are seeking a fourth title on Asian soil.

     

  • Wrestler, Bryan inspired my goal dance

     

    Eaglets’ four-goal hero Kelechi Iheanacho has revealed that his goal celebration was inspired by his favourite wrestler Daniel Bryan.

    Iheanacho raced to the corner flag whenever he scored, raised and pumped his arms, extending his fingers to the heavens. His knees followed along in rhythm to celebrate his goals.

    “This is the celebration move of my favourite professional wrestler,” Iheanacho told FIFA.com.

    Daniel Bryan is this Nigerian boy’s favourite wrestler, a bearded American from the outskirts of Seattle who occasionally goes by the moniker, the American Dragon.

    “I watch him on TV and I love the way he whips up the crowd this way, so I decided to copy it. The fans seemed to like it, too,” he added with a broad grin.

    “I was totally over the top with joy when that first goal went in.

    “I’ve scored four goals in a game many times, but only in the streets with my friends,” he insisted with a beaming smile, the confidence of youth and a hugely successful day spilling from his pores. “But never in an international match, never for my country. The feeling is amazing.”