Tag: Oshoala

  • Oshoala is face of 2016 Women Federation  Cup

    Oshoala is face of 2016 Women Federation Cup

    Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) in conjunction with HS Media Group – a leader in sports marketing  in Nigeria, will on  October 4,  unveil African Female Player of the Year (2014), Asisat Lamina Oshoala (MON) as the ‘Face of 2016 Women Federation Cup’.

    The event will hold at the Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere, Lagos and will herald the chain of activities lined up for this year’s Women Federation Cup final, which comes up later this month in Lagos.

    Oshoala, who will grace the final in Lagos, will also hand-out signed jerseys and other football items to fans and participating teams in the final at the stadium to ginger up the younger ones.

    This benevolent gesture is in tune with her heart desire to promote the game at the grassroots and help the future generation of young Nigerian players, particularly, ladies who are aspiring to attain the greatest heights in their careers.

    The Arsenal lady won the Women Federation Cup twice in 2013 and 2014 with Rivers Angels FC of Port Harcourt and has expressed her pleasure at being picked the ‘Face of 2016 Women Federation Cup.’ She promised to work towards bringing back the glory days to the tournament.

    “I am prepared to join hands with the  NFF to rekindle the passion and bring back the crowd for this age-old competition in Nigeria,” she said.

  • Hotsports set to make Oshoala Face of Female FA Cup

    Hotsports set to make Oshoala Face of Female FA Cup

    Hotsports Nigeria Limited are on the verge of finalising arrangements with the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) to make former African Women’s Footballer of the Year, Asisat Oshoala, the Face of the 2016 Female FA Cup.

    Oshoala, who is back on a short break from her base in London, where she features in the women football league for the Arsenal Ladies, joined the Hotsports team in a crucial meeting  with the Lagos State Football Association Chairman and the 1st Vice President  of the Nigeria Football Federation,  Seyi Akinwunmi at  the State  FA office in Onikan, Lagos on Tuesday.

    The NFF top official described the idea of making Oshoala the Face of the female FA Cup as a brilliant innovation and promised to pass the message to the President of the NFF, Amaju Pinnick, who he said will be glad to welcome the initiative.

    “First of all, we have Oshoala, coming to give back, it happens only a few times . Secondly, we need inspiration  for young female footballers in Nigeria, she (Oshoala) has offered  herself and it’s a very good thing  to do , ” Akinwunmi  said.

    The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Chairman of  Hotsports  and HS Media Group, Taye Ige commended the NFF and Asisat Oshoala  for creating the platform  to revive the image of female football in Nigeria.

    “It’s a boost  for female football in Nigeria ultimately, you remember that at every final event of the FA Cup, the  female  final is played just as an adjoint  of the  male event or as a curtain raiser. We think that is not good enough and  we think the national Federation should do something about it and begin to build the brand called female football,” Ige said.

    On her part, Oshoala said she was full of excitement about the initiative to make  her the face of the female FA Cup.

    “I feel very happy and excited about it, I”ll really appreciate it if it can be approved, to make me the Face of   the 2016 female FA Cup,” Oshoala said.

    Hotsports is the official Marketing consultant for the Asisat Oshoala brand.

  • Oshoala: I want to be an inspiration to others

    Oshoala: I want to be an inspiration to others

    A veteran of two FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cups, Nigeria’s Asisat Oshoala feels a strong connection to FIFA’s youth competitions. It is the place where she learnt the big lessons and made the big choices that ultimately led her to awards, accolades and a place at the FIFA Women’s World Cup™.

    But well before the teenage dreams of wearing green jerseys and scoring goals in faraway lands, there was a little matter of shaping her skills on the local pitches of Ikorodu, 36 kilometres north of Lagos.

    AMONPOINT-572“When I was in school I used to play football with boys,” Oshoala told FIFA.com. “I was in this six-a-side team. The boys always used to say to me: ‘Don’t go to the front, just stay at the back. Just kick the balls out. You can’t score goals. You can’t dribble past defenders.’

    “And then the day came where we made it to a final. I dribbled two or three players and scored a goal. 1-0. End of the game. I remember saying to them, ‘Look at that. You don’t believe in me but look at what I can do.”

    Oshoala considers that moment her first valuable life-lesson. “When you have this determination, and people see this determination in you, eventually they have no choice but to give you the support you need to get you where you want to go,” explained the Arsenal Ladies midfielder, reflecting warmly on those first boisterous barriers in her carrier.

    From Ikorodu to Saitama

    On the international front, it all began for then-17-year-old Oshoala with a surprise call up to the Nigeria team for the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup Japan 2012. “I didn’t think I was even going to get to pass the ball at the U-20 (tournament) because I was so young,” said the midfielder. “I thought I was just making up the numbers.”

    Oshoala came on as a substitute in the 76th minute of Nigeria’s opener against Korea Republic. Her performance for those final 14 minutes was so impressive that she started every subsequent match at the tournament, helping Nigeria all the way to the semi-finals.

    “Then and there I learnt that when given an opportunity, you give it your best,” she said. “You might not see them, but someone is always watching. It was a great lesson for me. It’s something I’ve carried from Japan into every match I play now.”

    Goals and golds in Canada

    Oshoala failed to score in Japan, a statistic she was quick to remedy at the next FIFA U-20 World Cup where she scored seven goals in six games. She left Canada 2014 with a runners-up medal hanging from her neck, the golden ball award in one arm, the golden boot under the other and several shattered tournament records in her wake, including becoming only the third player in the competition’s history to score four goals in one match.

    “Canada was a massive one for me,” she said. “I wanted to do better. I wanted people to come not only watch my team, but I wanted them to come watch the girl who is determined, the girl who is always ready to give her best.”

    Perhaps one of the most representative moments of her confident and competitive character took place against England in their final group stage game of Canada 2014. Locked at 1-1, England’s Bethany Mead missed a penalty in the 53rd minute. Just six minutes later, Oshoala was brought down in the box and given the same chance to snatch the lead.

    “It was a crucial penalty for the team,” she said. “We had to score. We had to win the game to qualify for the next round. It wasn’t planned that I take it. We had a penalty taker, but I could see that she was scared. I walked up to her and said, ‘I’ll take it for you.’

    “I wanted the challenge, I remember thinking, ‘I’m the old player in the team, I’m the one that played at the previous U-20, I should be able to step up and do it for my team.”

    Oshoala slotted the ball away coolly and Nigeria ran rampant through the knockout stages until a 98th minute goal in the final against Germany ended the Falconets hopes of a first ever U-20 Women’s World Cup trophy.

    The biggest stage

    It was no surprise then, that less than a year after the U-20 tournament where she nearly swept the individual honours, Oshoala received a spot in Nigeria’s starting XI in their opening match at Canada 2015. “The Women’s World Cup was something completely different,” Oshoala recalled. “I’d never experienced playing for such big crowds. I remember having to reprimand myself a few times.

    “I kept having to remind myself to not go onto the pitch and just start looking at my idols and not play football. I kept refocusing on this thought, ‘I’m going to go there and play the game I have inside me.’”

    Only 21, and already at idol-status herself for younger generations of players, Oshoala is acutely aware of her responsibility. “I want to be an inspiration to others,” she said. “So whenever I’m given the opportunity to represent my country I have to give my best.”

  • Liverpool accept Arsenal bid for Oshoala

    Liverpool accept Arsenal bid for Oshoala

    According to reports, Liverpool Ladies have accepted  Arsenal Ladies’ offer to sign Nigeria international Asisat Oshoala.

    The Reds confirmed on their official website on Tuesday that they had accepted a bid for the striking superstar, who has begun to emerge as one of the finest female footballers in the game today.

    According to reports in Nigeria, the striker—who was named African Women’s Player of the Year in 2014—will discuss personal terms with the Gunners, and thrash out the small print of the contract, before deciding whether she will swap life in Merseyside for a switch to London.

    A statement on the Liverpool website announced the acceptance of the offer with the following statement: “Liverpool Ladies can today confirm that the club has reluctantly accepted a bid from Arsenal Ladies for Asisat Oshoala.

    “After the Gunners activated a clause in the Nigerian international’s contract, the striker will now discuss personal terms with Pedro Martinez Losa’s side.

    “The deal is also subject to the 21-year-old being granted a work permit ahead of the 2016 season.”

    The 21-year-old moved to Liverpool from celebrated Nigerian side Rivers Angels in 2015, having made her Nigeria debut years earlier.

    Oshoala top scored at the 2014 Fifa U-20 Women’s World Cup, and was also named the best player in the tournament, however, she struggled to truly make an impact at last year’s Women’s World Cup, as Nigeria were dumped out in the first round.

  • Kolo Toure to watch Oshoala  in action vs Brescia

    Kolo Toure to watch Oshoala in action vs Brescia

    Kolo Toure will watch Nigeria international Asisat Oshoala and her Liverpool teammates in action today as they seek to overturn a one – goal deficit in the UEFA Women’s Champions League against Brescia.

    The former Ivory Coast international has been invited to be guest of honour at the Select Security Stadium in Widnes.

    Apart from cheering the Liverpool Ladies, Toure will meet The Reds supporters and sign autographs as well as pose for photographs.

    Oshoala made her debut in the Champions League last week, coming on in the 46th minute to replace Ashley Hodson in the first leg held in Italy.

    Nigeria internationals Charity Adule, Evelyn Nwabuoku, Ogonna Chukwudi, Sarah Michael, Ebere Ngozi, Chichi Igbo, Onome Ebi, Gift Otuwe and Uchechi Sunday will all be hoping to get game time in the Champions League today.

  • Oshoala wins Leadership Sports Personality award

    Oshoala wins Leadership Sports Personality award

    Super Falcons’ striker Asisat Oshoala has been named Leadership Sports Personality of the Year. The award was presented at the newspaper’s Conference/Awards ceremony in Abuja on Wednesday.

    The pacy forward, who plays her club football for Liverpool Ladies FC in the English Women’s Super League, won several awards last year, including the BBC Women’s Player of the Year diadem.

    Selected as the Most Valuable Player (MVP) of the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup finals in Canada, where Nigeria emerged runner-up, Oshoala was also named Player of the Tournament at the 2014 African Women Championship in Namibia, where she was also the second Best Goalscorer.

    The Award was presented at the Sheraton Hotel, Abuja on Wednesday morning and received on Oshoala’s behalf by the Team Administrator of the U-20 Women National Team, Mrs Faith Ben-Anuge.

    Oshoala, who will turn 21 on Friday, also played for Nigeria at this summer’s FIFA Women’s World Cup finals in Canada.

  • knee injury Oshoala may miss Bata tie

    knee injury Oshoala may miss Bata tie

    If feelers from Liverpool Ladies FC are anything to go by, Super Falcons will again miss top star Asisat Oshoala for an all-important Rio 2016 Olympic qualifier against Equatorial Guinea due to injury.

    The reigning African women’s player missed the first leg which ended 1-1 in Abuja due to same injury, and she won’t recover by the time the return leg will be played on August 2.

    Oshoala is nursing a knee injury, which sidelined her from Thursday’s league game for Liverpool against Everton and she will be out “for weeks”, the club manager Matt Murray said.

    England star Fara Williams and Satara Murray are also down with hamstring injuries.

    Oshoala was injured on Saturday as she helped ‘The Reds’ beat Notts County 2-0.

    “It’s the spine of your team – your central midfielder, your centre-back and your centre-forward – but it’s one of those things,” Beard told the BBC.

    “They’re important players to us but it’s going to give maybe one or two of the younger players an opportunity.

    “We’ll do as much as we can, while we’re still involved in everything mathematically, to finish as high as we can.”

  • Asisat Oshoala scores in Liverpool win over Arsenal

    Asisat Oshoala scores in Liverpool win over Arsenal

    Super Falcons striker Asisat Oshoala was on target when Liverpool Ladies walloped Arsenal Ladies 3-1 in the Women’s Super League One on Sunday.

    The Nigerian international converted a lovely finish in the 87th minute to inflict a first league defeat of the season on Arsenal to keep their hopes of a third consecutive Women’s Super League title alive.

    England midfielder Fara Williams opened the scoring with a stunning strike from 25-yards out before 41-year-old full-back Becky Easton bundled in a second.

    Spain striker Natalia’s delicate chip pulled one back for the hosts, who were backed by a crowd of 2,061.

    But Asisat Oshoala’s lobbed finish secured the points for Liverpool.

    The result gave the defending champions their first away points of the season and they are now only three points behind the second-placed Gunners, with a game in hand.

    Liverpool are now fifth on the table with nine points while Arsenal are now five points behind leaders Chelsea after the Blues won 4-1 at home to Bristol Academy.

  • NIGERIA V USA:We’ll play like Real Madrid – Oshoala

    NIGERIA V USA:We’ll play like Real Madrid – Oshoala

    Asisat Oshoala has had a pretty spectacular 12 months by anyone’s standards.

    The Ikorodu, Lagos, native took home both the Adidas Golden Ball and the Golden Boot at the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup Canada 2014 en route to a second-place finish with the Super Falconets in August of last year, while just last week she scored in her senior Women’s World Cup debut.

    In between those feats, ‘Superzee’, as she is known by her team-mates, signed for Liverpool and earned the BBC’s Women’s Footballer of the Year Award, while also picking up the CAF young and senior player prizes.

    Add in becoming a Member of the Order of the Niger (MON), an honour bestowed upon the 20-year-old by her nation’s president and it would be safe to assume that Oshoala is content with how things are going at the moment!

    And you would be wrong. Despite all of the accolades she has recently earned and the attention she has received from all corners of the planet, Nigeria’s No.8 has been finding it difficult to enjoy herself during her first Women’s World Cup so far. That is not to say Canada 2015 has yet to be a worthwhile experience for the young starlet, though.

    “I have learned a lot of things about myself as a player,” Oshoala told FIFA.com after her team’s 2-0 loss to Australia. At times during the U-20 Women’s World Cup last summer it seemed almost impossibly easy for Oshoala to find the back of the net. But as the young starlet quickly pointed out, that is simply not the case at Canada 2015.

    “This is a big tournament with much stronger competition. When you play at the under-age tournament, and then you come to the senior World Cup, you see it’s much harder. So, you just have to adapt to it. My style of play can’t always be the same. I need to find different ways to change my attacking patterns so I can get behind the backline.”

    That is a lesson Oshoala duly learned after the Super Falcons’ loss to Australia, where she and her fellow forwards rarely threatened the Matildas’ goal. After a wildly entertaining 3-3 draw where Oshoala scored Nigeria’s second and presented herself as a constant threat to Sweden, the No. 8 found herself frustrated against Australia.

    “I would say Sweden actually made it very hard for us,” explained Oshoala. “Australia, I think, were an easier opponent. We were unlucky not to get the goals we needed. But it doesn’t matter; we have to be better, no matter what.”

    If coach Edwin Okon can get his front three – Oshoala is usually featured up top alongside the talents of Desire Oparanozie and Ngozi Okobi – firing on all cylinders in time for today’s big test against a tough USA side, the Super Falcons may just be able to soar into the knockout stages, something Nigeria have only done once before, at USA 1999.

    Oshoala believes she and her team-mates have what it takes to reach the Round of 16, and as she explains with a smile on her face she would like to emulate the style of a certain attacking trio known the world over.

    “I want us to play like Real Madrid’s forwards!” Oshoala says through her laughter. They’re very, very good, Benzema, Ronaldo and Gareth Bale. We can be similar to them and I’d like us to play just like them as much as possible. As a front three we can be very dangerous and if we try to be like them, we’ll go very far in this tournament!”

  • How I changed Sweden’s game plan- Oshoala

    How I changed Sweden’s game plan- Oshoala

    Super Falcons forward, Assisat Oshoala had to pay the price of being one of the few outstanding players in the Nigerian team when she was marked from all angles by the Swedish girls in an encounter that left the Falcons in a draw in their 2015 Women’s W/Cup opening game on Monday.

    However the recently crowned BBC best female footballer of the year revealed she had to change the game plan to the Super Falcons favor.

    In a chat with the NationSports after the match she said:” I realized I became the target and its normal when you everybody knows.

    I’m not going to say I’m a key player or a star player but I know they have watched my game especially at the last U-20 World Cup.

    In the first half, they came all out for me but I said to my teammates to play the ball more on the other side so that when I get the ball I can make use of it well,” she said.

    Oshoala also revealed that the present crops of Falcons were determined to excel beyond the African shores. With two goals down in the first half, they made up their mind to come out stronger.

    She said: “We conceded two quick goals but we knew we had no other options than to come out stronger in the second half and that was what inspired us when we got to the pitch. We told ourselves we have to come back stronger and I’m happy we got the result.”

    She added: “This is the senior World Cup and I feel great to score my first goal at this level. I am very happy about it, I am proud of myself, I am proud of my team and nation. I am doing what I know how to do best and I am grateful to God for always helping me to fix things up.”