Tag: Super Eagles

  • Keshi rues Dike’s injury

    Keshi rues Dike’s injury

    Super Eagles coach, Stephen Keshi, has regretted the injury that knocked Bright Dike out of the team before the Confederation Cup held in Brazil in June.

    The Big Boss, who spoke in Abuja, said the MLS player would have been a perfect replacement for Emmanuel Emenike, but unfortunately, he was also injured.

    He said, “Bright Dike’s injury was pathetic, and it came almost the same time with that of Emenike. Bright would have been a perfect replacement for Emenike but it is unfortunate that he was injured too.

    “But the good news is that he has recovered and has started gradual training. I’m hopeful that by September when we have our series of qualifiers, he would be fit enough to be part of the team. It is not always the best for any coach to lose almost his best options at the same time.”

     

     

  • Why I invited Gero to Eagles – Keshi

    Why I invited Gero to Eagles – Keshi

    Super Eagles coach, Stephen Keshi, has explained the reasons behind the invitation of Enugu Rangers forward Alhaji Gero to the senior national team ahead of the return leg of the CHAN qualifier against Ivory Coast in Abidjan.

    Although Gero could not rescue the Flying Eagles at the just concluded FIFA U-20 World Cup in Turkey where the team crashed out in the round of 16, his overall performance at the tourney caught the attention of the Super Eagles technical crew.

    “I saw a lot of qualities in him that was why I invited him. I expect him to bring in competition to those who are already in the team, futaa.com quoted Keshi as saying on the player.

  • Eagles ‘debut thrills Oladapo

    Eagles ‘debut thrills Oladapo

    Shooting Stars midfielder, Olufemi Oladapo, has hailed his Super Eagles debut against Cote d’Ivoire in a 2014 CHAN qualifier.

    The former U-20 star was on from start to finish as the Eagles ‘B’ side thumped the Ivorians 4-1 in last weekend’s tie played at the Ahmadu Bello Stadium, Kaduna.

    “I’m so happy with the result we recorded and also for being a part of the squad,” the defensive midfielder told MTNFootball.com

    “The game was very tough in the first half, but the second half was different as we banged in more goals to win well.

    “It was a good thing to play alongside Sunday Mba and Ayo Saka. And I believe I took my opportunity.”

    The former Anderlecht and IK Start of Norway ace predicted the Eagles will again beat Cote d’Ivoire in Abidjan in the return leg.

    “Going to Abidjan for the second leg will be different, but with what I saw in the first leg we will win again to qualify for the CHAN,” he declared.

    “We have the squad who can deliver anywhere and at any time,” he added.

     

  • Injured Nwachukwu out of CHAN qualifier

    Injured Nwachukwu out of CHAN qualifier

    An ankle injury has ruled out Heartland FC forward Obinna Nwachukwu from Saturday’s CHAN qualifier against Cote d’Ivoire in Kaduna.

    “Obinna suffered a knock around his ankle and I am not sure he will be available for selection,” Coach Stephen Keshi told MTNFootball.com

    “Outside Obinna, there is no other injury worry in the team. We are fired up for the game and praying for mother luck now.”

    Meanwhile, Kaduna State governor, Muktar Ramalan Yero, who visited the Super Eagles on Friday ahead of Saturday’s match, said he will lead the state delegation to cheer the team to victory.

    Yero, who was accompanied by some of his cabinet members, said he was sure that with the quality of  players in the  team, Nigeria will defeat the Ivoirians on Saturday.

     

  • Ameobi removes ‘controversial’ Newcastle clause

    Ameobi removes ‘controversial’ Newcastle clause

    Newcastle striker Shola Ameobi has cancelled a clause that stopped him from featuring for Nigeria at the 2013 African Cup of Nations in South Africa.

    There have been several reports that Ameobi may no longer play for the national team following the insertion of the controversial clause in his contract at Newcastle United that led to his exclusion from Nigeria AFCON squad.

    But officials have now disclosed that the striker has cancelled this clause, which means he is now fully committed to the Super Eagles.

    “He said the clause has been removed and he will be ready to play for the Super Eagles anytime he is called upon,”MTNFootball.com quoted a Super Eagles official, Dayo Enebi Achor , as saying on the issue on Friday.

    Enebi also quoted the vastly experienced striker as saying “I will love to play for Nigeria under Stephen Keshi because he is a good coach, above all I am very proud to be a Nigerian and will always grab the opportunity to don the green white colours of my fatherland.”

    An excited Keshi has already said he will talk to the player to reassess his u-turn in the national team and will invite him anytime he was needed in the national team.

    “He is no doubt a good player and the national team can make do with his experience anytime we call upon him,” Keshi said.

    Ameobi, who opted for Nigeria after he played for England at age-grade levels, made his long-awaited Eagles debut against Venezuela in a friendly in November last year.

  • I’ll be ready for Malawi’s match- Joel Obi

    I’ll be ready for Malawi’s match- Joel Obi

    Super Eagles and Inter Milan attacking midfielder, Joel Obi, has assured Nigerian soccer fans that he would be ready for September 5 World Cup qualifying game against the Flames of Malawi in Abuja.

    Speaking with The NationSport in an exclusive chat from his base in Italy on Thursday, former Ebedei United starlet, said he has passed through all the necessary steps for recovery and would rejoin Inter for pre-season training on July 10.

    The player is particularly happy that he has a brighter chance of getting involved in Nigeria’s quest to secure one Africa’s tickets for next year’s mundial in Brazil.

    “Firstly I want to thank God Almighty for helping me to see through the recovery process. The injury has stopped me from playing for my club and country for some time now.

    “I want to tell you especially that I would be rejoining my teammates for full training sessions in July 10. So that means I would be back fully on that day and I am really happy about this. It is not easy to pass through the process of recovery from injury but as a professional football player that is one of the things we must pass through. But the joy of rejoining my teammates in Inter really makes me happy,” he told our correspondent.

     

  • Ex-Super Eagles star Oliha is dead

    Ex-Super Eagles star Oliha is dead

    Former Super Eagles midfielder, Thompson Oliha is dead.

    He died on Sunday morning and his remains had been deposited at the mortuary.

    Reports said the former Flying Eagles midfielder complained of malaria and was taken to an undisclosed hospital in Ilorin, Kwara State, where he gave up the ghost.

    Oliha was a key member of Nigeria’s 1994 African Nations Cup winning squad in Tunisia.

    He also played in the 1994 World Cup in United States with the Super Eagles.

    He was a second half substitute in Nigeria’s round of 16 clash with Italy at the tournament, a match Super Eagles lost 2-1 to exit the competition.

    Until his death, Oliha was one of the coaches at the Kwara State Football Academy in Ilorin.

     

  • Eguavoen: Lack of concentration was Super Eagles’ undoing

    Eguavoen: Lack of concentration was Super Eagles’ undoing

    Austin Eguavoen, a former Super Eagles Head Coach, said on Thursday that the team’s concentration level at the ongoing Confederations Cup in Brazil was their major undoing.

    Eguavoen told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that the team could have stayed longer at the tournament, if they had sustained their level of intensity in all their matches.

    The former ACB FC of Lagos and Gent FC of Belgium defender emphasised the need for the Stephen Keshi-led technical crew to work more on the team’s attack line.

    “In my assessment of our performance from the opening match with Tahiti, we were brilliant. We could have scored more, but we couldn’t. And mind you, we missed some players that would have been part of the struggle.

    “In our match against Uruguay, even when we fought so hard, our major undoing was lack of concentration, but in all, I give it to them that they did well,” he said.

    Eguavoen, who was a member of the Super Eagles squad that won the 1994 edition of the AFCON in Tunisia, stressed that the Eagles must step up their game against the big teams. He noted that the team initially kept pace with World Champions Spain in their last group match, but eventually lost out because they could not convert gilt-edged chances into goals.

    “It could have been Spain 5 Nigeria 3, but that didn’t happen, because we did not take advantage of the chances; that’s the difference. In spite of the lack of bite in our attack, we still gave Spain a run for their money, even when we lost 3-0,” he added.

    On the chances of the team qualifying for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, the former Super Eagles coach was of the firm belief that the team would qualify for the soccer fiesta.

    “I have no doubts in my mind; we can go to sleep. Nigeria has qualified for the World Cup. We just have to work hard with a lot of top friendlies against European, Asian, South American and African sides,” Eguavoen added.

  • Chidi Nwanu warns Keshi, NFF: Don’t destroy Super Eagles again

    Chidi Nwanu warns Keshi, NFF: Don’t destroy Super Eagles again

    Super Eagles defender, Chidi Nwanu, who is now a full time Pastor in Belgium, has warned the Super Eagles Coach Stephen Keshi and the Nigeria Football Federation not to destroy the team as it happened after the USA ’94 World Cup when it was disbanded.

    According to him the downfall of the Nigeria senior national team actually began that time and the country’s football is still struggling to come back to limelight. He was of the opinion that more experienced players should be brought back into the team in order to fortify it most especially in the attack line of the team.

    Nwanu who was not happy with the performance of the Eagles most especially against the world Champions Spain told SportingLife from his base in Belgium yesterday that he was ashamed of the way the Eagles lost the game because of loss of concentration. He was particularly irked about the way the Nigerian team conceded the third goal against Spain.

    “I watched the Super Eagles match against Spain which Nigeria lost 3-0. I think they forgot to score and they forgot to keep their discipline either. They couldn’t make the goals, they lost their chances and they couldn’t concentrate in the defense,” he said.

    “The third goal that Spain scored against the Eagles was not supposed to be because everybody left the defense line including the goalkeeper trying to score. It was ridiculous to have done this at this level of a competition like the Confederations Cup.

    “I will say Kudos to the goalkeeper (Vincent Enyeama) because the Spanish team could have scored more goals if not for his efforts in goal by preventing many goals attempt from the Spanish attackers.

    “I think the Eagles gave too much respect to the national team of Spain and I don’t know why.

    “The Technical Adviser of the team (Keshi) and his technical crew as well as the welfare officer, if there is any in the team, should sit down and analyze how these experienced players can be useful to the team and how best they could bring some of them back to the team in order to fortify it. I know quite well that in all these national and international matches a team like the Super Eagles need experienced players in the team.

    “Let’s go back the memory lane. I don’t want what happened to the team (Eagles) after the World Cup in 1994 in United States of America to happen again this time around.

    “We came back from the USA ’94 World Cup and we were all disbanded despite playing impressively in the competition. So the players that formed the 1996 Atlanta Olympics were the team that played in the France 1998 World Cup and we know what happened then.

    “The Super Eagles disbandment in 1994 was the beginning of the downfall of Nigerian football then. The team was properly disorganized that time which is still reflecting in our (Nigerian) football up till date. The same trying is what is happening now in the Eagles. So we must try to stop this trend once and for all.”

  • The Song of the Super Eagles

    We arrived in Brazil as the Champions of Africa, the continent’s pride.

    We travelled to Belo Horizonte and they draped us in flowers, celebrated our failings and cheered the every touch of our lowly opponents.

    In Salvador—the capital of happiness—our hopes were curtailed by a veteran’s thunderbolt.

    Then, the foray to Fortaleza, and a contest with the champions of Europe, the champions of the World, a team one day to be revered among the finest the universe has ever produced.

    The narrative has been reversed; the crushing victory against Pacific minnows was greeted with indifference and inevitability, the narrow defeat to the Celeste of Uruguay met with shrugs of respect and respectability, and the 3-0 loss to Spain cradled by gushing glory and a renewed sense of belonging.

    Only in the darkest of defeats, the confirmation of elimination has the world begun to believe in Stephen Keshi’s mission and the Super Eagles’ place at the international high table.

    Against La Roja in Ceara State we met many familiar but forgotten figures of the African game; they were all there.

    Ahmed Musa was the bright young thing, the prodigal talent, blessed with pace and promise, but lacking the noblest of all the virtues, a mind to capitalise on his twinkling toes.

    John Obi Mikel was the talismanic hero. The midfield general, an absence lamented since the departure of Sunday Oliseh; spraying passes, prompting attacks and driving his side forward. They tell me that during the group stage no player completed as many passes in the final third of the pitch as the Chelsea man.

    There was Vincent Enyeama, the final stand, the last line of defence, consistently strong, consistently resolute, but ultimately unable to cull the calculated offense that came his way.

    In these men we recognised figures we have come to know and adore over the last 12 months, men who carried the Eagles to South Africa, who claimed a continent’s crown, and who were so defiant in defeat here at the Confederations Cup.

    Dreams of the semifinal depart unrealised, but optimism is rife following such a bold defeat. Nigerians are now looking forwards, not towards a knock-out clash with Brazil, but towards a summer of promise back in this land of carnival and protest.

    This competition may have ended in disappointment and elimination, but Keshi and his collective have made the most of their opportunity to demonstrate their burgeoning talents before a global audience.

    Certainly, the attack may have been at times shambolic, the forward line lacking almost any semblance of cohesion, and areas of the squad proving to be wafer thin, but against Uruguay, and particularly Spain, the side showed that they have the requisite ability to trouble the elite teams; they don’t get much more accomplished than the Champions of South America, of Europe, and of the World!

    The attack is an evident area of weakness, although Nigerians can take solace in the fact that the likes of Victor Moses, Emmanuel Emenike and Kalu Uche will return from injury in due course.

    Beyond them, there is a whole swathe of attacking talents plying their trade across the world who could be primed to step into the squad ahead of next summer. Keshi need never feel forced to rely on the limited abilities of Ideye Brown, Anthony Ujah and Joseph Akpala again.

    It is easy to forget just how young and relatively inexperienced this side are—it was a point Keshi was keen to convey in the wake of their defeat. While Spain have played together for over half a decade, and almost all have a career’s worth of top-end experience, Nigeria still have the capacity to grow together.

    The assured centre back pairing of Kenneth Omeruo and Godfrey Oboabona are just 19 and 22 respectively; the aforementioned Musa and the absent defensive midfielder Ogenyi Onazi are only 20, while talented forwards Victor Moses and Nnamdi Oduamadi are each 22 and with great scope for development.

    They may have received criticism from some quarters following their stuttering victory over Tahiti, but in defeat, perhaps paradoxically, the Super Eagles have shown that they know how to stand strong, they are capable of controlling a midfield and carving out chances, and—with a key inclusion or two up front—could well be capable of beating some of the world’s finest teams.

    It will doubtless be another year of learning and development for Keshi and his young side, if they continue in their trajectory, expect them to stick around a little longer in Brazil next summer.

    Culled from www.kickoff.com