Nigeria sleepwalks towards missing South Africa 2010 Print E-mail
Written by Ayo Akinfe   
Saturday, 05 April 2008

Nigeria sleepwalks towards missing South Africa 2010 

By Ayo Akinfe 

With the 2010 World Cup qualifiers due to start in May, Nigeria is once more looking like a country not interested in participating in the Mundial. I challenge anyone to give me one good reason why Nigeria deserves to go to the big dance.

At the moment, we have no coach, are not playing friendlies, do not know our best team, lack cohesion and have no plans to integrate young players into the squad. While we are in this our habitual deep slumber, everyone else is aggressively stepping up preparations and correcting their flaws.

Looking at the current dire situation, it would take a miracle of biblical proportions for all our current problems to be resolved before our first qualifier against South Africa on May 30. In Nigeria, we are used to this kind of lack of planning but what I find surprising is that after the furore over the failure of the Galadima board, everyone is taking the current nonsense so calmly.

After the recent debacle of Ghana 08 and missing out on Germany 06, one would have thought that Nigeria has learnt her lessons but alas, we have not. As things stand, we are probably the most ill-prepared nation in the world for the 2010 World Cup and I find it inexplicable that nobody seems to care.

We failed to qualify for Germany 06 because the Nigerian Football Association (NFA) left an unqualified, ill-equipped and technically limited coach in the form of Christian Chukwu in charge of the team. Moves to replace him only began after our failure to beat Angola in Kano, by which time it was too late.

I must confess that one of the things that makes Nigeria such a lovely and wonderful country is our love for the dramatic. We as a people love sailing close to the wind, skating on thin ice and staring death in the face now and again.

Unfortunately, our knack of pulling back from the precipice to prevent us falling into the abyss does not always work and on many occasions, we have been known to lose our footing and take the plunge. This is exactly what happened in 2006 and all the signs point to it happening again in 2010.

South Africa 2010 will probably represent Nigeria’s best chance of winning the World Cup in our lifetime. Home advantage has always been a key advantage in the World Cup and in South Africa, there is no doubt that the home fans will be rooting for the continent’s own teams.

By the time the World Cup comes round to Africa again, most of us will either be dead or too old to appreciate what is going on. Africa’s most populous nation should be using this chance-in-a-lifetime to catapult the continent to the top of the rostrum and seek to claim a place at the high table of the elite but alas, once more, the giant is letting the continent down.

When first elected, I believed that the Sani Lulu-led board should have been given a mandate to win South Africa 2010 or get kicked out but now, that actually seems far-fetched, as we may not even be there. To win the Mundial, you have to qualify first.

We are two years away from the World Cup and in every sane nation on earth, planning has begun. Our Eagles have no coach and looking at the way the bungling NFA is having endless meetings with no solution in sight, I doubt if we will have one by May 30.

For starters, I am not aware of the NFA interviewing or talking to any world class coach capable of motivating the boys, making our opponents fear us and technically astute enough to navigate the early stages of the World Cup. At the moment, they are talking to a group of local coaches but deep down, I believe that the members of the Sani Lulu board knows that this is a recipe for disaster.

To coach Nigeria’s Super Eagles effectively, you need to be a coach who stands head and shoulders above the players. Given the kind of king-sized egos we Nigerians come with, our coach needs to be a man who the players will respect, fear and revere.

If he is a coach who they believe that they have played at a higher level than, we have all the components for a disaster. Our boys as we know them, will never play with guts, passion, motivation and unbridled loyalty for a coach like Samson Siasia, Amodu Shaibu or Stephen Keshi.

We need a man of the calibre of say Gus Hiddink, Giovanni Trapattoni, Luis Van Gaal, Klaus Toepmoller, Jean Tigana or Frank Rijkaard. Anything less than that and we will get the kind of lacklustre, indifferent performances we saw in Ghana 08.

Talking of Ghana 08, I hope that the NFA has managed to extricate itself from the messy tangle it got into with the clueless and pathologically lazy Berti Vogts. Now that the man has been appointed as Azerbaijan’s head coach, any further payments from the NFA should cease.

No heads rolled over the Berti saga despite the fact that the NFA was warned about the man’s limitations, his laziness, his refusal to scout our players and the fact that he was screaming about knowing 20 of his 23-man squad before he had even met half of the players. The NFA board may have got away with it once but should they make a hash of things in 2010, they should be subject to worse treatment than any erring sports board has ever faced in the history of Nigeria.

If the reports we read about Globacom offering to pay the salaries of a new coach are true, why has someone not been appointed? Why are we not playing friendlies, making use of Fifa windows, scouting young players and integrating our youngsters into the main team?

During the March 25/26 Fifa window, 23 African teams played friendly games, in certain cases against opposition as formidable as Argentina and France. We do not even have any idea when we will have a helmsman and yet, for some reason, we think we have a right to pick up a World Cup ticket ahead of some of these our more serious and better-prepared continental brothers.

Given how woeful we were in Ghana 08, I am still scratching my head as to how even a man like Gus Hiddink would turn things round within two years. We need a good clearout and the introduction of a whole host of new blood into the team.

Many of our players are way past their prime and were it not for the fact that they are using their “football ages” rather than their real dates of birth, their clubs would have retired many of them too. Some of our best and most talented players were involved in the Late Yemi Tella’s victorious U-17 team and you do not need to be a rocket scientist to realise that we need some of these boys in the team.

As we speak, players like Chrisantus MaCauley, Lukman Haruna and Rabiu Ibrahim would get into any Eagles 23 squad if selection is based solely on merit. How soon we appoint someone who will realise this and get on with this may well determine if we will be in South Africa or will be at home enjoying the Nigerian summer.

 




RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1




Nigeria sleepwalks towards
missing South Africa 2010
By Ayo Aki...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 05.04.2008 11:12

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Vade MecumVade Mecum is offline 
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 # 2

Our boys as we know them, will never play with guts, passion, motivation and unbridled loyalty for a coach like Samson Siasia, Amodu Shaibu or Stephen Keshi. - Ayo Akinfe

I DISAGREE WITH YOUR CONCLUSION. MY OPINION, IS THAT, IF WE PAY OUR LOCAL COACHES WELL, AND GIVE THEM ALL THE ENCOURAGEMENT, THAT WE ACCORD THE FOREIGN COACHES; THEY WILL SUDDENLY COMMAND MORE RESPECT FROM OUR BOYS

We need a man of the calibre of say Gus Hiddink, Giovanni Trapattoni, Luis Van Gaal, Klaus Toepmoller, Jean Tigana or Frank Rijkaard. Anything less than that and we will get the kind of lacklustre, indifferent performances we saw in Ghana 08. - Ayo Akinfe

AGAIN, I DISAGREE WITH YOU SIR. IF OUR LOCAL COACHES ARE GIVEN, EVERY NECESSARY ENCOURAGEMENT AND PROPERLY FACILITATED AND MOTIVATED, LIKE THE FOREIGNERS, WE SO MUCH LOVE TO IMPORT, LIKE BORA MILUTINOVITCH, BERTI VOGTS AND YOUR FOREIGN 'COACHES OF CALIBER' , OUR LOCAL COACHES, WHO ARE ALREADY DELIVERING, EVEN WITHOUT ANY ENCOURAGEMENT, WILL PERFORM WONDERS. MIND YOU, OUR LOCAL COACHES, ALREADY KNOW AND UNDERSTAND THE BOYS IN AND OUT. OUR LOCAL COACHES, KNOW HOW TO PSYCHE UP AND MOTIVATE THE PLAYERS. OUR LOCAL COACHES, UNDERSTAND OUR APPROACH TO THE GAME, BETTER THAN THE FOREIGNERS. OUR LOCAL COACHES ARE MORE INTELLIGENT AND SOPHISTICATED, WHEN IT COMES TO READING AN ON-GOING GAME AND MAKING NECESSARY CHANGES. OUR LOCAL COACHES WILL NOT RESIDE IN GERMANY AND COACH THE EAGLES FROM GERMANY. OUR LOCAL COACHES HAVE MORE RESPECT FOR OUR PEOPLE, OUR PLAYERS, OUR SPORTS ADMINISTRATORS AND OUR GOVERNMENT. OUR LOCAL COACHES, WILL NOT NEED TO SACRIFICE OUR CHANCES, BY LEARNING THE BASICS ABOUT OUR PATTERN OF PLAY AND WHO IS WHO, AND WHO CAN DO WHAT, AT THE ELEVENTH HOUR TO A MAJOR EVENTH. THE CURRENT CROP OF LOCAL PLAYERS, NOW TURNED COACHES, WHO ARE AVAILABLE TO COACH THE EAGLES, HAVE ALL PLAYED THE GAME, AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL TOO. BUT THEN, COME TO THINK OF IT, BERTI VOGTS, PLAYED AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL AND EVEN PREVIOUSLY COACHED AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL. DO YOU WANT HIM BACK ?

Talking of Ghana 08, I hope that the NFA has managed to extricate itself from the messy tangle it got into with the clueless and pathologically lazy Berti Vogts. Now that the man has been appointed as Azerbaijan’s head coach, any further payments from the NFA should cease. - Ayo Akinfe

I AGREE WITH YOU ON THIS. HE ABANDONED US; THUS HE SHOULD GET NO SEVERANCE PACKAGE.

Posted by Vade Mecum| 05.04.2008 16:07

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JohnmoorJohnmoor is offline 
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 # 3

We need a man of the calibre of say Gus Hiddink, Giovanni Trapattoni, Luis Van Gaal, Klaus Toepmoller, Jean Tigana or Frank Rijkaard. Anything less than that and we will get the kind of lacklustre, indifferent performances we saw in Ghana 08. - Ayo Akinfe

NIGERIA MUST BE BUILT BY NIGERIANS, BECAUSE IT'S THE MAN WHO WEARS THE SHOE THAT KNOWS WHERE EXACTLY IT PINCHES HIM, AND ONLY THE FARMER KNOWS THE TRUE NATURE OF HIS FARMLAND AND EXACTLY HOW THE SEASONS AFFECT HIS CROPS

Posted by Johnmoor| 06.04.2008 00:01

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philipikitaphilipikita is offline 
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 # 4

I support the first 2 comments by Vade Mecum and Johnmoor.
What is needed more than respect and keeping to strict discipline and laid down regulations? Not that Ahmodu Shuaibu will decamp a player for gross violation and some sport ministry officials will "overule" the coach, how can such a coach be respected by players? There must be no sacred cows.
Even the biggest stars of the game (Beckham, Ronaldhino, Ronaldo, C. Ronaldo, Kaka), they stick to camp rules like "boys", because the know they implication of not playing for their national team.

We can do it, if a local coach will be accorded the same respect and resources enjoyed by foreign clowns.
Why do we underestimate what we can do?

Posted by philipikita| 06.04.2008 01:02

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JohnmoorJohnmoor is offline 
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 # 5

SHIKINA!

philipikita, you've said it all!

I hope Ayo Akinfe will have a re-think, that is, if he is not one of those that encourages the 'Glass House' (through public speech and writing) to go for foreign coach, so they can benefit from the corrupt process of getting one

Posted by Johnmoor| 06.04.2008 01:34

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OnariOnari is offline 
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 # 6

One thing that keep amazing me is that we Nigerians who suppose to know better behave as if to say we don't know the fundamentals of the Nigerian problem.

If our football is a failure and we need foreigners to manage it, why cant we just hand over the country entirely to foreign country to manage...In fact put it literally, Nigeria should be recolonized...thats what the article is leads me to believe.

when the leadership of the country was passionate about their country, our sports also strived and the sports men and women especially footballers were passionate and proud of their country and did extremely well, and when we had and now still have mediocre as leaders, why will anyone be passionate about a country going down the drain due the fault of its citizens inability to lead honestly. Patriotism to ones country to me is give and take ...it is two way thing

Everyday I see fellow citizens criticize and abuse some government ministries and parasatals like the police, NNPC, customs, and on this article here, our football, it makes me wonder if actually we the citizens of Nigeria actually pay attention and are engaged in the fundamental issues that keeps down our country year after year with no end in sight.

The failure of our police, our football(sports), NNPC, customs, Immigration, and any other entity that make up our country is reminiscent of bad, inept and corrupt leadership that has abdicated from their responsibility.

There is no sense that anyone will build his or her house from the roof. The strength and quality of a house is based on the strength and quality of the foundation, so also apply to anything on earth...the foundation in which our country stands yesterday and today remains the big problem that is militating against the progress of our country...


Many of my compatriots will agree with me that no one will rebuild our country for us, only Nigerians with patriotism, hard work, brotherhood, commitment, sincerity and honesty will rebuild our country...that includes our football. There are many examples all over the world to support this assertion...the Former soviet Union and USA in the 80's in Afghanistan, Iraq of recent memory (upon all the money pumped in by USA) remain quagmire.

There are too many examples to show that no foreigner will rebuild our country for us except we show leadership and take leadership responsibilities and lead..not the Chinese, Americans, British, Indians, Lebanese or anybody on mother earth except when we Nigerians say enough is enough and take responsibility.


I believe we should stop treating our problems in isolation...or selectively...Our country is in such a mess that even the President that controls the wealth of the nation is not passionate, how will the ordinary citizens...there are enough blame to go round and until our leadership show genuine desire to lead, every other aspect of the country will reflect the leadership character of the country.

Posted by Onari| 06.04.2008 01:36

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abdulmuminabdulmumin is offline 
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 # 7

Vade Mecum, Johnmoor, Philipikita and Onari,

A big THUMBS UP to all of you for saying it as it shoud be said!

Posted by abdulmumin| 06.04.2008 04:15

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JucihartJucihart is offline 
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 # 8

NFA matter has been overflogged a number of times without yielding result. they are simply asking Nigerians what we can do. We have no choice but stick with their nonsence. We hear one story today and another tomorrow. If you seek my opinion, Nigeria needs to completely overhaul this system and bring new people with a challenging spirit. I f you must know the truth, the currently people are tired and should take a rest. They have done well and we appreciate their effort.

SUGGESTION/QUESTION - Don't you think a lady will do better than the current leader? We need to explore that option. Trust me on this

Posted by Jucihart| 06.04.2008 09:10

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Tunde meeeTunde meee is offline 
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 # 9

When England went scouting for foreign coach, the FIFA president, Sepp Blatter said most countries that performs well in the Mundial uses indigenous coaches. Little wonder that any Nigerian still expressed opinion in support of hiring a foreign coach. What exactly did we get out of Vogts. Lets rally round and give one of our own the required backing,morally and remunerationally.

Posted by Tunde meee| 06.04.2008 10:39

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EjaEja is offline 
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 # 10


=Jucihart;4295002155>NFA matter has been overflogged a number of times without yielding result. they are simply asking Nigerians what we can do. We have no choice but stick with their nonsence. We hear one story today and another tomorrow. If you seek my opinion, Nigeria needs to completely overhaul this system and bring new people with a challenging spirit. I f you must know the truth, the currently people are tired and should take a rest. They have done well and we appreciate their effort.

SUGGESTION/QUESTION - Don't you think a lady will do better than the current leader? We need to explore that option. Trust me on this



Jucihart, can you please clarify, that your "SUGGESTION/QUESTION", are you still on the subject of football or are you now talking about the leadership of the country?

Posted by Eja| 06.04.2008 10:51

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