Showing posts with label Stephen Keshi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephen Keshi. Show all posts

Sunday, June 29, 2014

AHIA MGBEDE: Stephen Keshi, A Hurdle To Clear (3) And Moving On

BY AMBROSE EHIRIM

Ahmed Musa (L) and Stephen Keshi. Image: Paul Gilham/Getty


In my first prediction, I had said the Super Eagles would beat the Balkan state of Bosnia-Herzogovina. They did. In my second prediction, captioned "Stephen Keshi, A Hurdle To Clear (2) And Thus Far," I said the Super Eagles would win by looking closely to the Argentinian-Iranian encounter and which by if Stephen Keshi studies the tapes carefully, that an Emmanuel Emenike-led attack to weaken the Argentinaian defense  shouldn't be a big deal if the focus was worked on; to demolish the guarded walls of  Ezequiel Garay, Marcus Rojo and Pablo Zabaleta by disorganizing their strategic defense patterns and opening chances at the goal. There were, however, some few chances though the breakthrough came with Emenike's assist to Peter Odemwingie who striked for the goal, beating the Balkan state by a lone goal. 

Argentina wasn't a tough crack. It had no strong defense as assumed and the Super Eagles couldn't penetrate, though, by a stroke of good luck, they were able to clear the hurdle at the mercy of Bosnia-Herzogovina that had sent Iran home in a game played simultaneously for favors not be given a chance.

With some of the game's powerhouses---Portugal, England, Italy, Spain---in early exit accompanied by Africa's Ivory Coast and Ghana, and luck not on Africans' side, the Super Eagles, no question, has all it takes to withstand the French forces when they clash on Monday at the Estadio Nacional Stadium in Brasilia. France, another powerhouse of the globe's sports festival which begun in 1930, in Uruguay, on commemoration of Uruguay's 100 years constitution and, having won the Gold for the 1928 Olympic Games,France will test its skills with the Super Eagles.

So far, the Brazil 2014 football festival has been a great success. Quite an interesting World Cup with lots of surprises and emerging brilliant football playing nations like Costa Rica, Bosnia-Herzogovina and Iran, despite sanctions and a pariah status over the years, Iran proved it's a nation to be reckoned with and not to be brushed aside when it comes to the game. Yes, Iran did not go down as had been anticipated; giving its group partners---Argentina, Nigeria and Bosnia-Herzegovina---runs for their money. Argentina in particular will attest to that, save for its powerful striker in Lionel Messi.

Last night, I had called my brother for a gist on the ongoing tournament and his take particularly on the upcoming Monday, June 30, Nigeria-France match. He really wants Nigeria to beat France, and Algeria beating Germany so the two African nations could meet for the first time in the tournament's history; and he was confident "soothsaying" it would happen. I was on his side, not on prayer lines, but for the fact that the Super Eagles is a better team in addition to its reign as Champion of the continent's Nations' Cup. We talked into the night in a relative discourse that had taken us aback to when the tournament began and when the magnificent Edson Arantes dos Nascimento (Pele) at 17, had featured in the World Cup representing his country, standing out as the youngest to tap the leather, following years of what would be a stigma attached to the living legend, Pele. We talked among others, the best organized and entertaining in the tournament's history, the 1970 festival Pele had helped the Selecao lift the trophy for the third time, in Mexico City.

My brother had questioned why Keshi had not been playing the multipositional Victor Moses. "Keshi is already a veteran," I said, "he has been around and knows his boys very well." With the Stoke City striker, Peter Odemwingie, as replacement, it's never a lost enterprise. He scored the first goal for his country in the tournament and with a combination of Emmanuel Emenike, there's hope for deliverance. All they have to do, like I previously said regarding its attack on Argentina, would be to stop midfielder Morgan Schneider and Yohan Cabaye who returns to the French starting line-up for Monday's encounter.

Enter the CSKA Moscow winger, Ahmed Musa. His focus and ability to shoot straight at the goal earned him two quick goals against Argentina. He should never stop capitalizing on those chances like he did with Argentina, aiming at the goal post.

Nigeria beating France shouldn't be seen as an upset. The Super Eagles is a better team. Losing only comes when their craft is combined with recklessness, and when Keshi declines to play key players at the right time as the changes demand.

Now that Egbon Goodluck Jonathan kept his word and stashed the players' pockets with a long awaited cash bonuses, keeping focussed and intact with the games' framework, I see Keshi lifting the trophy. I love this game and up the Super Eagles.

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

AHIA MGBEDE: Stephen Keshi, A Hurdle To Clear (2) And Thus Far


Final Draw of the 2006 FIFA World Cup: Coaches of Switzerland Koebi Kuhn, Togo's Nigerian Stephen Keshi, France's Raymond Domenech and South Korea's Dutch head coach Dick Advocaat (L-R) shake hands after the draw for the 2006 FIFA World Cup finals in Leipzig, eastern Germany, December 9, 2005. The four countries were drawn in Group G for the World Cup finals. Date: December 9, 2005. Image: Wu Xiaoling/Xinhua Press

Nigeria's first major FIFA World Cup attempt began in 1976 with the Preliminary Rounds of the African Zone; and, in 1977, when the Final Round of the Preliminaries was played on a league schedule drawing Tunisia, Egypt and Nigeria together as the finalists with one of the three teams to represent Africa. With a home court advantage, Nigeria needed just a win against Tunisia for a spot at the Argentina tournament. 

When it comes to Ahia Mgbede, Nigerians are known to be totally united neverminding the archrivalry between the front-running clubsides of the day and its key players---the IICC Shooting Stars Football Club (Ibadan Investment Credit Corporation) of Ibadan and the Rangers International Football Club of Enugu. There were other picks from the minor clubsides like Haruna Illerika and co. destined to promote Ahia Mgbede spirit in the country, the only source and key ingredient to national unity.

With a nation united on Ahia Mgbede, the death squads ceased to exist in their operations over rival ethnic teams. The consultation of the Babalawos and images of the rivals picked to be pinned during encounters had to be waved for a national call. So, too, was the Oracle visits to the shrines on the Eastside where concoctions of the shrines' red soils and decayed mammals are mixed in drinks for supernatural powers, cast away and done with. There were no more invocations of "Agwuishi na Amadioha" with the chants of "Isee o, Isee o" and things of that nature that the enemy must fall and be destroyed by the gods of nd'amala. And on the Westside, the gods of ifa had also been cautioned to cease and desist as well, regarding its voodoo deities' "eleda" to come through and destroy its enemies before the battle begins. No god was much better. They had come to terms with reality. That what was needed was collectivity for ultimate utopianism.

A dialogue reached between spirits of the land. 

And they arrived.

One nation under God, indivisible with destiny, and oneness becomes the ideal. Folks from all ethnic localities would meet at the pubs and drink in unism. They would drink together on the sidewalks chanting "one nation under God; we shall overcome our predicaments," following calls for more booze and in euphoria, that never had there been a team assembled in the nation's history to play as one with the passion of the sport and a display of patriotism.

On the drive toward Argentina '78, the team built by the Yugoslavian "Soccer Bully," Father Tiko, had nothing in comparison to all of the African continent and what was up and about to unfold on the playgrounds heading to Latin America. So close, and if it wasn't for Godwin Odiye's miscalculated intercepting header, that finest squad would have gone to Argentina and made Nigeria proud. In fact, bring the trophy home. Yes, that's how Tiko's boys were in the day and time they had to be feared and notably, the clubside, Enugu Rangers, defeating Germany's Dundee United in that classic friendly, showing the world they belonged.

The FIFA World Cup had been the treat; the lost, and yet again, Odiye becomes a national nightmare on which the nation is yet to recover.

Then and again, the Eagles had expected to be compensated for that loss---to win the African Cup of Nations for the first time which was held in Ghana, in 1978. It never came. The Chairman Christian Chukwu-led squad had lost to Uganda in the semis while my fellow school mate, the wizard dribbling Ahmed Polo, captained the Black Stars to lift the trophy for a record fourth time.

Playing at the World Cup had become a mirage for a nation so huge in human capital and buoyant in its natural resources to be able to produce an outstanding team on national calls. As of that time, in 1978, a young lad named Stephen Okechukwu Keshi was tapping leather at St. Finbarrs College, and before then, the Iponri neighborhood had been his hangout where folks tested skills in the event of academic scheduled mandates or national calls. The Nations Cup was coming up, and the "bully trainer" Tiko, had kept his men intact save for some new addition which included the youngest to tap the scene on national call; an energetic, athletically combined left-footed striker by the name of Henry Nwosu. The vibrant press had warned the nation's football organizing body not to field him. They called on Tiko to drop him; that he was too young and lacked experience in a tournament Nigeria wanted its trophy bad, on a life and death situation. Nwosu was not dropped; he became the nation's youngest striker and among the cast that brought Nigeria the African Cup of Nations Trophy. Keshi had not been seen or surfaced anywhere he could be identified as a national treasure.

With Nations Cup in the books from a Chairman Chukwu's-led campaign victory, the Jules Rimet Trophy became an immediate target. Appearance at the World Cup never came. it was still a mirage. All sorts of national coaches began to emerge until the employment of Brazilian Otto Gloria Nigerians thought he would deliver not realizing he was an arm chair coaching specialist, not the type wanted by the nation at its desperate hour.

Yes, a mirage and a very distant Trophy from view. 

But then, came Clemens Westerhof and a football clinic that generated and prepared the finest cast for the showdown of nations, clearing the hurdle, eventually. Winning the African Nations Cup Nigeria gained its spot at the 1994 World Cup held on the shores of America. Great representation which overnight catapulted Nigeria as an emerging powerhouse in global football. Keshi was on the roll call in Nigeria's first ever appearance on FIFA's global football festival held around the cities in the United States. Equal to the task and in its rookie year, the Eagles gave its best and slugged it out with the robust playing Roerto Baggio-led Italian team.

The aftermath of the FIFA 1994 USA wasn't favoring Nigeria on the global arena when Westerhof had left and a team determined to reach the top on its level began to lose its steam. Keshi left and came to California for a brief stunt with aging players and a take at coaching. On the squabbles for a national coach after going down the hill on performances, a suspension by the presidency and a Nigerian obsessed with foreign coaches, nothing worked until Keshi was considered for the top coaching job after years of neglect which had him look elsewhere---Mali and Togo---he coached successfully to be given attention.

Like in the first part of this piece, Keshi had been called for a "high tech" lynching by a Nigerian "wild, wild," fanatical mob when his chances became very slim in last years nations cup in South Africa until he turned things around and coached the Super Eagles to victory, winning the trophy as a player and as a coach, and first of its kind in the nation's history. Now the history maker is about to complete another mission and add more credits to boost his resume. I had predicted victory for the Eagles before the Bosnia-Herzogovina encounter. 

Looking closely to the Argentina-Iran encounter, it doesn't take too much probing to come to terms that Argentina is beatable. Without much ado, a fierce Super Eagles attack enforced by the magnificent Emmanuel Emenike would for sure weaken the defense of Ezequiel Garay, Marcos Rojo and or, Pablo Zabaleta and, open up chances for the "spoiled brats'". Victory then, would be easily theirs.  On the Super Eagles defense, like the Iranians did, neutralizing the firepower of its forwards---Lionel Messi, Sergio Aguero, Gonzalo Higuain and or midfielder Maxi Rodriguez---they will smile all the way to the Knockout Rounds. Again, the firepower of the Argentinian forwards must be neutralized and its defense weakened.

The line for the Nigeria-Argentina match Wednesday, June 25, 2014 at the Estadio Beira-Rio Stadium, Porte Alegre will be in favor of the Super Eagles. With more opening chances, Nigeria by two.

Friday, June 20, 2014

AHIA MGBEDE: Stephen Keshi, A Hurdle To Clear

By Ambrose Ehirim



In February 2013 which is exactly 16 months ago, Stephen Keshi was a national hero and an African icon having head-coached the Super Eagles to victory at the Nations' Cup in South Africa. He came from behind on the scorecards with an uncertain fate and eventually changed his flawed strategy and, took the last laugh on which his boys, the Super Eagles, came out celebrating a trophy no Nigerian ever thought was possible. Vibes from the "negative press" had written him off and a die hard football fanatics, the raged but flamboyant supporters had been demoralized and hopeless, as a result, until Super Eagles lifted the trophy.
Turning out to a point Keshi and his boys would be mobbed upon return, a loser, from the tournament, his efforts and change of strategy alongside a very good luck that came on his side, the Super Eagles pulled it out lighting up the spirit of the nation that was once down. There was no mourning. The Super Eagles won.
I had joined the bandwagon to talk down on Keshi and his boys, neverminding applauding my boy, the magnificent Emmanuel Emenike, I had awarded an asterisk branding him a spoiled brat due to the way he celebrated his goals, which I thought he overemphasized. Nigerian mobs came after me for calling Emenike and his colleagues "Spoiled Brats." It was just my heartbeat. It's the nature of the sport and nothing, absolutely nothing, buys that. the ladies, for sure, knows that, too.
Yes.
The Super Eagles victory at the 2013 Nations' Cup brought along with it, all sorts of fanfare---joyous festivities and merry making---a free sex festival and all that you can handle. I missed it. Cash was pouring in from every corner. Gifts were overwhelmingly given. Structures were named after them. Keshi, in particular, stood the test of the moment. He smoked all the way to the bank and, even by the time the Globacom Chairman, Mike Adenuga, knew it, he had already lavished Keshi with fleet of cars and millions in any currency.
Here we go again. Keshi, about to be lynched from a game his country folks thinks he's to blame, the speculations now is that Keshi had already planned his relocation and not nearing his home country knowing the consequences of throwing the country into serious mourning after a devastating FIFA World Cup performances. In fact, the speculation is alleging Keshi is coming out here, the City of Angels, to hang with us and save himself from a "wild, wild," unforgiving Nigerian Football fanatics. Godwin Odiye knows better and we all bear witness.
In tomorrow's game against one of the Balkan states, the Bosnian-Herzegovinaians, Nigerians must come out and throw support...lift up the spirits of these youngsters for a must win. The Super Eagles will win and, it's our call; we the people!
The Super Eagles must attack
like its cousin, the Hawk
The Super Eagles must fly
over the mountains and over the seas
Like its buddy, the Dove
Like the Dove, they must show
compassion, love and oneness
The Super Eagles must win...
For a guy who helped lift the trophy as a player in 1994, playing from the bottom of his heart; coached his national team to victory during the 2013 African Nation's Cup Finals and represented his country very well at the 1994 FIFA World Cup in the United States, he deserves no mob lynching but courage!

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Stephen Keshi: Nigeria Need To Gain More Experience

The Super Eagles coach conceded victory to a better team after his side lost 3-0 to Spain on Sunday night in Fortaleza

By Eric Gomez
GOAL DOT COM, Sunday, June 23, 2013



What he's learned from Spain and the Confederations Cup

We lost the match because we played against a better side, a team that has been good for a very long time. It's a learning process for us, we just have to continue what we started tonight and build.
The teams and the coaches that I spoke with, have been very educative for us. We're going back with some sort of education from this tournament.

On the nature of his strikers missing up front

I think there was so much anxiety in front of the goal line, the good thing is that we created chances but we didn't finish them. Hopefully it's going to come quickly.

On fair nature of the result

Yeah, if you look at the game - three goals was not fair. But, this is football and it happens.

Is Brazil or Spain the favourite?

Well, I don't know all of world football. I'm learning. I can't say if Spain is better than Brazil. In this tournament, the best team doesn't always win. I can't put money on anyone.

On absence of key players for Nigeria at the tournament

I think so, because when you look at the other teams, they have their complete team, their first-team. In the last matches we lost four or five key players and today we lost another key player in the centre half, it was damaging. It's football, we have to live with it.

What will Nigeria do if they make the WC?

If we qualify, we have questions. We're still in the process of qualifying, so I can't tell you what we're going to do yet.

On why the team lost so much composure in the second half

It's a learning process for us. This is a team that hardly goes down 2-0 and when put in that position, they lost the composition, the shape of the team. It was a major problem. In the first half we were very composed, but when we conceded the second goal in the second half, we became unprofessional. We need more experience.

On his reaction to Alba scoring two goals

"It's the game. When I was playing I scored 10, 11 goals a season. Just because you're a defender doesn't mean you can't help your team make a difference up front. I've seen a lot of good defenders scoring goals. Goals win games, and it doesn't matter (who scores).

Monday, January 14, 2013

Bobby Williamson Fires Back At Stephen Keshi's Racial Remarks


Uganda's national soccer team coach Bobby Williamson has fired back at Stephen Keshi, coach of the Nigeria national soccer team over the coach's racial remarks that foreign coaches troop to Africa for the attractive pay that is involved and not really to train the players to attain their goals, and commitment to national duty, on the basis African coaches are equal to the task and could do better.

In what has been taken as racist comments, Keshi said "the white guys are coming to Africa just for the money. They are not doing anything that we cannot do. I am not racist, but that's just the way it is."

Uganda did not qualify for the South African finals due to begin on Saturday, January 19, 2013. Dismissing Keshi's racial slurs, Williamson, originally from Scotland and firing back at Keshi said:

 “I never came here for the money. I came here for the job, for a new experience and a new working place. I’ve never regretted it. When I first came here, the money I was being paid was just enough to pay the mortgage. It has improved because I have been relatively successful; at the regional African Cecafa tournaments and I’ve also get close to qualifying for the Africa Cup of Nations. We are all professionals, if he [Keshi] could get a better job in Europe and earn better money, then I’m sure he would be off like a shot. It’s just like most African players who are playing in Britain: they’re not just there for the love of football, they are there to make money.”

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