Nigeria: Super Eagles - the Coach We Do Not Need

opinion
By Dele Akinola

Out-going (?) Super Eagles coach, Stephen Keshi, might have effectively made a tacit admission: his February, 2013 African Cup of Nations victory came only through sheer luck and providence. He came on board in November, 2011 promoting the usual Nigerian football musical chart-buster starring the weather-beaten title track, "Building a New Team." As Nigerians eagerly expected the emergence of a formidable squad, his team remained "work in progress." Almost three years on, the music has not changed. After crashing out of the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, he described his collection as "a very young team." Only sheer luck and providence could have, sixteen months ago, given a title as big and competitive as AFCON to a team which even today still remains a young, new work-in-progress over other teams that were not only good and established but also solid, compact and ready.

In my piece, "Super Eagles: The fallacy of New Team" of March, 2011, I recalled that we embarked on our latest journey to the world where new teams are built in 2002 when we prematurely hounded out a number of our established and battle-tested stars just because they had one poor AFCON outing against a Senegalese team that was on its way to conquering defending World Champions, France, only four months later. I also prophesied, in the same piece, that by the time the 2014 World Cup comes around, we would still be building a new team. Now, even at the quarter final stage, it had become clear that the World Cup was not for new, young work-in-progress, but for teams that were complete, formidable and ready.

FIFA, the world's football governing body, itself, never expects a young team at the World Cup. That is why the Under-17 championship was put in place. The world does not expect a new team at the highly competitive global show. The Under-20 tournament has been institutionalized for such teams. The football family does not deploy so much time and resources just to watch works-in-progress in action. That is why nations have the option of not registering to participate in the competition. Administrators, organizers, analysts, commentators, enthusiasts, die-hards and fee-paying spectators converge at multi-billion dollars state-of-the-art stadia, sports studios, viewing centres and family lounges to watch a football world war being prosecuted by nations' best generals and formidable armies.

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