The two-time BBC African Footballer of the Year and former Captain of the Super Eagles, Austin Jay Jay Okocha described the 1-0 defeat to Sudan as confirming his worst fears that “football is long dead and gone” in Nigeria.
Writing on Twitter on Sunday, Okocha wondered if the Super Eagles
could have performed better, considering the level of development of
football in the country.
Stating that the result of the match has put the national team in a
“very unusual situation,” he cautioned against unfairly criticising the
Super Eagles and the coaching crew.
“We are in a very unusual situation. The question is: ‘do we deserve
better considering the state of our football affairs in recent times?’
Anyone that blames Keshi or the boys is short-sighted. Our football is
long dead and gone. This is just the confirmation,” the former Nigerian midfielder tweeted.
“Well done, South Africa. It is not the result most Nigerians
expected, though. But we have to step up our game and grab the next six
points to have a chance,” Okocha added.
Meanwhile, Nigerians have been divided over the Super Eagles’ slim
chances of qualifying for the 2015 African Cup of Nations following the
Sudan defeat.
Football commentator for Optima Live, Deji Faremi, said he held the
belief that “Keshi’s cup is full”, adding that “Keshi should leave.”
Faremi, however, noted that Keshi is not the “devil” behind Nigeria’s
football woes, saying Nigerians should also begin to ask some pertinent
questions about the running and development of football in the country.
“Yes, Keshi has lost his dressing room and is always quarrelling with
his players. And he is really arrogant, too. I think Keshi should
leave. I believe he should leave. I won’t hold brief for Keshi; he
should leave. But let’s ask ourselves: How many tactically-strong
coaches, including foreign ones, have Nigeria had in the last five to 10
years?
“When Keshi leaves, are we going to get a coach who is truly better,
or are we going to continue with the same mediocrity? Do Nigeria really
have top or world-class players at the moment compared to other African
and non-African teams?
“Imagine dumping many of these players, does Nigeria have genuinely
better replacements? Do we think it’s not a problem that we do well in
age-grade competitions, but the players ‘decline’ as they grow?
“Another important question is: Do Nigerian players (almost all) play
as well for the national team as they do for the clubs? Is that double
standards? Can Nigerians stop acting like he’s the devil? I also think
Nigerians should start realising Keshi is not 30 per cent of the problem
of our football,” Faremi argued on Twitter.
Lamenting the performance of the Super Eagles, sports analyst with
Super Sport, Colin Udoh, stated that the present crop of Super Eagles
did not deserve to participate in the African Cup of Nations holding in
Morocco.
In his analysis of the match, Udoh stated that the Super Eagles lost
early chances, adding that the various passes in the midfield were
“pointless” with “no real penetration.”
With the Super Eagles at the bottom of the table in Group A – with
one point from three matches – Udoh tweeted, “Funny that South Africa
may have done Nigeria a favour by winning. But this team (Super Eagles)
does not deserve to be in Morocco.”
A social commentator, Emeka Enyadike, wrote on Twitter that it was
worrisome that Nigeria’s “best chances” at the qualifying match came
from Mikel Obi, stating that the development showed that the Super
Eagles “really has a problem.”
Disagreeing with those calling for the head of Keshi, however, a
respondent, Abubakar Isimbabi, explained that Keshi’s sacking would not
solve the Super Eagles’ problem.
“The outcome of Sudan-Nigeria match is unfortunate but I think Keshi
should be left to finish the qualifiers. What miracle is expected from a
new coach?” Isimbabi tweeted.
Culled From PunchNg
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