Nigeria coach Stephen Keshi |
An official of the NSC, who spoke with
our correspondent, lamented that neither the NSC nor the NFF could
afford to continue sourcing for funds to meet with the $10,000 demand
for each player and $20,000 for their coach Stephen Keshi who gets
double what the players get for such. He however noted that a meeting
has been scheduled for the coach and players’ representative to
cordially sort out their differences on the matter.
He said, “It is not only win bonus that
the NFF or NSC attends to; the bill is too huge to continue with. These
people also get different types of allowances in camp. If you calculate
what it costs for each game then people will understand that under the
current state of affairs it is very difficult to continue at that tempo.
Maybe in the future the bonus can be increased but for now we have to
face the reality.
“The national teams are so many in both
the male and female categories and so all this and so many other factors
have to be taken into consideration.”
In a document obtained by The PUNCH,
the NFF spent N176m on the salaries of the Eagles coaches from November
2011 to February 2013 with N80m going to Keshi. And within the set
period, Keshi received $320,000 in match bonuses with the least being
$4,000 received for the pre-Nations Cup friendly against Cape Verde. The
coach got $40,000 for the win against Burkina Faso in the final match
of the 2013 Nations Cup as the NFF papers indicate.
Our correspondent’s investigation proved
that the NSC and NFF officials are not comfortable with the way Keshi
handled the bonus fight in Namibia after a World Cup qualifying match on
June 12. They alleged that the coach did not do enough to make the
players understand the need to cut the bonuses.
“Ultimately the coach will also lose his
by half and so it becomes very difficult expecting him to make his
players fall into line. We think he didn’t handle the matter well in
Windhoek for personal reasons,” he said.
PUNCH
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