Exactly seven days from today, the 19th edition of the Africa Nations
Cup will kick off in South Africa but action for the Super Eagles under
the tutelage of Stephen Okechukwu Keshi will actually begin two days
later when they confront fellow West Africans, Burkina Faso in their
first game.
Last year when the competition was co-hosted by Equatorial Guinea and
Gabon, Nigeria was conspicuously absent after Eagles’ immediate past
coach, debonair Samson Siasia bungled the country’s chances right on the
turf of the Abuja National Stadium when a more determined Syli National
of Guinea picked a deserving 2-2 to grab the lone ticket from their
group.
That disappointment caused Nigerian football fans to turn their backs
on the Eagles and rightly or wrongly, vented their anger on the
country’s football governing body, the Nigeria Football Federation, NFF.
From 2008 in Ghana to 2010 in both Angola for the Nations Cup and
South Africa for the World Cup, the Eagles were tutored by four coaches,
Berti Vogts, Shaibu Amodu, Lars Lagerback and Siasia, a mix of foreign
and local players. Therefore when Siasia failed, the cry was for an
indigenous coach and the lot fell on Keshi who had handled both Togo and
Mali after his stint with Amodu in 2002.
He began by going back to the basics, like his former coach, Clemens
Westerhof did while he was in the saddle between late 1989 and mid 1994,
recruiting deserving home-based players from the local league for a
rebuilding process.
Even though Nigerians saw what he did with little Togo which he
qualified for their first and only World Cup in 2006 in Germany, they
were not quick to nurse any hope of he reviving the fortunes of the
Eagles whom they booed each time they played on home soil.
That feeling gradually gave way to optimism when the so-called home
boys spiced with a handful foreign-based players held their own even
before big football Nations. The drubbing a Lionel Messi-inspired
Argentina handed the Eagles last year didn’t change their feeling much
as the Eagles’ earlier 4-1 drubbing of the same team in Abuja, though
without Messi, was a enough to massage the ego of the fans.
With Keshi in-charge, the Eagles did not struggle too much to qualify
for the Nations Cup but Nigerians were not too optimistic they could
pull any surprise in South Africa, their grouping with Zambia, Burkina
Faso and Ethiopia notwithstanding.
However, following the 3-1 win over Venezuela and the pulsating 1-1
against a star-studded Catalonian side parading a bunch of Barcelona FC
and Spain’s World Cup winning players, the same fans were beginning to
dream that the Eagles will not only qualify from their group but come
tops ahead Zambia and Burkina Faso until last Wednesday’s drab 0-0 draw
with giant-killing Cape Verde made them have a rethink.
However, it is the belief of every Nigerian football follower that if
the team could get the maximum points against Burkina Faso, a team that
have not really given them a scare in the past, in their first match on
January 21, it could boost their morale against Zambia when they meet
on January 25 for an outright win or draw at the worst to make
qualification for the quarter final brighter.
Culled: Vanguard
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