Tuesday 9 December 2014

Former Super Eagles Skipper Worried On The Future Of Nigeria Football


Sunday Oliseh, believes the glory days of the country’s national team will not return unless they “get their house in order.”


Nigeria have been on a downward spiral in the past year and capped it all when they failed to qualify for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations despite being in a group adjudged as fair.

Oliseh who spoke with the BBC Sport said, “We have got technical problems and administrative problems – it is too much for one nation, even if you are Nigeria.

“At the moment, it is bleak. We need to face up to the job and get organised.”

Oliseh was part of the Nigeria squad that won the Africa Cup of Nations in 1994 and the Olympic gold medal two years later. He also played at the World Cup in 1994 and 1998, helping the Super Eagles to the last-16 at both tournaments.

In those competitions, Oliseh played with other great players referred to as the “golden generation” of Nigerian football. Some of those players were Austin Jay-Jay Okocha, Nwankwo Kanu and Finidi George.

But Oliseh cannot see where the next generation is going to come from.

“During the 1990s, a lot of the players were products of the Nigerian league. Those who were playing in Europe had only left two or three years before. Myself, I had moved to Europe only four years before the 1994 World Cup.

“It was not as if it was Europe that made us. The Nigerian league produced us; it was so competitive then, it was viable and credible.

“The national team does not create players, you select your best players from your clubs to play in the national team.

“But now our attention is more focused on the national team and we have neglected the domestic league, which is the major problem in Nigerian football. If we cannot get the league in order we will never have another golden generation.”

He is also worried about the continual crises at the Nigeria Football Federation.

It was only in 2013 that Stephen Keshi led Nigeria to the Nations Cup title in South Africa. Nigeria’s fall since then has been rapid. And Oliseh believes there needs to be consistency as well as clear boundaries over roles.

“To fix it we have to get our house in order,” he said. “And it is not too far-fetched, the solution to this. For example, if we have a football federation president who is doing well, let’s leave him in the job.

“It is great that Nigerian are passionate about football, that they have opinions like a coach. But in reality, everybody thinks they know football – not because they play football but because they know football. It doesn’t work like that.

“We need to let people who are technicians do the technical work. If you are going to talk about tactics or physical, let that be somebody who has that expertise.”

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