People were sacked before Keshi and people will be hired after him – Odegbami
W here do
you stand on the disengagement of Stephen Keshi as Super Eagles coach by
the Nigeria Football Federation?
Keshi is my
friend and I was one of those who championed his recruitment when he was being
shopped for and I supported him all through to the 2013 Nations Cup and 2014
World Cup. We played together as team-mates and so I am very unhappy that he
lost his job and the way he lost the job is another cause for concern.
I thought
that if they wanted to sack him, it could have been done earlier or nicely done
when the opportunity was right, when the conditions called for it, when
everything was perfect for him to have gone honourably.
But that he
waited for this long and they also waited, only to now sack him shows that they
were looking for any opportunity or the closest to an opportunity to sack him.
And that is why we have this unfortunate incident that is generating a lot of
discussions and debate in the country. It is rather unfortunate.
What is the
way forward in this unfortunate situation as the NFF has said Shuaibu Amodu
should be the interim manager of the team. Do you think they should get another
coach so that the qualification process for the 2017 Nations Cup will not run
into hitches?
Time waits
for no one. The world just trudges on. That Keshi has been removed doesn’t mean
that is the end of the world. People were sacked before him and people will be
hired after him.
Looking
forward, I just thought that the issue of Shuaibu Amodu coming in as coach will
now draw up its own debate and controversies. As technical director, he has an
assignment, he has his own mandate, so I think he should just stay within that
mandate, instead of coming in.
There was a
time that he came in when Keshi was sacked but left after Keshi was recalled.
It implies a musical game of chairs and there is no justification for him
coming in at this point. But I like what I heard that one, they say it is a
temporary thing, two, what Amodu said he was not putting out his neck forward
for that position.
So what do
we do now?
I am totally
not in support of a foreign coach. I believe there will be a hidden agenda
behind hiring a foreign coach that will come to Nigeria. Let us see his
credentials. What has he won? What qualities does he have to be our coach? We
are not going to look at his white skin to let him just come. Has he done
better that the coaches that we’ve had and have? Has he done better than Keshi?
Keshi remains the most successful indigenous coach in the history of football
in Nigeria.
There has
never been anyone, foreign or local that was better than him. And some of us
have said that from Keshi we should start to look at their generation. Players
who played at every level, players who were coached by the highest level of
coaches, players who have gone further to get higher education and acquire
coaching courses to handle our national teams. We have said so and we should
not go back on our word. There is one person eminently qualified to become the
next coach of the Super Eagles.
And I think
he deserves to be given a chance. He is an international. He has the
intellectual capacity to handle the team. He has demonstrated steady grasp of
the game over and over again in his conversation and analysis of the game in
the world. We have seen him, we have heard him and we think he can do it. That
person is Sunday Oliseh. Under no condition must anybody go and bring one
foreigner to come and say he wants to coach a Nigerian team in this age that we
are in.
We have a
Sunday Oliseh. Give him the job to do. Don’t say he does not have the
experience because if you don’t give him the opportunity, he will never get the
experience. Keshi started from somewhere. Samson Siasia started from somewhere.
Go to those foreign countries and you will find out that there are certain
coaches who started their careers at the top. Oliseh qualifies. No uestion on
it. Bring in Oliseh. Those are my personal views on him.
Are you not
worried at all by his lack of coaching experience at the national team level?
Not at all.
There is no other Nigerian qualified for the job than him.
People will
disagree with you on that based on the fact that he has no experience for such
a sensitive and demanding job as the Eagles Coach…
Of course,
but who says that he has not been coaching. He has been coaching in Belgium.
In an
academy…
Coaching is
coaching. Caching at the national level is the easiest job in the world. It is
easier than to coach a club, where you go and get players, teach them, train
them and make them play as a unit and a whole lot of other things. The national
team coach is the one that assembles all the best players available, has two or
three days to talk to them, tell them how he wants them to play and they go and
play. He doesn’t do much. Anybody can coach the national team of any country,
it will now depend on their intellectual capacity, nothing else.
What about
the managerial abilities?
That’s part
of it. Where do you get the managerial abilities? It’s on the job. And the
truth is that as a former player and academy coach, he has the experience.
Coaching an academy is the hardest kind of coaching. As a former player, he has
experienced what it is like to play. That is the best experience to be a
manager. And if you go to school like Oliseh has done, you have the knowledge
to pass on. So let us see him impact the knowledge to our Eagles.
In terms of
intellectual capacity, I believe, based on what I know that the most qualified
man for that job today is Oliseh. Give him the chance. We are playing in
African, anybody who comes to handle the Super Eagles and cannot pass through
the African qualifies for the Nations Cup does not deserve to be called a
coach. Ninety per cent of them will take Nigeria there. Anyway, so why not
Oliseh.
That is my
recommendation. He has everything it takes, we have heard him, we have seen
him, the world has recognised him, FIFA recognises him, Super Sports recognises
him. During the last World Cup, he showed class. He is amongst the best
analyzers of football that I know.
Just like
you
No I can’t
do it
But can he
cope with the politics there?
It is good
that he does not know that aspect because if you play the politics, then you
will be consumed by it. If you go there and face your technical job, you don’t
have a problem. Keshi was trying to play the two. Why did he remain? It was
politics. Politics kept him there and politics sent him packing. He didn’t
leave the job now, they sent him away. How could they have had the guts to send
him away but for the political change that occurred. That is the reality of it.
Which change
are you talking about?
The
political change. How did Keshi remain there? He was backed by the Presidency.
And I am not talking of the President.; But he was backed by the Presidency and
we know they backed him because they felt that he was unfairly treated and that
they should have treated him with modesty and decorum. Anyway, those who were
trying to get him out are also people who were put there politically. So why
would you now use your political advantage to sack somebody else? They were all
coming from the same pot of soup.
You have
experienced your fair share of political misadventure with the NFF, so you are
talking from experience…
Absolutely,
that is why I say leave the politicians to face their game and you will have no
problem
But you are
also a politician…
I am learning
the trade of politics. Previously, I was just a technical person, thinking that
I could contribute my technical knowledge to develop Nigerian sports, but
I have been told that it does not work that way. I have tried to be NFF
President about four or five times but it did not work. I have left it for them
because I am a political neophyte.
In this
season of change, are you not thinking of a rebound?
In this wind
of change, there is a storm that is blowing everybody, everywhere. When things
settle, you never can tell where it will land
What kind of
Sports minister are you expecting President Muhammadu Buhari to appoint?
One who is a
visionary, one who captures the original action plan for the development of
sports in Nigeria, which was on course and derailed through succession of bad
administrators who had no idea of what sports development was. We want somebody
who will come with a vision, a road-map and everybody can think clearly and
which is implementable, taking it one step at a time until we get to the level
we hope to attain.
It is not a
sprints event. Anybody who comes and tells you that he wants to win the Olympic
Games does not deserve the assignment. Ask for somebody who will tell you that
we are going to take the 15 million out of school children back to school,
because we are going to use the instrumentality of sports. Get somebody who
will tell you that we are going to reduce the unemployment amongst our youths
in Nigeria because we are going to promote sports to generate employment for
our youths.
Listen to
that person who will tell you that we are going to raise a generation of
sportsmen who in eight years time will make Nigeria one of the foremost
sporting nations on earth and we would now be competing for Olympic gold medals
not tomorrow but in the future. So the foundation is essential. We should not
rush. It is a marathon race. You don’t sprint when you start a marathon, you
have to lay the foundation and let it be strong.
Looking back
at the old days that produced people like you, are you hopeful of a return to
such glorious days?
Absolutely,
I don’t even have reasons to articulate why. But the Presidency of Buhari,
without raising a finger, without doing anything, the corruption level has
dropped in the country. Discipline is returning to several arms of government.
That is the benefit of having one person come into office, without doing
anything. That tells you that if he starts to do something, that the change
that we all require will come. And if he has good people around him, Nigeria would
not be same in another four years time.
What
emotions run through your mind when passing the National Stadium in Lagos?
I weep.
Every time I pass there I shed tears over what has happened to this
national edifice.
How did
things get this bad there?
It is a
reflection of Nigeria. How had is Nigeria? Very, very, very bad. The state of
Nigeria is very bad and the National Stadium is just there, serving as a
picture on the wall, telling us how bad we are. When we fix the place, we can
look at the new National Stadium and see the beauty of Nigeria.
The Super
Eagles don’t even have a base now, leaving some persons to call for their
return to Lagos…
18 million
people to support the Super Eagles, you can’t have a better incentive than the
National Stadium. The National Stadium, when it was the National Stadium, was a
slaughter house. If you came in there you would be intimidated, afraid to play
as the fans would subdue you.
Were the
Algerians subdued by the fans when you played them in the final of the 1980
AFCON?
Of course,
they were the best team in Africa that time. The Algerians had the young team,
they had just returned from the World Cup. They were a team on the ascendancy.
In fact, when we were going to play them, if you looked at the records of both
teams, we didn’t even stand a chance. If that game had been played outside
Nigeria, probably we would not have won.
The
atmosphere in the stadium, the team, everything elevated us to a certain level
that the opponents were intimidated and there was no way they could have won.
But they came back later, less than two years and taught us a lesson, even
though we still had some of the blame to take.
Any
comparison between your generation and this current ones?
You can’t
even compare. The level of sports administration is so low. The level of our
administration is so low because we are not doing development. Don’t let me say
negative things against people. This is not it. We have shopped the production
of quality players in Nigeria. Although in the past few months, truth be told,
I have been watching what is happening in our league and I see there is a
renewed interest and players are doing fairly well again. The domestic league
is coming up and maybe that portends hope for us.
Your marks
for the NFF after about eight months in office?
Maybe it is
too early to judge them because they have a four year tenure. So far, I think
it has been a mixed grill. They have done certain things well, confused us in
certain things and I think they can do better. It is too early in the day for
us to start to condemn anybody.
Your word to
the next sports minister on not interfering or intervening with the affairs of
the NFF…
When you say
a sports minister, you are talking about someone who is responsible for sports
in the country. There is no way that he will not intervene in sporting issues.
He may not interfere, he may not disrupt but he definitely will intervene at
critical times.
Don’t we
need to draw a line between what they do in the sports ministry and the NFF?
Of course,
the minister has his mandate for him as sports minister. But I am not even in
support of keeping the sports ministry. I think we should revert to our
National Sports Commission so that we take the politics in the country away
from our sports. That way technocrats can run the place rather than have
politicians in the place. Once, you start politicising the place, of course, it
affects our growth.







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