Nigeria’s former skipper, Nwankwo Kanu, has made a
passionate appeal to the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) to intervene in the
invitation rift between West Bromwich Albion Nigerian striker, Peter Osaze
Odemwingie, and the Super Eagles’ Head Coach, Stephen Keshi, stressing that
though no player is bigger than the country, the team still needs Osaze and
others. The Arsenal’s former flamboyant player, who spoke with the media during
the formal presentation of trophy to Chief Edwin Clark for the Clark Under-18
International Football Tournament in Abuja, equally appealed to the Albion’s
forward to understand and acknowledge the fact that the head coach is totally
in charge, urged the federation to urgently broker peace between them.
“As I always say, the situation is something that
they have to solve and sort out. The NFF has to be involved to make sure it is
sorted out. Keshi is the boss as the coach, while Osaze is a player. The
situation is between a player and a coach and whatever decision the coach takes
becomes the final. “However, no matter the situation, Osaze remains a good
player that, of course, Nigeria would need any day any time. But, the situation
is now a big problem and the earlier it’s solve, the better.
Continue to read after the cut...
Therefore, the NFF has to intervene to ensure that
there is peace. Let me also correct the impression that winning the Nations Cup
without some senior players does not mean that they are no longer needed in the
team. “What it means is that Nigeria is blessed, it also shows that we have the
talent, the players and we can now do without anybody because nobody is bigger
than the country. The meaning is that whoever you are and wherever you are, you
have to appreciate that Nigeria is bigger than any individual. “The players
must understand the magnitude of pressure on them from more than 160 million
Nigerians.
No player should see himself as god and it applies
also to every other Nigerian in every field of human endeavour. Every player
must begin to appreciate the importance of the invitation to play for
fatherland,” he noted. On Super Eagles qualifier matches, the former Portsmouth
of England intelligent forward argued that having won the AFCON, the team has
proved that the Keshi-led boys are in killer mood, begging Nigerians to only
give the players and technical crew the needed support and prayers.
“We don’t need to doubt what Nigeria can do now in
football after winning the AFCON trophy. The option left for us is to put our
heads together and support Keshi. When he started, there was this question of
why, but now we are champions of Africa. “I don’t think we still need to ask
further why, concerning the strength of the team because we have the players. And
as I said before, even we want to raise another 23 new players that can make us
proud, we can still have them. All we should do is to believe in them and they
will achieve,” he noted.
No comments:
Post a Comment