Stephen Keshi on Tuesday in Abuja
finally sealed a new two-year deal as Super Eagles coach after a long
battle with the Nigeria Football Federation that spanned several months,
over a contractual renewal.
The former Nigeria captain, who is in
his third spell with the national team, was first named coach of the
Eagles in 2011 but his contract with the team ended after their second
round elimination from the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.
He managed the team on an interim basis
during the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers as the Eagles failed to
qualify and defend their title in Equatorial Guinea.
Keshi was given the boot by the Nigeria
Football Federation during the AFCON qualifiers but was reportedly
reinstated on the orders of the Presidency.
His assistant, Daniel Amokachi, took
charge of the squad in the last four friendly matches played by the
team. Keshi was handed a contract renewal — that insisted he must
monitor players in the local league — in February but he described it as
a “slave contract”, which sparked another row between him and the
federation.
The latest row between the coach and his
employers occurred when Keshi granted an Abuja radio station an
interview, saying NFF boss Pinnick Amaju lied when he said the football
body had paid the Eagles’ coaching crew all their salaries and
allowances.
However, Keshi has now demanded a fresh start as he begins a third sojourn in charge of the national team.
“This is the time for us to come
together to fight for this nation. I am begging you all to please put
the past behind and let’s start afresh,” he said.
NFF technical committee chairman Felix Anyansi-Agwu said Keshi’s return as coach is ‘a new beginning’.
“The entire NFF board has absolute
confidence in the capacity of Stephen Keshi to take the Super Eagles to
new heights. We plead with Nigerians to see this as a new beginning and
support Keshi.”
Eagles captain, Vincent Enyeama, expressed delight at the return of Keshi, describing the coach as a ‘friend.’
“I am happy he (Keshi) is back. He is
more of a friend and big brother to me than a coach,” the Lille
goalkeeper, who played his 100th Nigerian game recently, said.
But ardent followers of Nigerian football are watching to see how both parties work together peacefully in the next two years.
Former Eagles defender, Taribo West, said the federation should give Keshi the necessary support to succeed.
The former Inter Milan centre-back said,
“I pray they will let him (Keshi) work this time around because the
last time there was so much problems between both parties. There was a
lot of complicity in his relationship with the NFF especially with
Amaju. I pray this time they work together and make our football sweet
again.
“Keshi can move Nigerian football
forward. He’s done it before by winning the AFCON in 2013. They should
encourage him to do better because we want to see the national team
where it used to be. This time, I am expecting a lot from the NFF, the
coach and the team.”
Source: PUNCH Newspaper
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