From Wilson Oruma to Macualey Chrisantus, Nigerian youngsters have
dazzled before falling by the wayside. Can the Manchester City youngster
buck the trend?
Nigeria
is a country of close to 200 million people and undoubtedly blessed
with an abundance of talent in many fields, especially football. The
amount of success the country has achieved in age group competitions
only makes you wonder why the team have failed to reach the
quarter-finals of the senior World Cup, despite appearing in three
knockout stages to date.
At the end of the 1993 edition of the
Under-17 World Cup, the Nigerian trio of Wilson Oruma, Peter Anosike and
Nwankwo Kanu had 16 goals amongst them, with Oruma clinching the Golden
Boot. In the long run, only Nwankwo Kanu progressed and became a
world-class star, winning the UEFA Champions League and Olympic Gold
between 1995 and 1996. More titles followed with Arsenal, Ajax and
Portsmouth (among others).
Oruma, on the other hand, retired in
2010 having played for nine clubs, Marseille being the most prominent of
them. Anosike wasn't that lucky, he couldn’t make it at the highest
level and his footballing career has faded into obscurity.
The
Golden Eaglets arguably have the best record at Under-17 World Cup
level, having appeared in seven finals, winning four and ending as
runners-up three times. One can still ask, however, why the Super Eagles
have never won the same tournament in the Under-20 age group. That
collapse against Mali on home soil in 1999 at the Nnamdi Azikwe Stadium
in Enugu still lingers in memory.
Victor Brown, Soga Sambo and Femi Opabunmi were all stars of the team
that reached the finals in 2001 but none of them have developed into
household names.
Macauley Chrisantus, Kabiru Akinsola, and Ganiyu
Oseni all played important roles in the all-conquering team of the late
Yemi Tella in 2007, with Chrisantus claiming the Golden Boot. Eight
years on, he has failed to break into the Super Eagles and now plays for
Sivasspor in the Turkish league while Toni Kroos, who was the star of
the German team in that tournament, is now a World Champion and has just
signed a contract with the biggest club in the world.
The lack
of a proper developmental process has been the greatest undoing of the
Nigerian talent pool. Most Nigerian football clubs do not have a proper
youth system, nor does the league itself have a well organised set-up
for the development of youth. This results in the desperation of players
to play abroad professionally instead of coming through the ranks. Age
falsification issues are also a major part of the problem while the lack
of faith in youth by Nigerian coaches hasn't helped matters either.
After Kelechi Iheanacho's heroics at the most recent edition of the
competition in the UAE, scoring six goals in seven games to claim the
Golden Boot, one wonders if it would have been better for Nigerian
football in the long term had Keshi taken him on the plane to Brazil
instead of some of the squad’s peripheral figures.
For any
Nigerian who saw the 17-year-old's performance for the Etihad giants vs.
Kansas City in their recent pre-season friendly, one might be tempted
to say that he's the next big hope of Nigerian football.
And
there's every reason for optimism. The youngster boasts close control,
good vision, decent pace and the supreme ability to read the game and
get into goal-scoring positions are his biggest attributes. He's also
good at bringing his teammates into play and recycling possession high
up the pitch, but that still doesn't mean he's the finished article.
Kelechi is still a work in progress, but one that has every chance of
being a true star.
If he gets a work permit, City has one of the
best academies in the world to aid the progress of any youngster,
although breaking into the first team will be a tough task and a loan
move would benefit him for regular football. Even manager Manuel
Pellegrini had to concede however, after the match against Kansas City,
that the youngster is an exceptional prospect.
Will Iheanacho
buck the trend of so many failed, forgotten Nigerian talents and finally
transfer his prodigious ability to the senior side? At the moment he is
in the foothills of a giant mountain, but City will look to provide him
all of the resources and support needed to rise to the top of the game.
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