A former coach of Nigeria, Adegboye
Onigbinde, has disclosed that he has personally written to
out-of-contract Super Eagles coach, Stephen Keshi, to quietly seek a job
elsewhere.
Onigbinde spoke with a Nigerian online news portal SuperSport.com.
Of late the calls have been deafening
mostly from former Nigerian managers for the erstwhile Mali and Togo
coach to leave the Eagles job after he failed to qualify the country for
the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations in a dismal fashion. The latest calls
for Keshi to quite have come from Christian Chukwu, Shaibu Amodu, and
Kashimawo Laloko, among others.
Onigbinde said he would not like to be
seen repeating himself on Keshi and Eagles’ job as he has specifically
asked him then to politely thank the president for considering him
worthy for recall and bow out honourably.
Onigbinde said, “On the very day the
Presidency asked him to return to his job I personally sent him a text
message to politely thank Mr President for the offer and bow out
honourably and quietly, too.
“Keshi respectfully replied the text
message thanking me and that was it as he went ahead with the two
remaining 2015 AFCON qualifying matches against Congo and South Africa,
I’m sure the rest is history.
“I volunteered the advice to Keshi
because I understand that he won’t work with the Presidency but a
different set of people as well as an entirely different environment.
“Now that others have picked up the calls
I have the privilege to have said over two months ago I won’t like to
engage in an exercise that will appear repetitious so that I won’t be
accused of having interest in the whole matter.
“I’m not used to pressurising people to
act in certain way, I’ve passed my view directly to him, I don’t need to
pressurise him further on same thing.”
Onigbinde insisted that administration is
the bane of the nation’s football development while he condemned the
football house for half-heartedly implementation of his suggestions on
match analysis.
“The major problem of football in the
land is administration, I’ve written several papers on the need for a
virile technical department which is key to football development.
“In other lands it’s called technical and
development department because without development then everybody could
as well go to sleep. I suggested that some people be trained as match
analysts but the persons I saw on the list the NFF wants to train made
me to laugh.
“The major mistakes we keep repeating are
to assume that ex-footballers are automatic administrators, it’s quite
wrong. Jose Mourinho and Arrigo Sacchi weren’t star players but you
can’t rival their administrative and technical finesse.
“Being a star player doesn’t make you sound administrator or technical expert, it’s clearly a special calling,” Onigbinde said.
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