Thursday, April 23, 2015

Nigerians must support Stephen Keshi to succeed- Geremi Njitap

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Former Cameroon midfielder, Geremi Njitap has charged Nigerians to give the re-appointed Super Eagles coach, Stephen Keshi their total support in order that he might succeed.

Keshi was given a two year deal on his second spell as the nation's senior national team coach on Tuesday, following his ten months wait without a job since the Eagles crashed out of the last summer's world cup in Brazil.


Geremi, a member of the Indomitable Lions team that won the AFCON title in 2000 and 2002 said that the Nigeria Football Federation needs to put everything in place in order for the 53-year-old to do well.

“I’m happy for him because they gave him another contract, it means that they trust him. But they have to support him. It’s not only him that has to make the difference,” Geremi told Goal at Heineken's#ChampionTheMatch in Lagos.

Geremi, 36, played in that Indomitable Lions core which also won the Olympic gold medal at Sydney 2000.

“Nigeria are like Cameroon, they think that they will always have talents but it’s not every time.

“They have to work hard and put in some money and encourage young kids to play football.

“Good education, as well, will help the country,” he said.

Cameroon have seen a fall in their football fortunes since 2002 when they won their fourth African title – they failed to qualify for the 2012 and 2013 editions before finishing bottom of their group in 2015.

They also had a disastrous campaign marked by on-field player altercation in Brazil as they made their seventh World Cup appearance. They are presently ranked 48th in the world, 11 spots behind tiny Cape Verde islands.

Geremi, who played 116 times for the Lions, believes that structural problems are responsible for the drop.

“Our government and the people who mange our football are asleep. They thought we would always have talents,” said the two time Uefa Champions League winner.

“The way football is going now, people prepare the future, the players have to start from the youth teams.

“When you expect to have good players in the future, you need to start from when they are young.

“In Cameroon, before we used to have pitches, not really spectacular, but grounds where kids could play. We don’t have that anymore.

“Now the young boys don’t play football, they are in front of the TV playing video games.

“We need to have infrastructure, we need to have good coaches that’s why some smaller countries are overtaking us because they are putting money in it and investing in infrastructure and they are getting results,” said the former Real Madrid and Chelsea midfielder. 


Credit : #Goal

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