Friday, 6 May 2016
Rio Olympics: Siasia faces selection headache over the over-age players
With about 90 days to the start of the Olympic
Games in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro,
Coach Samson Siasia is facing a selection
headache over which over-age players to select to
strengthen the side for the men’s football
tournament in the summer.
While the qualifying
campaign, which Siasia’s
boys won late last year in
Senegal is restricted to
players aged under-23,
three overage players can
compete at the Olympics,
with Nigerians set to
spend the next weeks
debating the identity of
the trio of overage players
Siasia will pick as he has
little time before
submitting preliminary
lists for the August
tournament. .
The local media has
already dished out plenty
of column inches to
speculation over the identity of the Dream Team’s
over-age trio to the Rio Games, as the search for
a second gold medal in soccer reaches feverish
peak after the heroics of the 1996 Olympic Team
managed by Dutchman Jo Bonfrere won gold in
Atlanta in 1996.
Top on the list is John Obi Mikel and Odion
Ighalo, two players from the Premier League, and
also goalkeeper Victor Enyeama, who is a strong
candidate. The France-based goalkeeper had quit
the national team last year when dropped from
selection, but now could return. Ighalo has been
one of Nigeria’s stand-out performers in the
Premier League this season, netting over 14 goals
for Watford in the current English Premier
League campaign.
Other Eagles regular like Ogenyi Onazi, Godfrey
Oboabona, Ahmed Musa and Aaron Samuel are
also reported to be targeting a place in the Rio
Games, all the more complicating the situation
for Siasia, who guided the Olympic team to win
silver at the Beijing 2008 Games.
The Olympic Games football tournament might
be seen as something of a misnomer at an event
where all the world’s finest athletes are
competing ... except in football. But for Nigeria
and Africa, it is important and it marked the early
breakthroughs for the continent in the
international arena. Zambia’s upset win over Italy
in 1988 was followed by a bronze for Ghana in
Barcelona four years later.
Then came the magical Nigerian performance of
1996 and gold again for Africa in Sydney in 2000
when Cameroon emerged victorious.
Brazil and Neymar will have the tag of favourites
and be the firm focus of everyone in August, but
the African challenge will be a very real one —
with the right over age players to spur on their
chances.
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