Is coaching Nigeria the hardest job in world football?
Sunday Oliseh (bottom row, centre) believes former World Cup team-mate Siasia (top row, second from left) can only win over his squad by ruling with an iron fist
England managers past and present may think their high-pressurised life is intolerable but Super Eagles coaches have it just as bad, if not worse - leading a nation whose fans, like Brazilians, () tend to see anything other than a tournament victory as failure.
"Managing Nigeria is an uphill task," says Sunday Oliseh, who played alongside Siasia as Nigeria won the 1994 Nations Cup before shining at USA' 94.
"You have to look at the magnitude of the pressure through our population. We are a nation of 150 million and everyone loves football, so you have to succeed."
As if to prove his point, Oliseh claims fans' expectations have lowered in recent times but then states that Siasia's only hope of completing his four-year deal is by reaching the 2012 Nations Cup final "because it's been 10 years since we finished second in Africa".
The Super Eagles have recorded several third-place finishes in that time but 1994, when their Fifa ranking peaked at fifth (), remains their last African crown. means Nigeria will be chasing their first group win in nearly two decades should they compete at Brazil 2014.
But Siasia's challenge is not just Herculean because of insane pressure (many fans genuinely thought they would win the World Cup) but also the number of areas that need improvement if he's to restore life to a national game which even Nigeria's federation (NFF) says is .
Vital organs have indeed been failing - not least inadequate support from , undue pressure from various powers for the coach to select certain players as well as a squad whose commitment has been questioned. All this has often infuriated the fans.
Then there's the added problem of Nigeria's top footballers enjoying near-godlike status, meaning Siasia needs to tame some sizeable egos.
The former striker has already endured run-ins with John Mikel Obi, Taye Taiwo, Peter Osaze Odemwingie and Victor Anichebe along the way to reaching the and finals.
Furthermore, his new charges - Odemwingie aside - are widely seen to exert more effort for their clubs than for Nigeria, and it's not just the fans making such claims.
"We want our players playing like they do at their clubs - because if they come here and play something else, we'll find someone else," Siasia, 43, .
This may be music to the ears of many Nigerian fans but it's one thing to talk tough, another to exercise hard-line policies while trying to win matches under pressure - and the Super Eagles currently trail in their .
New Nigeria coach Samson Siasia (right) advises his players en route to the 2008 Olympic Games final in Beijing
Westerhof's strict discipline kept players on their toes to such extent that , a far cry from the current attitude.
"If our players are not disciplined, we will not move forward," says Oliseh.
Westerhof's inspired tutelage sparked Nigeria's 1994 Nations Cup win as well as their maiden World Cup appearance later that year, followed - as coach Jo Bonfrere rode his slipstream - by a historic .
"Another problem is that Samson's team will constantly be compared to those of the 1990s," adds Oliseh.
Yet Siasia, who played for French-side Nantes during his career, would do well to point this out - for the key is that Westerhof was given nearly six years in his role, allowed to build bit by bit as the Dutchman finished his masterpiece.
Nonetheless, the new coach, who favours free-flowing football, will find time the rarest of luxuries, with no Nigerian having ever lasted longer than three years in the post.
"Give me 2-3 years to put together a team that can play the way Nigerians want - offensive-minded, hard-working, using the wings properly and being tactically disciplined," he told the media last week.
His ambitious overhaul includes screening the country's youth before selecting the best to work under his system (so that they're ready when forced to step up), undoubtedly curtailing the careers of several old-timers (e.g. Yakubu) while also hunting new talent - such as .
But Siasia has to rebuild while not just winning but doing so with conviction and good football: for lest we forget, the last Nigerian to coach the Super Eagles won his first six qualifiers but still for his style of play.
Shaibu Amodu also achieved all the aims set him by the Nigerian federation - qualifying for the World Cup and reaching the semis of Angola 2010 - but was nonetheless.
Siasia has been tasked with reaching the next World Cup semi-finals but the NFF has upped the ante by saying he'll only be in Brazil if he wins the 2012 Nations Cup.
Or then again, bearing Amodu in mind, even that's not guaranteed.
Comment number 1.
At 11th Dec 2010, Wheater_bix wrote:Nigeria has always had talented players but football has always been a team game, looks like I'm first to comment woo! :D
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Comment number 2.
At 11th Dec 2010, Wheater_bix wrote:Excellent blog Piers, it's always great to get an insight into a developing nation's footballing prowess
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Comment number 3.
At 11th Dec 2010, yomola wrote:SiaSia will have it very easy. Why? Because he is the people's choice
Amodu came in at a time when people wanted Siasia.
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Comment number 4.
At 11th Dec 2010, Jotham_04 wrote:This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.
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Comment number 5.
At 11th Dec 2010, kenzo wrote:Very good blog. Nigerians Love siasa and he would be given chance. Shaibu is totally different. Siasa would be tough on the big players, while Saibu as always been weak with the Big Players. Nigeria want tough coach like Clemens Westerhof and Bonfrere Jo.
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Comment number 6.
At 11th Dec 2010, cravencottagefarts wrote:Nigeria's Super eagles? more like an dying eagle:
tatterred and torn featherssores all over.
can't soar nor glide.
emits lots of black smoke trying to fly.
creaking wings.
severrely weakened and rubbery beak.
practically blind eyes/vision with no retina.
cracked and overwrinkled skin.
no appetite for success.
misses by miles easy landings on flat surfaces.
wretched outlook for life.
and the list continues....
look, you need to go back and watch the Eagles at this year's CAN against the TINY SQUIRRELS of Benin, to see how bad this former graceful and majestic bird now struggle againsts even the tamest of oppositions.
i've never in my life seen a squirrel harrass an eagle, but the Squirrels did so with glee last January...
SOLUTION to REJUVENATION:
get another WESTERHOF like character, who can:
1...kick the butts and get rid of the players with inflated egos and overaged, such as mikel obi, yakubu, etc
2...shun the NFF and walk in to the president's office at will to avoid the obstacles/medusas called NFF and Sports Ministry.
3...stop calling powerless and spineless players such as etuhu, and that guy who got the red card card against greece, and all other tasteless bums in the team
4...use as many players as possible in as many matches as possible before getting a final 36 strong team.
5...LIVE IN NIGERIA AND TOUR NIGERIA IN DEPTH....like westerhof did.....EAT NIGERIAN FOOD TO KNOW WHY NIGERIAN PLAYERS NEED A HARDSKINNED MANAGER, like westerhof did.........REFUSE TO LISTEN TO NIGERIAN PRESS CRITCISM.
6...Manager SHOULD REFUSE TO SHARE HIS SALARY WITH THE NFF, like Westerhof refused the NFA back then.....
Nigeria's best manager by light years is westerhof......Nigeria needs another strongman like him!!!
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Comment number 7.
At 11th Dec 2010, Tokunboh Akinbiyi wrote:Nice incisive blog, we hope the poor administrators will give our Siasia enough time to succeed (Imagine this; after having to personally source for funds to execute the FIFA under 21 world cup where Nigeria came 2nd to Messi's Argentina, he was asked by - guess who - to submit the funds for disbursement by ''them''!). He's the fan's favorite though it's difficult to understand the reason you'll pay an expat so much (for SA 2010 world cup) and pay a citizen so little for the same job! (what is this type of behavior called?). By the way, Nigeria's peak rating by FIFA was 5th.
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Comment number 8.
At 11th Dec 2010, Jay Kay wrote:Siasia has good PRINCIPLES & he's DISCIPLINE coach-wise with his players....go SIA !...we've got ur back!!!!
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Comment number 9.
At 11th Dec 2010, olifen wrote:@6
I could have sworn it was Sani Kaita who was sent of for senselessy kicking out at his opponent.
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Comment number 10.
At 11th Dec 2010, birdman-peterson wrote:the root cause of failure of African football as a whole is simply the fact that our players worry too much about getting injured while playing for their countries... until they put countries above clubs like those of Oliseh, Taribu West, Kanu and Ja Ja Okocha used to do, our continental football is close to death.
it is not that we have less talent now then in the 1990s and early 2000s but the shift is commitment and full delivery to your country which is affecting the countries in Africa(Nigeria included) and that is why Egypt has been outstanding because almost 2/3 of their players play at home and their heart is there to deliver for their country unlike the rest.
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Comment number 11.
At 11th Dec 2010, cravencottagefarts wrote:9. At 7:58pm on 11 Dec 2010, olifen wrote:
@6
I could have sworn it was Sani Kaita who was sent of for senselessy kicking out at his opponent.
OLIFEN, i know you're right.....but ready my comment quoted below again, i did not say it was Etuhu, i said:
3... ".....and that guy who got the red card card against greece".....
i could not remember the name kaita... BUT, i did not say it was etuhu, read my comment again!!!
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Comment number 12.
At 11th Dec 2010, Luther wrote:Samson Sia Sia will do better - if not better than the 1994 Super-Eagles because he was a member of that team, he learned from both successful coaches Westerhof and Jo Bonfrere. He also seemed to be enjoying the support of all the 1994 team-mates of Olise, Okocha etc.
Above all, Samson Sia Sia will succeed because he was the coach of the successful and high-flying Flying Eagle teams which fell to Argetina twice in a row where the likes of Mikel Obi and others were discovered and he has used those instances to gain experience as the people's coach. That is why the Nigerian people liked him so much.
Nigeria is a great football nation where everyone knows the game (to some extent) including market women (watch the Nigerian Femal Team), but Sia Sia knows that he needs and he will surely seek the support of the almost 200 million Nigerians while he began his career as a coach for the football Powerhouse nation called Nigerians.
In Nigeria, we don't want to win the game, but we want to win with free flowing attacking football with abundance of skills and football senses. Nigerians want to get them young, but the only problem is that the "All Nigerian Secondary School Games" that usually produce the Super Eagles every four years is no longer available. Samson Sia must first work on that - getting the local sports council to re-start the programs.
Finally, Sam Sia Sia knows that to win is a project that requires project management mentalities. Set target, start working on the plan to get to target goals.
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Comment number 13.
At 12th Dec 2010, andrew wrote:This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.
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Comment number 14.
At 12th Dec 2010, Socratestee wrote:Good blog. Its good not to generalize. Everybody doesn't think Siasia is the 'messiah'. You judge someone by his achievements. He has done well and he has done not so well. But this guys crooning about his successes but makes excuses for his failures. He didn't do well in his last national job and with Heartland he failed only to blame players openly, saying the team wasn't his.
He needs to win things but the insanely optimistic fans must know Nigeria can't win things based on luck when age cheating isn't at play. Prepare and cater for the players and they can play without fear. Not looking for players that have been invested in by others like Onuoha but not doing the investment. Sow where you want to reap. And I am a Nigerian.
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Comment number 15.
At 12th Dec 2010, victor wrote:Amos Adamu & FIFA where the real problem in Nigerians futball.No oil producing country gets an easy ride with football.FiFa is addicted to oil money. Amos Adamu was their atmcard in Nigeria.Amos Adamu is one of the wealthiest nigerians & as he grew rich, our football grew short. A poor nation like nigeria hosted 2 world cups in 10year because FIFA knows what they individually get from that.Adamu prefared Nigeria bought refs over than play good futbal & anytime the govt threatened him, He & September Blatter will counter with a Ban. But Adamu was always honest until he oined FIFA.Where is democracy in FiFA with only two presidents in more than 2 decades. Like every other global demon, fifa is wikileaks away from d collapse we are all praying 4.
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Comment number 16.
At 12th Dec 2010, england_canwinsomuch wrote:The expectation of Nigerians is not unfounded. We have the resources and the materials to make any coach perform well. I hope Sia 1 will not disappoint Nigerians because lots of confidence is in the air that he will perform. If he can keep his cool, talk less and do more. I believe he should make it.
It can be said that coaching Nigeria is one of the toughest because Nigerians are not patient people, so like Pardew, Siasia should be up and running. Some of the boys are used to him from the age grade level, so he should start from the known to the unknown.
I wish him the best.
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Comment number 17.
At 13th Dec 2010, Orufuo wrote:When I hear fans oohing and aahing about Siasia, I ask myself whether I mysteriously lost time. Whether in the time I maybe was abducted by aliens he had gone ahead to coach Inter Milan, Barcelona, Man United and won a string of trophies.
But if I didn't lose time, then I wonder exactly where the magic wand went. As much as I can remember, here's what I know about his recent record as coach (Played four matches at the U-20 World Cup in Egypt - lost three badly. Played six games in the group stage of the CAF Champions League with Heartland this year - lost his three away games and drew his three home games)
That doesn't sound like Jose Mourinho's CV, yet we call him the Special One. Hmmmmm. If passion and goodwill are all it takes to succeed, then I'd say he'd win the World Cup, but so many other things go into making successful teams.
Where are the players? With our best players in the West Hams and West Broms of the world, where are the players? And here's more dilemma for Siasia - The old and ageing populate his team, while the young have no experience. If he goes with the old (who have little quality) he can't win, if he turns to the young (who have better quality) he would need at least four years (How long has Wenger been building his new Arsenal?!)
Cote d'Ivoire, Ghana and Senegal are streets ahead of Nigeria in player quality and the latter duo are already on the freeway in the development of their younger teams.
The science of football coaching like the rest of science has moved at a frightening pace... I do not recall that Siasia has taken time to develop himself in recent times. Players like students sense when their teachers are not up-to-date and there is no bigger respect killer than that.
Mikel comes from listening to Ancelotti and subconsciously expects Siasia to be at least close in his methods otherwise kaplunk!... players just don't wake up and be committed otherwise Mourinho and Alex Ferguson won't be who they are.
Winning managers build committed teams. It's not about patriotism, and I think we miss that point all the time in Nigeria. Same Inter that was a fighting squad last season has now be Benitezed.
NFF is generally poor at administration and many more and there is not much support that Siasia can hope to get from those guys.
Finally - until the Nigerian League gets its groove back I really can't see where the quality will come through from (remember we don't have solid youth development programmes). The last time Nigeria played great football was in 1998. That's the year Kanu moved to England and Nigeria followed him - and consequently the local league lost its mojo. Since then our quality has been in trickles.
Same players Amodu used that we abused him for are the same players there today. As Nigerians are such big and proud followers of the English game, maybe FIFA can allow us borrow a few English players then.
I hope Siasia succeeds, I hope Nigeria succeeds, but yes Piers the Nigerian job is the Poisoned Chalice.
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Comment number 18.
At 13th Dec 2010, Orufuo wrote:When I hear fans oohing and aahing about Siasia, I ask myself whether I mysteriously lost time. Whether in the time I maybe was abducted by aliens he had gone ahead to coach Inter Milan, Barcelona, Man United and won a string of trophies.
But if I didn't lose time, then I wonder exactly where the magic wand went. As much as I can remember, here's what I know about his recent record as coach (Played four matches at the U-20 World Cup in Egypt - lost three badly. Played six games in the group stage of the CAF Champions League with Heartland this year - lost his three away games and drew his three home games)
That doesn't sound like Jose Mourinho's CV, yet we call him the Special One. Hmmmmm. If passion and goodwill are all it takes to succeed, then I'd say he'd win the World Cup, but so many other things go into making successful teams.
Where are the players? With our best players in the West Hams and West Broms of the world, where are the players? And here's more dilemma for Siasia - The old and ageing populate his team, while the young have no experience. If he goes with the old (who have little quality) he can't win, if he turns to the young (who have better quality) he would need at least four years (How long has Wenger been building his new Arsenal?!)
Cote d'Ivoire, Ghana and Senegal are streets ahead of Nigeria in player quality and the latter duo are already on the freeway in the development of their younger teams.
The science of football coaching like the rest of science has moved at a frightening pace... I do not recall that Siasia has taken time to develop himself in recent times. Players like students sense when their teachers are not up-to-date and there is no bigger respect killer than that.
Mikel comes from listening to Ancelotti and subconsciously expects Siasia to be at least close in his methods otherwise kaplunk!... players just don't wake up and be committed otherwise Mourinho and Alex Ferguson won't be who they are.
Winning managers build committed teams. It's not about patriotism, and I think we miss that point all the time in Nigeria. Same Inter that was a fighting squad last season has now be Benitezed.
NFF is generally poor at administration and many more and there is not much support that Siasia can hope to get from those guys.
Finally - until the Nigerian League gets its groove back I really can't see where the quality will come through from (remember we don't have solid youth development programmes). The last time Nigeria played great football was in 1998. That's the year Kanu moved to England and Nigeria followed him - and consequently the local league lost its mojo. Since then our quality has been in trickles.
Same players Amodu used that we abused him for are the same players there today. As Nigerians are such big and proud followers of the English game, maybe FIFA can allow us borrow a few English players then.
I hope Siasia succeeds, I hope Nigeria succeeds, but yes Piers the Nigerian job is the Poisoned Chalice.
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Comment number 19.
At 14th Dec 2010, osas wrote:For the fist time in since 1994 we have a coach who is able to stand his ground against indiscipline in the team as demostrated during the selection for the olympic games in china when mikel was drop 4 lack of committment and gross indiscipline. this alone would make all players to know that everybody is dispensable. but for sisia to suceed he must be allowed to pick all his backroom staff, so as not to have an excuse for failing.
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Comment number 20.
At 16th Dec 2010, Ayo wrote:It is easy for people to talk about indiscipline in the playing team but not with the administrators of the team. The statement made by the President of the NFF during the unveiling of Siasia as the Coach of Nigeria that he had employed the "people's choice" shows that the moment the people say they no longer want Siasia as coach he would listen and sack him. The same thing they did to Amodu Shuaibu who qualified Nigeria for the World Cup twice. Until we have real football people managing our football we will not succeed even if we engage Jose Marinho. The people who employed CW did not listen to "the people" before he was employed or during his tenure as Coach of NIgeria. If they had done so they would not have employed him or they would have sacked him after the 1990 Nations Cup finals in Algeria.
The Nigerian Sporting press is the main proplem that the sport has. The people do not agitate as much as the press who devote their time in slandering any coach that is employed by Nigeria if he does not invite their players (we know that some of them take bribe to promote the profiles of players so that they can be invited to play for NIgeria). When CW was employed by then NFA the press criticised the FA accusing them of employing a second class coach, now it is easy to say he was the best coach ever employed by Nigeria. If those at the helm of the FA had listened to the press we will not be talking about CW now. We employed TL who qualified Holand for the 1990 World Cup, the press chased him out. We will not succeed until we have people who know what they want as experts and stick with the choice of Coaches they employ for Nigeria just as Yusuf Ali did by not listening to the "people". Give a coach enough time as he is the expert who has the Know-how then it is then that Nigeria can get back to where they were in the 1990s.
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Comment number 21.
At 16th Dec 2010, Ayo wrote:I am not a new member. i used to comment with the name akinduro234 but since the change in membership I changed my registration.
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Comment number 22.
At 16th Dec 2010, andrew wrote:The big Question is if Siasia took Nigeria to the world cup would he have included Kanu and. Yobo?
If answer is yes we are finished before we can start! The reasons are obvious.
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