2019 ANNUAL REPORT: Nigeria's Football Earns Lowest Grade In Four Years
The grade of C earned by Nigerian football in 2019 is the lowest in four
years and it denotes a steady trajectory of decline. Last year, it
graded C+ after grades of B- and B in the previous two years. The
overall grade of C follows a year of two C- grades in two categories and
C grades in two other categories. Only one category (The Super Eagles)
received a grade of above C. It received an A- grade, an upgrade from B
which it earned in the previous year. The Super Eagles -- the country's
flagship team -- has never received a grade less than B- since the
Annual Report began in 2016. This year's A- represents the excitement
surrounding the team after a disappointing 2018 which had ended with a
gloomy World Cup.
Below is a look at each graded category.
Youth Football
Both the U17 and U20 teams participated at the FIFA World Cup with their
peers. For most countries in the world, that participation would have
been something to celebrate. However, for Nigeria there is always a
higher expectation for those two age grade teams. Nigeria ranks No. 1 in
the U17 category having won the championship more than any other
country in the world. However, in 2019, both the U17 and U20 teams
disappointed with both failing to reach the quarter final stage. Those
results dealt a major blow to youth soccer development in the country
and football administrators have more than likely turned their sights to
recruiting youth footballers developed outside the country as
demonstrated in both teams at the 2019 World Cups. The outcome from that
recruitment is not pretty. Grade C.
Women Football
Disappointing year in some sense, particularly the fact that the senior
team failed to advance to the Olympics after Coach Dennerby was
surprisingly let go. One success was Nigeria's return to the knockout
stage of the Women's World Cup and visible improvement in defensive
tactics employed by the team at the World Cup. There is no doubt,
however, that the women football in Nigeria is tottering particularly
under the current administration with the team clearly considered as
second fiddle to the men teams. Grade C.
Local Professional Football
With Nigeria increasingly focused on foreign football, attention to the
local professional scene is waning. The league finished by a surprise
zonal arrangement with a brief league playoff quickly organized. This
haphazard approach seeped into the start of the 2019/2020 season which
was delayed for a long period before it kicked off without television
coverage. Local professional football was headed towards a D grade but
the performance of two of its four teams in the continental cups rescued
it to a grade of C-.
Football Administration
Football administration, once praised, is presently performing at a low
level in terms of its management of the national teams. Several of the
coaches were reportedly on delayed payments and teams threatening to
boycott games because of the same issues. It smacks of a return to the
past. Troubling also is the squabble with hired foreign coaches.
Locally, the administration of the local league is questionable with low
sponsorship and non-existence of major television coverage. None of the
above signs is good and a grade of C- is appropriate at this time.
Super Eagles
The only shining light is the flagship team of the country -- the Super
Eagles. Last year this team was despised and the manager hanging on a
thin thread. However, the manager's injection of new and exciting
talents has not only revived hope but has strengthened the squad. The
result were two impressive ties against two Top 210 teams in the world
-- Ukraine and Brazil. In addition, the team started its 2021 African
Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifiers by accumulating maximum points. A
grade of A- is assigned only because of poor performances of the B
national team in the qualification series for the African Nations
Championship (CHAN) and the WAFU. Grade A-.
As is always the case, below is a further analysis of the performance of each unit of the Super Eagles.
Goalkeeping.
Goalkeeping for 2019 did not show a great improvement but it certainly
did not get worse. In fact, the first choice goalkeeper Francis Uzoho
who started poorly in the beginning of the year has show great
reliability starting from the third place game at the Nations Cup. He
was man of the match in the international friendly against Brazil.
Ezenwa has been steady when given the opportunity and Akpeyi has reduced
his errors and was good in his appearances for the team. Maduka Okoye
has been add ed to the pool of competing goalkeepers but has not been
tested enough to decide whether or not he belongs. Grade B-.
Defense. The defense has
been strong when evaluating the players individually but the result
produced by the unit has not been impressive with goals conceded against
teams like Madagascar, Seychelles, Benin Republic, and Lesotho. More
work is needed but remarkable improvement has been shown in the ability
to walk the ball ball out from the defense rather than hoofing it up
front. Grade of B.
Midfield. Nigeria, perhaps,
done the best here with several new players who have contributed. Mikel
Obi retired after the AFCON and he has been replaced without the team
missing a beat. In fact, it could be argued that Iwobi has brought more
aggressive play making ability when on his game and the unit has been
much faster moving the ball along. The grade is A-.
Forwards. The introduction
of Victor Osimhen was a major upgrade but even before then Odion Ighalo
was at the top of his game finishing top scorer at the AFCON ahead of
high profile names like Mohammed Salah, Sadio Mane, and Riyad Mahrez.
Osimhen has been even more impressive after Ighalo's retirement. Grade
is A.
Bench. This is where the
team made the most progress. Gone are the days when the absence of one
player meant the degrading of the team. That is no longer the case. The
bench players are just as effective as the starters and can often impact
the game when introduced. This has led the coach to make starting
changes for tactical reasons from one game to the next. Grade is A.
Coaching. The coaching crew
was facing a sack right after a disappointing 2018 World Cup but the
federation decided to keep the crew in spite of a loud public outcry for
a sack. That confidence in the coaching crew has been repaid with the
strengthening of the team and the fans now behind the team again. This
situation certainly justifies an A- grade for the crew.
Outlook for 2020. The
Nigerian Super Eagles are exciting, once again, and much stronger all
around with a much balanced squad. It is primed for a good run at
qualifying for both the 2021 AFCON and the 2022 World Cup. To do so will
require an impressive performance during the qualifiers in 2020.
________________________________________________________________________________
OVERALL GRADE FOR NIGERIAN FOOTBALL
Nigerian football received grades of C, C, C-, C-, and A- in five
categories for the 2019 year. Based on those five unit grades, a final
grade of C is assigned to Nigerian football. Although the flagship team
received A- that is not enough. The overall grade of C is the lowest
assigned since the Annual Report began in 2016.
________________________________________________________________________________
2019 Team Data
This year's loss record was five, one less than the previous year.
Importantly, two of those five losses came from Team B at the CHAN and
WAFU games. This created an efficiency of .0597, which is better than
both 2017 and 2018. See the data table for detailed data.
2019 Individual Data
Alex Iwobi with 15 appearances was the player that played the most games
for Nigeria in 2019. However, he barely topped the minutes log by two
minutes over William Ekong who led the 2018 minutes log. Iwobi's total
minutes of 1212 is the highest annual minutes for a player in the last
four years. Odion Ighalo who scored six to top the annual scoring chart
in 2018 scored the same total to top the chart in 2019. Moses Simon
totaled three assists to top the assists chart.
Recognitions (Nigerian Football)
Odion Ighalo was clearly the best male player of 2019 with his goals
that led Africa at the AFCON. Samuel Chukwueze was the best new player
in 2019 with a slight edge over Joseph Aribo. The Emerging Star of the
national team is Victor Osimhen. Of all the Super Eagles, he is the one
most likely to win Africa's Football of the Year in the coming years
based on his hunger for goals at both club and national team levels.
Star is written over his play and he demonstrated a glimpse of it in the
recent 4-2 thumping of Lesotho in Maseru where he took over the game.
The Best Team for 2019 is the Male National Team 'Super Eagles'
following a magnificent revival in 2019 unequaled by any other Nigerian
team.
The Best Coach went to Thomas Dennerby who managed the female national
team -- the Falcons. He took the team to the knockout stages of the 2019
Women's World Cup. The last time Nigeria reached that stage was in 1999
when Ismaila Mabo was coach. Importantly, Dennerby clearly showed that
the women team can be set up effectively against set pieces, something
that had been missing from the women national team for years. Although,
it did not always prevent conceding via set pieces but it reduced the
occurrences where opponents found it easy to score in such situations.
Francesca Ordega, the most impressive female player at the 2019 Women's
World Cup, is the Best Female Player of 2019. She was the most
threatening forward when Nigeria had the ball at the Women's World Cup
and certainly came out of the shadows of Nigeria's big names Asisat
Oshoala and Desire Oparanozie. The most impressive Emerging Female Star
is defender Chidinma Okeke who was one of the best Nigerian defenders at
the Women World Cup after impressing at the WAFU Cup.
About the Author:
Dr. Chuka Onwumechili is a Professor
of Communications in the Strategic, Legal and Management Communication
(SLMC) Department. Dr. Onwumechili joined Howard University, full time,
in 2009 and served as Interim Dean of the School of Communications.
Prior to his appointment at Howard, he served as Vice President of the
Digital Bridge Institute (DBI) in Abuja, Nigeria and Chair of the
Department of Communications at Bowie State University, Bowie, Maryland.Along with his role as Department Chair, Dr. Onwumechili is Editor-In-Chief of The Howard Journal of Communications, a position he assumed in September 2014.
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