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Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) - Sports - Nairaland

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Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by SmartyPants(m): 7:59am On Apr 01, 2022
By now it is no news to any Nigerian sports fan, that Augustin Eguavoen and his entire team have been relieved of their duties at the helm of affairs of the Nigerian National team.

Most Nigerians are happy with this development, with some claiming that his immediate predecessor, Gernot Rohr would have delivered better results. However, a simple analysis of events will clearly demonstrate that Eguavoen did a fine enough job given the circumstances.

I will attempt to undertake this analysis by demonstrating, first that Eguavoen has a better record than one might realize, and secondly by comparing the performance of his Super Eagles with that of Afcon winners, Senegal, and runners-up Egypt.

When Gernot Rohr was sacked a few weeks to the Afcon, knowledgeable sportspersons decried the move, citing the difficulty any new coach would face in setting up the team to play to his own patterns. In analyzing Eguavoen, therefore, it must first be understood that the new boss was operating under extreme pressure, with little to no time to work with the players, play friendly games, and so forth. He was thrust immediately into the challenge of the Afcon and the subsequent challenge of world cup qualifying.

In this sense, Eguavoen eventually became a victim of his own success.

Few Nigerians, or football fans anywhere, would have expected Nigeria to defeat Egypt, talkless of the ease with which it was done. Egypt would go on to be the eventual tournament runners up, slaving out draw after draw. Interestingly, Senegal, the eventual winners, adopted a similar approach in getting to the final, barely managing 9 goals in open play in the entire tournament. For some perspective, vincent Aboubakar of Cameroun scored 8 goals on his own. This fact will be shown to be relevant subsequently.

For now, the point is that, after entering the tournament with very low expectations, coach Eguavoen immediately delighted and raised the expectations of Nigerians by leading the team to three successive wins, while playing some exciting football.

And then came the shock round-of-16 exit at the hands of Tunisia. The Tunisians had studied the Nigerian game plan which was rather simple: pass it to the wingers and let them dribble. The Tunisians set up defensively and effectively contained the threat of the most dangerous nigerian winger, Moses Simon, relying, themselves, on a largely ineffective strategy of counter-attacking.

On the whole, the game appeared set for extra time - barring the intervention of the sublime, or the ridiculous. As it turned out, it was a ridiculous error from fine-boy Maduka Okoye whose poor attempt at saving a speculative long-range drive led to the only goal of the game. This goal was also the first and only goal Nigeria conceded in open play at the Afcon.

I suspect most people would agree with me that there is not much a coach can do about a goal-keeping error. Except, perhaps, play another keeper. So Nigerians began to clamor for the changing of Maduka Okoye. Apparently, Francis Uzoho of some unmemorable club side in Cyprus, or Enyimba's second-choice goalkeeper, John Noble, would be much better options than the pretty boy who is on loan to Sparta Rotterdam from Watford. I admit I was one of those.

So began the qualifying playoff games. Nigerians were prepared to forget the Afcon failure since the prospect of the world cup loomed and Ghana surely would be dispatched easily. Pretty boy Maduka claimed to be ill, though, there are many of us who believe his malaise was/is merely one of discontentment at the abuse he suffered at the hands of irate Nigerians.

The not quite-as-pretty Francis Uzoho, then, to the satisfaction of most Nigerians, was left to reclaim the spot that was once his. It is important to point out that Francis Uzoho was once a highly rated goalkeeper plying his trade in the Spanish top flight.

Eguavoen's team went to Ghana, ostensibly, set up to play for a draw so as to leverage the home advantage in the return leg in Abuja. The game, an ugly 0 - 0 draw played out accordingly. Nigerians, who always expect to win, were disappointed and left grumbling. The coach should have used Ademola Lookman some said. Etebo should have started becasue Bonke was useless others chimed. Moses Simon should be dropped, yet another group chorused.

At the press conference before the game in Abuja, one sports journalist asked Moses Simon whether the coach should yeild to calls to play Ademola Lookman since he (Moses Simon) had been caged for since the Tunisia game. Eguavoen, appears, now, to have listened to all of these voices. In the second leg in Abuja, he dropped Moses Simon for the first time, starting new boy Ademola Lookman in his place, along with Ogenekaro Etebo in place of Innocent Bonke, and Dennis Emmanuel on the right flank. The court of public opinion had their way, and the results? Predictable.

Ademola Lookman looked unable to cope with the physicality of the opponents, and was ineffective. Etebo lacked match fitness and kept giving the ball away. He was also nowhere to be found when Thomas Partey of Ghana fired off a speculative shot from 5 yards out of the
Nigerian box. That Partey shot was eerily similar to the one Youssef Msakni scored just a few months earlier, to end Nigeria's world cup hopes.

The lanky Francis Uzoho couldn't get down early enough to save the tame shot that sqeezed it's way under his huge frame and into the corner of the net. Apparently, the problem wasn't Maduka's fine face after all. This time, though, unlike in Garoua two months ago, there was an immediate response. Ademola Lookman was brought down in the box and a penalty was awarded after a VAR review.

All the Super Eagles needed to do was score, and we expected that they would. After all the Ghanaians came to joke around right? Wrong! While Nigeria had the upper hand in terms of possession, there was simply no penetrative edge to it all. And so, the sorrow of Garoua became the agony of Abuja.

All of this is now water under the bridge.

Eguavoen and his team have all been sacked by Amaju Pinnick, the NFF don. Interestingly, Pinnick, who hired both Eguavoen and his predecessor Rohr, has now sacked both while he himself remains securely ensconced within the NFF seat of power. Logically, if all the people you hired failed to do a job well then at the very least, it is clear that you are not fit for the role of hiring people for that job. Amaju Pinnick, if he were honorable, should have resigned by now, for overseeing, arguably, the worst Nigerian footballing disaster of the past 20 years!

But that is now beside the point. The real question is, did Augustine Eguavoen really fail to deliver? Let's examine his record.

Of 6 competitive games, Eguvoen's eagles won 3, lost 1, and drew 2. That is a decent record at any level.

And it wasn't as though this team was playing slouches either. The one defeat came to Tunisia, who are going to the world cup after convincingly dispatching West African heavyweights, Mali. The two draws came in fiercely contested ties with arch-rivals Ghana.

This is a decent record for any coach. Much more so for one who has had as little time as Eguavoen has had while being under as much pressure as he has been, from the media and higher-ups in the NFF who have always tried to dictate tactics to him.

Now, to buttress the point, consider the good fortunes of Senegal. Like Nigeria, Senegal played out their world cup qualifying games with an overall draw, conceding once in Cairo, and scoring once in Dakar. Both times by way of an own goal. Their good fortune was winning the resultant penalty shootout. Senegal are also the current Afcon winners, but their displays were boring and intrepid throughout the tournament, relying on the same defense-first strategy Eguavoen employed in the world cup qualifying games.

Their performances were certainly not better than anything Nigeria played. And what of Afcon runners up Egypt? They played through extra-time 4 times, going to penalties 3 of those 4 occasions, and repeating that trend by going to penalties with Senegal in the world cup play offs.

Of the top African teams, objectively analyzed, it is clear that Nigeria under Eguavoen has not performed unexpectedly poorly. Gone are the days of struggling to draw or defeat relative minnows like Cape Verde, or conceding 4 goals in 2 minutes against the likes of Sierra Leone. Eguavoen was on the right path with the Eagles, and given the little time he has had, should have been allowed another year or two at the helm of affairs.

Today, unfortunately, thanks to the grandstanding of Amaju Pinnick and the ever so forgetful Nigerian media, his competent run at the helm of affairs will be wrongly remembered as a calamitous reign of sorrow.

13 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by engroke(m): 8:53am On Apr 01, 2022
I disagree with you, the Nationla team is not where u come to experiment or hope to improve your CV, Eguavoen failed and he knows it all this grandstanding should just stop.


He was aware if the task ahead and should have rejected the job if he knew he wont be able to cope with the pressure that comes with it. The moment you agree to take a job, u agree to all liabilities and assets.


Before his appointment, he was the technical director and knows much about the players and the team but he lacks the tactical depth to achieve anything with the team even if he had the whole year to prepare.


As for Rohr, he was not overly poor as he was on course to fulfill his mandate, he qualified us for the world cup in a group that had both Cameroon and Algeria( cameroon were the African champions while Algeria were the number 1 african side then).


Eguavoen understood the task at hand and he couldn't achieve it not to even say that the only top team he defeated in his six games sojourn was EGYPT. NFF should as a matter of urgency look for a coach capable of giving us what we want Thanks

32 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by SmartyPants(m): 10:34am On Apr 01, 2022
engroke:
I disagree with you, the Nationla team is not where u come to experiment or hope to improve your CV, Eguavoen failed and he knows it all this grandstanding should just stop.


He was aware if the task ahead and should have rejected the job if he knew he wont be able to cope with the pressure that comes with it. The moment you agree to take a job, u agree to all liabilities and assets.


Before his appointment, he was the technical director and knows much about the players and the team but he lacks the tactical depth to achieve anything with the team even if he had the whole year to prepare.


As for Rohr, he was not overly poor as he was on course to fulfill his mandate, he qualified us for the world cup in a group that had both Cameroon and Algeria( cameroon were the African champions while Algeria were the number 1 african side then).


Eguavoen understood the task at hand and he couldn't achieve it not to even say that the only top team he defeated in his six games sojourn was EGYPT. NFF should as a matter of urgency look for a coach capable of giving us what we want Thanks

Engineer, are you saying Rohr's 4 - 4 vs Sierra Leone at home was a good result? What of his inability to defeat Cape Verde? The last 4 - 5 games of Rohr's tenure were terrible to watch with unacceptable results! Let's not rewrite history here.

I'm telling you even Pep Guardiola would have struggled to do better in the time frame Eguavoen had. It is simply not enough time to develop and implement a system afresh.

Look at Arsenal with Arteta? Liverpool with Klopp? It took a couple of seasons to get their teams playing well.

I'm also making the point that bar two goal keeping errors, we could very easily have been another Senegal.

10 Likes

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by Nicho118(m): 11:01am On Apr 01, 2022
For your team not to score an open goal against the worse Ghana team in recent years for 180minutes, then the coach is not good enough

28 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by Nobody: 11:17am On Apr 01, 2022
Read the 5 epic moments that the Super Eagles disappointed Nigerians

https://www.footballorbit.com/epic-moments-super-eagles-disappointed-nigerians/
Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by SmartyPants(m): 1:19pm On Apr 01, 2022
Nicho118:
For your team not to score an open goal against the worse Ghana team in recent years for 180minutes, then the coach is not good enough

Bro haven't you seen Watford demolish Liverpool? That's football...besides, who says this Nigeria team is so great? Apart from Osimhen and Ndidi, there is no world-class player in the core of the team. The rest are either playing second division or in a B league, or chopping bench.

The new boys like Lookman and Dennis may be decent players but they are new. They won't gel for some time. So arguably Nigeria is also a weak team.

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by yunus22: 6:12am On Nov 21, 2022
SmartyPants:


Bro haven't you seen Watford demolish Liverpool? That's football...besides, who says this Nigeria team is so great? Apart from Osimhen and Ndidi, there is no world-class player in the core of the team. The rest are either playing second division or in a B league, or chopping bench.

The new boys like Lookman and Dennis may be decent players but they are new. They won't gel for some time. So arguably Nigeria is also a weak team.
Good morning Sir, happy Monday wishing you a blissful week ahead. I kindly implore you to check your mail sir I just sent you

2 Likes

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by bigdammyj: 1:11pm On Nov 21, 2022
Okay.
Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by adioolayi(m): 1:11pm On Nov 21, 2022
By failing to qualify us for Worldcup

Who is this OP sef..


Story that was posted since 1st of April....the mod just wake-up in November 2022 to put this on front page after series of events This Nairaland mods sef grin cheesy grin cheesy

4 Likes

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by Newyorkitis(m): 1:12pm On Nov 21, 2022
Fine job from a fine boy.
Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by VeryWickedGoat: 1:12pm On Nov 21, 2022
E don start again. grin

Nigeria: Shaibu Amodu (2001–2002)
Nigeria: Festus Onigbinde (2002)
Nigeria: Christian Chukwu (2002–2005)
Nigeria: Augustine Eguavoen (2005–2007)
Germany: Berti Vogts (2007–2008)
Nigeria: James Peters (2008)
Nigeria: Shaibu Amodu (2008–2010)
Sweden: Lars Lagerbäck (2010)
Nigeria: Augustine Eguavoen (2010)
Nigeria: Samson Siasia (2010–2011)
Nigeria: Stephen Keshi (2011–2014)
Nigeria: Shaibu Amodu (2014)
Nigeria: Stephen Keshi (2014)
Nigeria: Daniel Amokachi (2014–2015)
Nigeria: Stephen Keshi (2015)
Nigeria: Sunday Oliseh (2015-2016)
Germany: Gernot Rohr (2016–2022)
Portugal: Jose Peseiro (2022 till date)

1 Like

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by angelEmade: 1:14pm On Nov 21, 2022
SmartyPants:


Engineer, are you saying Rohr's 4 - 4 vs Sierra Leone at home was a good result? What of his inability to defeat Cape Verde? The last 4 - 5 games of Rohr's tenure were terrible to watch with unacceptable results! Let's not rewrite history here.

I'm telling you even Pep Guardiola would have struggled to do better in the time frame Eguavoen had. It is simply not enough time to develop and implement a system afresh.

Look at Arsenal with Arteta? Liverpool with Klopp? It took a couple of seasons to get their teams playing well.

I'm also making the point that bar two goal keeping errors, we could very easily have been another Senegal.
You are replying someone wey no dey watch ball. Football analysis is way beyond lose and win...only experts can understand.

1 Like

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by oluwaseyi0: 1:14pm On Nov 21, 2022
Since April 1st

This is already overtaken by event

Football doesn't waste time
Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by Profayo: 1:15pm On Nov 21, 2022
The only decent team Eguavoen won was Egypt and Egypt is not even what they use to be.Egypt didn't win any team in regular time during the knockout phase of AFCON apart from Morocco and they even further failed to qualify for world cup.Eguaovoen could not win a very poor Ghana team over two legs, Ghana that came last of their group in AFCON, a group that had Comoros.We are Nigeria, we are the super Eagles.Such results are not acceptable

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by Adenugay(m): 1:15pm On Nov 21, 2022
good
Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by chinavs9ja(m): 1:17pm On Nov 21, 2022
No mind the op...Failure is Failure no matter how you justify it

2 Likes

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by RichFoundation(m): 1:17pm On Nov 21, 2022
Ok
Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by emmabest2000(m): 1:18pm On Nov 21, 2022
In whatever you are doing the most important thing is to deliver
Whether by luck or by experience
Just deliver

Among all the local coaches that coached Super Eagles
Na only Stephen Keshi Delivered


Others are just there .....

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by somehow: 1:21pm On Nov 21, 2022
The current coach is the worst of them all.
Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by xristos(m): 1:22pm On Nov 21, 2022
i agree
Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by Sunisonflex39(m): 1:22pm On Nov 21, 2022
Thread since April..nawao..

This is why nigeria is not moving..
A whole 8 months thread
Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by ShoeWorld2(m): 1:23pm On Nov 21, 2022
lipsrsealed
Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by Emu4life(m): 1:24pm On Nov 21, 2022
Of Course he did, by getting us knocked out of the R16 of AFCON2021 and failing to Qualify us for QATAR2022.

1 Like

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by colonelwealth(m): 1:25pm On Nov 21, 2022
SmartyPants:
By now it is no news to any Nigerian sports fan, that Augustin Eguavoen and his entire team have been relieved of their duties at the helm of affairs of the Nigerian National team.

Most Nigerians are happy with this development, with some claiming that his immediate predecessor, Gernot Rohr would have delivered better results. However, a simple analysis of events will clearly demonstrate that Eguavoen did a fine enough job given the circumstances.

I will attempt to undertake this analysis by demonstrating, first that Eguavoen has a better record than one might realize, and secondly by comparing the performance of his Super Eagles with that of Afcon winners, Senegal, and runners-up Egypt.

When Gernot Rohr was sacked a few weeks to the Afcon, knowledgeable sportspersons decried the move, citing the difficulty any new coach would face in setting up the team to play to his own patterns. In analyzing Eguavoen, therefore, it must first be understood that the new boss was operating under extreme pressure, with little to no time to work with the players, play friendly games, and so forth. He was thrust immediately into the challenge of the Afcon and the subsequent challenge of world cup qualifying.

In this sense, Eguavoen eventually became a victim of his own success.

Few Nigerians, or football fans anywhere, would have expected Nigeria to defeat Egypt, talkless of the ease with which it was done. Egypt would go on to be the eventual tournament runners up, slaving out draw after draw. Interestingly, Senegal, the eventual winners, adopted a similar approach in getting to the final, barely managing 9 goals in open play in the entire tournament. For some perspective, vincent Aboubakar of Cameroun scored 8 goals on his own. This fact will be shown to be relevant subsequently.

For now, the point is that, after entering the tournament with very low expectations, coach Eguavoen immediately delighted and raised the expectations of Nigerians by leading the team to three successive wins, while playing some exciting football.

And then came the shock round-of-16 exit at the hands of Tunisia. The Tunisians had studied the Nigerian game plan which was rather simple: pass it to the wingers and let them dribble. The Tunisians set up defensively and effectively contained the threat of the most dangerous nigerian winger, Moses Simon, relying, themselves, on a largely ineffective strategy of counter-attacking.

On the whole, the game appeared set for extra time - barring the intervention of the sublime, or the ridiculous. As it turned out, it was a ridiculous error from fine-boy Maduka Okoye whose poor attempt at saving a speculative long-range drive led to the only goal of the game. This goal was also the first and only goal Nigeria conceded in open play at the Afcon.

I suspect most people would agree with me that there is not much a coach can do about a goal-keeping error. Except, perhaps, play another keeper. So Nigerians began to clamor for the changing of Maduka Okoye. Apparently, Francis Uzoho of some unmemorable club side in Cyprus, or Enyimba's second-choice goalkeeper, John Noble, would be much better options than the pretty boy who is on loan to Sparta Rotterdam from Watford. I admit I was one of those.

So began the qualifying playoff games. Nigerians were prepared to forget the Afcon failure since the prospect of the world cup loomed and Ghana surely would be dispatched easily. Pretty boy Maduka claimed to be ill, though, there are many of us who believe his malaise was/is merely one of discontentment at the abuse he suffered at the hands of irate Nigerians.

The not quite-as-pretty Francis Uzoho, then, to the satisfaction of most Nigerians, was left to reclaim the spot that was once his. It is important to point out that Francis Uzoho was once a highly rated goalkeeper plying his trade in the Spanish top flight.

Eguavoen's team went to Ghana, ostensibly, set up to play for a draw so as to leverage the home advantage in the return leg in Abuja. The game, an ugly 0 - 0 draw played out accordingly. Nigerians, who always expect to win, were disappointed and left grumbling. The coach should have used Ademola Lookman some said. Etebo should have started becasue Bonke was useless others chimed. Moses Simon should be dropped, yet another group chorused.

At the press conference before the game in Abuja, one sports journalist asked Moses Simon whether the coach should yeild to calls to play Ademola Lookman since he (Moses Simon) had been caged for since the Tunisia game. Eguavoen, appears, now, to have listened to all of these voices. In the second leg in Abuja, he dropped Moses Simon for the first time, starting new boy Ademola Lookman in his place, along with Ogenekaro Etebo in place of Innocent Bonke, and Dennis Emmanuel on the right flank. The court of public opinion had their way, and the results? Predictable.

Ademola Lookman looked unable to cope with the physicality of the opponents, and was ineffective. Etebo lacked match fitness and kept giving the ball away. He was also nowhere to be found when Thomas Partey of Ghana fired off a speculative shot from 5 yards out of the
Nigerian box. That Partey shot was eerily similar to the one Youssef Msakni scored just a few months earlier, to end Nigeria's world cup hopes.

The lanky Francis Uzoho couldn't get down early enough to save the tame shot that sqeezed it's way under his huge frame and into the corner of the net. Apparently, the problem wasn't Maduka's fine face after all. This time, though, unlike in Garoua two months ago, there was an immediate response. Ademola Lookman was brought down in the box and a penalty was awarded after a VAR review.

All the Super Eagles needed to do was score, and we expected that they would. After all the Ghanaians came to joke around right? Wrong! While Nigeria had the upper hand in terms of possession, there was simply no penetrative edge to it all. And so, the sorrow of Garoua became the agony of Abuja.

All of this is now water under the bridge.

Eguavoen and his team have all been sacked by Amaju Pinnick, the NFF don. Interestingly, Pinnick, who hired both Eguavoen and his predecessor Rohr, has now sacked both while he himself remains securely ensconced within the NFF seat of power. Logically, if all the people you hired failed to do a job well then at the very least, it is clear that you are not fit for the role of hiring people for that job. Amaju Pinnick, if he were honorable, should have resigned by now, for overseeing, arguably, the worst Nigerian footballing disaster of the past 20 years!

But that is now beside the point. The real question is, did Augustine Eguavoen really fail to deliver? Let's examine his record.

Of 6 competitive games, Eguvoen's eagles won 3, lost 1, and drew 2. That is a decent record at any level.

And it wasn't as though this team was playing slouches either. The one defeat came to Tunisia, who are going to the world cup after convincingly dispatching West African heavyweights, Mali. The two draws came in fiercely contested ties with arch-rivals Ghana.

This is a decent record for any coach. Much more so for one who has had as little time as Eguavoen has had while being under as much pressure as he has been, from the media and higher-ups in the NFF who have always tried to dictate tactics to him.

Now, to buttress the point, consider the good fortunes of Senegal. Like Nigeria, Senegal played out their world cup qualifying games with an overall draw, conceding once in Cairo, and scoring once in Dakar. Both times by way of an own goal. Their good fortune was winning the resultant penalty shootout. Senegal are also the current Afcon winners, but their displays were boring and intrepid throughout the tournament, relying on the same defense-first strategy Eguavoen employed in the world cup qualifying games.

Their performances were certainly not better than anything Nigeria played. And what of Afcon runners up Egypt? They played through extra-time 4 times, going to penalties 3 of those 4 occasions, and repeating that trend by going to penalties with Senegal in the world cup play offs.

Of the top African teams, objectively analyzed, it is clear that Nigeria under Eguavoen has not performed unexpectedly poorly. Gone are the days of struggling to draw or defeat relative minnows like Cape Verde, or conceding 4 goals in 2 minutes against the likes of Sierra Leone. Eguavoen was on the right path with the Eagles, and given the little time he has had, should have been allowed another year or two at the helm of affairs.

Today, unfortunately, thanks to the grandstanding of Amaju Pinnick and the ever so forgetful Nigerian media, his competent run at the helm of affairs will be wrongly remembered as a calamitous reign of sorrow.


Bro,how much were you paid..??

Because this your lengthy uninspiring writeup to defend the indefendable incompetence of Mr. Eguevon&crew is brown envelope journalism.

He knew what was expected, yet he failed...it would have better Rogr was allowed to finish the qualification he started.

3 Likes

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by Abujaexpress: 1:25pm On Nov 21, 2022
SmartyPants:
By now it is no news to any Nigerian sports fan, that Augustin Eguavoen and his entire team have been relieved of their duties at the helm of affairs of the Nigerian National team.

Most Nigerians are happy with this development, with some claiming that his immediate predecessor, Gernot Rohr would have delivered better results. However, a simple analysis of events will clearly demonstrate that Eguavoen did a fine enough job given the circumstances.

I will attempt to undertake this analysis by demonstrating, first that Eguavoen has a better record than one might realize, and secondly by comparing the performance of his Super Eagles with that of Afcon winners, Senegal, and runners-up Egypt.

When Gernot Rohr was sacked a few weeks to the Afcon, knowledgeable sportspersons decried the move, citing the difficulty any new coach would face in setting up the team to play to his own patterns. In analyzing Eguavoen, therefore, it must first be understood that the new boss was operating under extreme pressure, with little to no time to work with the players, play friendly games, and so forth. He was thrust immediately into the challenge of the Afcon and the subsequent challenge of world cup qualifying.

In this sense, Eguavoen eventually became a victim of his own success.

Few Nigerians, or football fans anywhere, would have expected Nigeria to defeat Egypt, talkless of the ease with which it was done. Egypt would go on to be the eventual tournament runners up, slaving out draw after draw. Interestingly, Senegal, the eventual winners, adopted a similar approach in getting to the final, barely managing 9 goals in open play in the entire tournament. For some perspective, vincent Aboubakar of Cameroun scored 8 goals on his own. This fact will be shown to be relevant subsequently.

For now, the point is that, after entering the tournament with very low expectations, coach Eguavoen immediately delighted and raised the expectations of Nigerians by leading the team to three successive wins, while playing some exciting football.

And then came the shock round-of-16 exit at the hands of Tunisia. The Tunisians had studied the Nigerian game plan which was rather simple: pass it to the wingers and let them dribble. The Tunisians set up defensively and effectively contained the threat of the most dangerous nigerian winger, Moses Simon, relying, themselves, on a largely ineffective strategy of counter-attacking.

On the whole, the game appeared set for extra time - barring the intervention of the sublime, or the ridiculous. As it turned out, it was a ridiculous error from fine-boy Maduka Okoye whose poor attempt at saving a speculative long-range drive led to the only goal of the game. This goal was also the first and only goal Nigeria conceded in open play at the Afcon.

I suspect most people would agree with me that there is not much a coach can do about a goal-keeping error. Except, perhaps, play another keeper. So Nigerians began to clamor for the changing of Maduka Okoye. Apparently, Francis Uzoho of some unmemorable club side in Cyprus, or Enyimba's second-choice goalkeeper, John Noble, would be much better options than the pretty boy who is on loan to Sparta Rotterdam from Watford. I admit I was one of those.

So began the qualifying playoff games. Nigerians were prepared to forget the Afcon failure since the prospect of the world cup loomed and Ghana surely would be dispatched easily. Pretty boy Maduka claimed to be ill, though, there are many of us who believe his malaise was/is merely one of discontentment at the abuse he suffered at the hands of irate Nigerians.

The not quite-as-pretty Francis Uzoho, then, to the satisfaction of most Nigerians, was left to reclaim the spot that was once his. It is important to point out that Francis Uzoho was once a highly rated goalkeeper plying his trade in the Spanish top flight.

Eguavoen's team went to Ghana, ostensibly, set up to play for a draw so as to leverage the home advantage in the return leg in Abuja. The game, an ugly 0 - 0 draw played out accordingly. Nigerians, who always expect to win, were disappointed and left grumbling. The coach should have used Ademola Lookman some said. Etebo should have started becasue Bonke was useless others chimed. Moses Simon should be dropped, yet another group chorused.

At the press conference before the game in Abuja, one sports journalist asked Moses Simon whether the coach should yeild to calls to play Ademola Lookman since he (Moses Simon) had been caged for since the Tunisia game. Eguavoen, appears, now, to have listened to all of these voices. In the second leg in Abuja, he dropped Moses Simon for the first time, starting new boy Ademola Lookman in his place, along with Ogenekaro Etebo in place of Innocent Bonke, and Dennis Emmanuel on the right flank. The court of public opinion had their way, and the results? Predictable.

Ademola Lookman looked unable to cope with the physicality of the opponents, and was ineffective. Etebo lacked match fitness and kept giving the ball away. He was also nowhere to be found when Thomas Partey of Ghana fired off a speculative shot from 5 yards out of the
Nigerian box. That Partey shot was eerily similar to the one Youssef Msakni scored just a few months earlier, to end Nigeria's world cup hopes.

The lanky Francis Uzoho couldn't get down early enough to save the tame shot that sqeezed it's way under his huge frame and into the corner of the net. Apparently, the problem wasn't Maduka's fine face after all. This time, though, unlike in Garoua two months ago, there was an immediate response. Ademola Lookman was brought down in the box and a penalty was awarded after a VAR review.

All the Super Eagles needed to do was score, and we expected that they would. After all the Ghanaians came to joke around right? Wrong! While Nigeria had the upper hand in terms of possession, there was simply no penetrative edge to it all. And so, the sorrow of Garoua became the agony of Abuja.

All of this is now water under the bridge.

Eguavoen and his team have all been sacked by Amaju Pinnick, the NFF don. Interestingly, Pinnick, who hired both Eguavoen and his predecessor Rohr, has now sacked both while he himself remains securely ensconced within the NFF seat of power. Logically, if all the people you hired failed to do a job well then at the very least, it is clear that you are not fit for the role of hiring people for that job. Amaju Pinnick, if he were honorable, should have resigned by now, for overseeing, arguably, the worst Nigerian footballing disaster of the past 20 years!

But that is now beside the point. The real question is, did Augustine Eguavoen really fail to deliver? Let's examine his record.

Of 6 competitive games, Eguvoen's eagles won 3, lost 1, and drew 2. That is a decent record at any level.

And it wasn't as though this team was playing slouches either. The one defeat came to Tunisia, who are going to the world cup after convincingly dispatching West African heavyweights, Mali. The two draws came in fiercely contested ties with arch-rivals Ghana.

This is a decent record for any coach. Much more so for one who has had as little time as Eguavoen has had while being under as much pressure as he has been, from the media and higher-ups in the NFF who have always tried to dictate tactics to him.

Now, to buttress the point, consider the good fortunes of Senegal. Like Nigeria, Senegal played out their world cup qualifying games with an overall draw, conceding once in Cairo, and scoring once in Dakar. Both times by way of an own goal. Their good fortune was winning the resultant penalty shootout. Senegal are also the current Afcon winners, but their displays were boring and intrepid throughout the tournament, relying on the same defense-first strategy Eguavoen employed in the world cup qualifying games.

Their performances were certainly not better than anything Nigeria played. And what of Afcon runners up Egypt? They played through extra-time 4 times, going to penalties 3 of those 4 occasions, and repeating that trend by going to penalties with Senegal in the world cup play offs.

Of the top African teams, objectively analyzed, it is clear that Nigeria under Eguavoen has not performed unexpectedly poorly. Gone are the days of struggling to draw or defeat relative minnows like Cape Verde, or conceding 4 goals in 2 minutes against the likes of Sierra Leone. Eguavoen was on the right path with the Eagles, and given the little time he has had, should have been allowed another year or two at the helm of affairs.

Today, unfortunately, thanks to the grandstanding of Amaju Pinnick and the ever so forgetful Nigerian media, his competent run at the helm of affairs will be wrongly remembered as a calamitous reign of sorrow.
Handing the job to Eguavoen at that critical moment was like jumping from frying pan to fire. Eguavoen was and he is not tactically better than Gernor Rhor whom he took over from. It was a tactical blunder by the visionless and missionless NFF.

1 Like

Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by donforeign: 1:33pm On Nov 21, 2022
Nigeria rather pay for a light skin coach, inferiority complex... useless country
Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by Softmirror: 1:34pm On Nov 21, 2022
angelEmade:

You are replying someone wey no dey watch ball. Football analysis is way beyond lose and win...only experts can understand.

FOOTBALL IS ALL ABOUT WINNING END OF STORY. IF YOU LIKE HAVE 90% BALL POSSESSION, 50% SHOT AT GOAL AGAINST YOUR OPPONENT. AS LONG AS YOU ARE TRAILING YOUR OPPONENT BY A LONE GOAL, YOU ARE A LOSER. THAT'S WHY TILL TOMORROW, COUNTRIES SUCH AS BELGIUM, NETHERLANDS AND IF NOT OF RECENT SPAIN BEING ABLE TO TRANSFORM THEIR EFFORTS TO WINNING A WORLD CUP, THEY WOULD ALSO HAVE BEEN GOOD FOR NOTHING. THERE IS NOTHING MORE TO FOOTBALL THAN THE SCORE LINE AT THE END OF THE DAY. NOTHING MORE. NOTHING ELSE MATTERS. A COACH WILL ONLY EARN RESPECT AS LONG AS HIS TEAM WINS AND CONTINUES TO WIN.

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Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by davodyguy: 1:34pm On Nov 21, 2022
Did he face any teams as strong as Portugal?
Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by davodyguy: 1:34pm On Nov 21, 2022
Abujaexpress:
Handing the job to Eguavoen at that critical moment was like jumping from frying pan to fire. Eguavoen was and he is not tactically better than Gernor Rhor whom he took over from. It was a tactical blunder by the visionless and missionless NFF.
God bless you.

Eguavoen coach the U17 team some years ago and lost in the group stage

He is yet to face top teams outside of Africa

Rhor on the other hand has taken Nigeria to WC, played friendly matches against top teams and won.

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Re: Augustine Eguavoen Did A Fine Job As Super Eagles Coach (Unpopular Opinion) by smartoliver(m): 1:35pm On Nov 21, 2022
I would say the OP is wise. It was so dirty watching both games we played against Ghana. I think we would have done better if Eguaveon never listened to people but played his preferred line up in Abuja. Nevertheless, our problem was never Eguaveon, it has always been Amaju Pinnick. That man has become a failure. He had better sack this Peseiro, and resign from his position. We need a new start, and we need it now

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