Nigeria
has re-appointed Samson Siasia as Head Coach of the Senior National Football
Team, Super Eagles. Siasia will work with respected tactician Salisu Yusuf,
FIFA U-17 World Cup –winner Emmanuel Amuneke and Alloy Agu for the upcoming
2017 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers against Egypt.
The
combination was recommended by the NFF Technical and Development Committee
following Sunday Oliseh’s resignation on twitter in the early hours of Friday.
Siasia served as Super Eagles’ Head Coach between December 2010 and October 2011,
before his contract was terminated following the team’s failure to qualify for
the 2012 Africa Cup of Nations. Amuneke led the Nigeria U-17 boys to a fifth
FIFA World Cup title in Chile last year and was hailed for his excellent
comportment and maturity, as well as the tremendous skills of his players.
Salisu Yusuf and Alloy Agu were in the immediate past crew led by Oliseh and
will serve as the bridge with the new team as Nigeria gets set for a
potentially –explosive double date with the Pharaohs in March. Siasia and
Amuneke are among few ex-Nigeria internationals who boast impressive track
record in coaching. Amuneke, who has a UEFA Pro licence, was assistant to Manu
Garba when the Nigeria U-17 squad won a fourth FIFA World Cup title in 2013,
and then headed the crew that successfully defended the trophy last year.
Siasia steered the Nigeria U-20 team to the African title in 2005 and led the
team to runner-up spot at the FIFA U-20 World Cup in The Netherlands the same
year. He also led the U-23 to silver medal in the men’s football tournament of
the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, and two months ago, led the U-23 to win the
Africa U-23 Cup of Nations in Senegal, in the process qualifying the team to
this year’s Olympics. Both men scored as Nigeria achieved an impressive debut
at the FIFA World Cup in the USA in 1994. Amuneke scored against Bulgaria and
Italy and Siasia scored against Argentina. Amuneke also scored the two goals as
Nigeria edged Zambia to win the Africa Cup of Nations for the first time on
away soil in Tunis in 1994, and also scored the winner as Nigeria defeated
Argentina to win Africa’s first Olympics football gold in USA two years later.
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