Player dropped for failing age test in Eaglets’ final list

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The chief coach of the Golden Eaglets, John Obuh, is courting another controversy ahead of Nigeria’s U-17 World Cup campaign after including a player suspected to have failed age test in his final squad for the competition.

Deji Joel was one of the 15 players who were dropped from the Eaglets after the Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scan was conducted in August. But the player was surprisingly included in the final squad of 21 released by the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) last Thursday, after the Eaglets’ training tour of Qatar.

The 15 players dropped from the squad of 36, according to a statement released on August 25 by the NFF, are: Kabiru Borgo, Abiodun Akande, Ariyo Olubukola, Habeeb Bello, Deji Joel, Yakubu Azeez, Ogungbe Ganiyu, Orji Alu, Justice Chinedu, and Chinedu Udegha. Others are: Amadi Moses, Solomon Enudi, Dubem Awaziem, Esse Joseph Junior, and Olaitan Gambari.

The player, Joel, was in the Golden Eaglets squad that crashed 3-0 to Benin Republic in Cotonou last year, a result that sent our Eaglets out of the African U-17 Championship qualifiers and led to the sack of Alphonsus Dike. Dike was the first coach to be given the task of producing the team for the Nigeria 2009 FIFA U-17 World Cup but Henry Nwosu replaced him following the team’s humiliation in Cotonou.

Nwosu reigned for a few months before he was sacked and replaced by the current coach, Obuh, who has had to endure the controversies concerning the age of his players after the NFF ordered an MRI test to be conducted on the team.

The inclusion of Joel may have cast some doubts over the screening of over-aged players from the team as claimed by the NFF.

Meanwhile, the Eaglets are back in the country from Doha, Qatar, as they look forward to their opening game of the U-17 World Cup which comes up in Abuja on Saturday against Germany, the current European cadet champions.

Ugbade appeals

Meanwhile, former Golden Eaglets captain wants greater emphasis to be paid to players’ development at age-grade level. Nduka Ugbade called on Nigerians not to place so much expectation on the side many eagerly expect to defend the title won by their predecessors in 2007.

Ugbade, who led the Golden Eaglets to victory at the tournament’s maiden edition back in 1985 in China, and who went on to make numerous appearances for the Super Eagles, feels developing prospective players for the senior national team should be accorded greater importance than winning the U-17 World Cup.

“Everyone loves to win, nobody loves to lose,” said Ugbade. “But at this level of football (U-17) winning should actually be the secondary focus while discovering new players for the future should be the major focus.

“If this present team does not win the World Cup, many Nigerians will condemn them forgetting that there could be one or more players in the team with the potentials of becoming superstars in the future. So we shouldn’t lay so much emphasis on winning as it is a developmental competition.”

The current Golden Eaglets have not had the best of preparations for the U-17 World Cup and with just a few days to Saturday’s opening match against Germany in Abuja, chances are that they will not be able to win a fourth world title come the end of the tournament on November 15.

Age issue

There are also questions concerning the true ages of the Golden Eagl ets players but Ugbade hopes the problem, which he insists is not exclusive to teams from Africa, will soon become a thing of the past.

“The age issue does not look like something that will easily die away but it is not peculiar to Africa; it is a global problem,” he continued.

“But it could stop once countries realise that they are destroying, rather than developing their football by using over-age players.”

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Reader Comments (12)


Posted by badejoko on Oct 19 2009

disasters waiting to happen

Posted by Nunayon tata Wannami on Oct 19 2009

I'm happy we are beginning to see the truth. If the boys who won this tournament in 1993 were truly under 17, Nigeria would be ruling the world of soccer now. Sadly they were in their twenties and the law of diminishing returns set in shortly after that moment of glory. Today, we are paying for our sins and have to hope that another team will underperform to be at the world cup. I cannot agree more with Ugbade.

Posted by Bro. Chigbu .F. (Snr) on Oct 19 2009

Hundred percent, I am in support of Ugbade's comment. This competition is a developmental one and not must win as most Nigerian is taken it. We should look ahead for the brightness of football in Nigeria.

Posted by chinedu nwawuba on Oct 19 2009

Nigeria has never fielded a truly under seventeen side. you know it, and I know it. even those that passed the MRI test are not below seventeen years, you and I know this. Man will always elude machines.just looking at their faces you will know they are above the age limit. we just have to present a team for the competition, period !!!!!!! We are Africans, we sabi ourselves

Posted by Metanure on Oct 19 2009

Thank goodness we are trying to be honest for once. It will be a long time before our image can be rebranded, but it is a small beginning. I watched the finals of the under 20 match between Ghana and Brazil and there was no doubt that they were all young boys, and not the okpans (elders and fathers) that Nigeria always cheats to represent us. Lets maintain some dignity before the eyes of the world.

Posted by Osumah frank on Oct 19 2009

The over age issue is not common with Nigeria alone but its a bad culture for the world of football. Just give a close look to all the players that wil be paraded by the various teams in the Nigeria 2009 FIFA U-17 world cup.

Posted by okosieme chinedu on Oct 19 2009

We do not have to cheat to get to de top. Frankly speaking,all de players we have ever paraded for all de age group tournaments starting with Nduka's set have always been overaged players.This is what FIFA calls 'PAPAS N MAMAS'. Its always in our culture to cheat. Corrupt people of a corrupt nation.

Posted by damka on Oct 21 2009

Ugbade has hit the nail on the head!however, saying we are not the only country involved in using over aged players doesn't excuse or erase the fact that it is just wrong!besides,as a people,we need to consider the embarassment and psychological effect this might have on the players affected by the MRI test who perhaps had been told by corrupt NFA officials that their true age was of no consequence.

Posted by Kot on Oct 21 2009

That player at the front of the pack in the picture is U-17 right? ;)

Posted by davidif on Oct 22 2009

kot, "That player at the front of the pack in the picture is U-17 right?" You are right, those boys in the picture ESPECIALLY the one in the front don't look nothing like 17.

Posted by AOP on Nov 09 2009

There are less than 3 U 17 players in each of the team that played Nigeria 2009 FIFA is helpless about it, there is no technology that can determine age with arithmetical precision, the nearest they will get will be about 5 - 6 years range below or above, and that is confirmed by Barrister Adokiye Amesimeka's findings.

Posted by adedeji manuwa on Nov 14 2009

i am happy that the mri scan is introduced by fifa in knowing the true u-17 players,so it is left to the nff.thank u.



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