Thursday 30 October 2014

'Jonathan Had Ordered Keshi Be Reinstated'

Stephen Keshi could be set for a surprise return as coach of African
champions Nigeria after the apparent intervention of the country's
President Goodluck Jonathan.

Keshi, who steered the Super Eagles to Africa Cup of Nations glory in
2013 and the knock-out stage of this year's World Cup finals, was
sacked on October 16 after a string of poor performances.

But several senior officials at the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF)
have revealed that Jonathan had ordered Keshi be reinstated and given
a contract.

Should that happen, he would be on the bench for Nigeria's next Africa
Cup of Nations qualifiers against Congo and South Africa in November.

Keshi, who was in talks on Thursday with sports minister Tammy
Danagogo, said he was unaware of any presidential intervention.

But he added: "If the president of my country asked me to return, who
am I to refuse?"

The 52-year-old coach had earlier refused to comment on speculation
that he could be reinstated, with a power struggle for leadership of
the NFF rumbling on.

New NFF boss Amaju Pinnick sacked Keshi and his coaching staff soon
after his appointment last month, adding that the hunt was on for a
foreign coach.

Jonathan is said to have met Pinnick and Chris Giwa, who briefly led
the NFF in August, at the presidential villa in the capital, Abuja, on
Wednesday night.

"Keshi is back as Nigeria coach and he will be the one to lead the
Super Eagles against Congo and South Africa next month," said one
senior official.

In a separate NFF statement released on Thursday, caretaker coach
Shuaibu Amodu said Keshi should be allowed to take charge for the last
two AFCON qualifiers.

He said the executive committee should reconsider as he did not have
enough time to prepare for the games.

"The timeframe is too short to start tinkering with the fabric of the
team or attempt to build a new team altogether," he wrote in an open
letter to NFF bosses.

Nigeria play Congo-Brazzaville in Pointe Noire on November 15 and
South Africa in Uyo, southeast Nigeria, four days later.

They need to not only win both matches but beat Congo by a margin of
two away goals to stand any chance of automatic qualification for the
finals in Morocco next year.
--Vanguard

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