Editorial
NFF, National Teams And Foreign Coaches
A couple of days ago, former national football team player, Sam Sodje, raised concerns over the plethora of foreign coaches, assistant coaches and members of backroom staff as handlers and officials of Nigeria’s national teams, particularly the Super Eagles.
At the last count, the Eagles are being led by a Franco-German, Gernot Rohr, with not less than three other foreigners as members of his backroom staff. The Super Falcons, Eagles female counterparts, have a Swede, Thomas Dennerby, as their handler, with another Swede as his trainer/assistant.
Few weeks ago, Dennerby sought and got Nigeria Football Federation’s approval to add another foreigner, a video analyst to the Falcons’ crew as they prepare for the FIFA Women’s World Cup in France later this year.
According to Sodje, the prevalence of foreign coaches in the national teams limits opportunities for local coaches to be promoted into the national team and improve their knowledge base and experience.
“I am worried that in the Super Eagles team, we have about five foreign coaches working with Gernot Rohr. This is slavery”, Sodje was quoted as saying.
Truly, we cannot agree less with the ex-international. The high number of foreign coaches in the national teams limits opportunities and possibilities for local coaches. Again, the sheer high number of foreign coaches in the national teams would certainly have negative impact on the lean resources available to the football federation and development of the game and manpower in the country.
It is illogical for Nigerian teams to have many foreign assistant coaches when there are lots of top coaches in the country without jobs. While we agree that in sports, it is acceptable that, for you to measure up with the best, you must engage the best hands and practitioners to bring you up to speed. Developing our local coaches and being prudent with scarce resources must not be sacrificed on the altar of preference to second or third-rate foreigners.
It is not a secret that, in some cases, most of the foreign coaches or assistants being engaged by the often cash-strapped NFF are journey men and third-rate coaches, usually packaged by some interests for reasons other than national interest.
Thus, we think that it is time for the NFF to review its strategy, particularly as it concerns recruiting and engaging coaching staff for the national teams. It is pertinent to always consider the long-term benefit of decisions to hire or not to hire foreign coaches for the country.
A foreign coach, if he must be engaged, ought to be given a clear mandate ab initio, of what is being expected from him. We expect that expatriate coaches must be able to devise and adopt a playing pattern, harmonise talent development strategies for the country and transfer technical and tactical know-how to local coaches.
This is why we believe that not more than one or two top foreign coaches are needed in any of our national teams at a time, with a handful of local coaches as assistants to understudy them. The NFF must not be in a hurry to approve or give foreign coaches of our teams blank cheques to bring in more foreigners, especially, for positions that could be effectively filled locally.
Instead of being carried away by the ‘easy’ and quick fix option of resorting to foreign coaches, we expect the NFF to find a deliberate way of encouraging Nigerian coaches to develop and further improve themselves to internationally acceptable standard. Through this means, Nigerian coaches can bring themselves at par with their foreign counterparts, which would leave the NFF with no justifiable reason to continue patronising expatriate coaches and save the nation from wasting scarce foreign exchange.
Nigerians have the capacity to deliver, even with substantive national team coaches. Late Stephen Okechukwu Keshi blazed the trail and proved himself outside the shores of the country, with Togo. Only few weeks ago, ex-international, Emmanuel Amuneke, led the Tanzanian national team to qualify for their first African Cup of Nations in 39 years.
These are indications that Nigerian coaches can excel, given the right environment and encouragement. It is time, we believe, for the NFF and other football administrators to look inwards, de-emphasise over-reliance on foreign coaches and try to provide favourable platforms and opportunities for Nigerian coaches to thrive with the national teams.
Afterall, no country has ever won the World Cup with a foreign coach.
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