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Nairaland Forum / Entertainment / Sports / Afcon 2019: Okocha Reveals How Nigeria-south Africa Rivalry Started (760 Views)
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Afcon 2019: Okocha Reveals How Nigeria-south Africa Rivalry Started by robosky02(m): 9:13pm On Jul 09, 2019 |
Afcon 2019: Okocha reveals how Nigeria-South Africa rivalry started Wednesday’s quarterfinal fixture will be the third time the two countries meet on the continental stage Nigeria legend Jay-Jay Okocha is looking forward to an "interesting" encounter when the three-time African champions lock horns with South Africa at the Cairo International Stadium. Ahead of the quarterfinal outing at the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations, the two countries had previously met in the continental showpiece twice - in 2000 and 2004 - and the Super Eagles came out victorious on both occasions, with Okocha playing a key role in both. The former Super Eagles captain has recalled how the rivalry between both countries started and why Cairo is a good venue for the match. “It was great because before then I was personally looking forward to playing against Bafana Bafana because we were having this argument who the best African team is,” Okocha told the media. “We felt Bafana won it in 1996 because we didn’t take part. I think we were on fire then, we were having our best period and that was the year we had won the Olympics [in Atlanta]. “But then the opportunity came in 2000, and for us it was personal to make sure that we get one over them. “It was a bit easier because we were at home. So, it will be interesting to see both teams playing against each other on a neutral ground.” Nigeria are yet to defeat South Africa in their last five outings, settling for four draws and a loss against Bafana Bafana, which came in 2017 during Afcon qualifying series. Okocha is not bothered by the recent head-to-head results but thinks the encounter will be decided by the players' performances on Wednesday. “I think it’s always easier to sit on the outside and act as if you have the best solution. But I’ve played the game at the highest level and I can tell you my opinion,” he continued. “You can come up with whatever tactics you want as a coach but if you don’t have the tools to execute you will struggle, and if you don’t have willing players that are ready to commit to the cause than you will struggle. “I think it’s all about the players’ mindset on the day and the team that wants it more.” Lalasticlala mynd44 https://www.goal.com/en/news/afcon-2019-jay-jay-okocha-reveals-how-nigeria-south-africa/k0oa2ah6kdkgzugom2nqqaqv
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Re: Afcon 2019: Okocha Reveals How Nigeria-south Africa Rivalry Started by indigenous234(f): 9:31pm On Jul 09, 2019 |
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Re: Afcon 2019: Okocha Reveals How Nigeria-south Africa Rivalry Started by Humulity: 9:45pm On Jul 09, 2019 |
You spoke well, Pa Jay...... |
Re: Afcon 2019: Okocha Reveals How Nigeria-south Africa Rivalry Started by Tolexander: 9:53pm On Jul 09, 2019 |
“We felt Bafana won it in 1996 because we didn’t take part. I think we were on fire then, we were having our best period and that was the year we had won the Olympics [in Atlanta].okocha is right! South Africa wouldn’t smell the trophy if Nigeria had participated in that tournament. It was our golden era then |
Re: Afcon 2019: Okocha Reveals How Nigeria-south Africa Rivalry Started by otipoju(m): 11:14pm On Jul 09, 2019 |
When we had the Mad man Abacha as president. |
Re: Afcon 2019: Okocha Reveals How Nigeria-south Africa Rivalry Started by holllandis: 12:36am On Jul 10, 2019 |
Okocha talks like a motivational speaker 1 Like |
Re: Afcon 2019: Okocha Reveals How Nigeria-south Africa Rivalry Started by robosky02(m): 11:26am On Jul 10, 2019 |
Tolexander:that was our era If not for abacha Kai we wouild have won it straight 1994 1996 1998 and even 2000
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Re: Afcon 2019: Okocha Reveals How Nigeria-south Africa Rivalry Started by robosky02(m): 1:51pm On Jul 10, 2019 |
T A brief history of the Nigeria/South Africa football rivalry. Goal/Getty Images Since 1996, Nigeria and South Africa have been locked in a football rivalry (Goal/Getty Images) The Super Eagles of Nigeria will on Wednesday, July 10 continue their quest for a fourth Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) title with a quarter-final clash against South Africa. A place in the semi-finals of AFCON 2019 is at stake along with bragging rights of a not too long-drawn rivalry between the two countries. Speaking purely in football terms, the two countries are really not rivals. Nigeria have a far richer football history than South Africa but fueled by politics, a football game between these countries has beyond the four corners of a football field. CAF Super Eagles of Nigeria will face South Africa in the quarterfinal of AFCON 2019 (CAF)c Football and politics It is a rivalry that was drawn from political sparring and distrust. There is a cliché that football and politics don't mix but in the case of Nigeria Vs South Africa, the stir has made what would have been just a football game turned into something bigger. As the Super Eagles prepare to take to the field against the Bafana Bafana on Wednesday in Cairo, an over two-decade narrative will once again come to the fore. It all started in 1996 when defending champions, Nigeria, infamously boycotted the 20th edition of AFCON which was hosted by South Africa. With Nigeria’s boycott, AFCON 96 was without one of the best teams in world football and a clear favourite. Two years earlier, in 1994, the Super Eagles of Nigeria had won their second AFCON title in Tunisia and also wowed the world at the 1994 FIFA World Cup in the United States of America. It was Nigeria’s then Head of State, the late General Sanni Abacha that gave the order for Nigeria to withdraw from AFCON 96 out of a long-drawn political tension between Nigeria and South Africa. Reuters Late Nigerian military leader General Sani Abacha ordered the Super Eagles not to participate in AFCON1996 that held in South Africa "It's so painful, but we are in support of the federal government," then Super Eagles captain Austin Eguavoen told the UK Independent. The Abacha regime, unarguably the darkest in the annals of Nigerian political history, was under constant attack by the South African government for its disregard to human life and this got to a boiling point when the Nigerian government adamantly executed the famous environmentalist, Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight others despite pleas from foreign nations. This unfortunate development infuriated a lot of Nigeria's allies including South Africa who severed ties with the West African nation and this sparked a diplomatic war between the two countries. Following this tussle, Abacha cut ties with South Africa and issued travel bans to the country. 'Champions by luck' With the absence of Nigeria at AFCON 96, South Africa went on to win the title on home soil to the chagrin of Nigerian who have had to deal with the thoughts of what would have been. Getty Images South Africa won AFCON 1996 title on home soil (Photo by Eric Renard / Onze / Icon Sport) South Africa took full advantage of the situation in their first tournament after apartheid to emerge as the new king of African football. The Bafana Bafana were a delight to watch as they paraded a squad full of exciting stars like the famous Mark Fish, Andre Arendse, Doctor Khumalo, Shaun Bartlett, Lukas Radebe, Neil Tovey and Mark Williams who scored two late second-half goals against Tunisia in the final to secure a famous victory. South Africa’s win left a sour taste in the mouth of Nigerian football followers who felt that the non-participation of the Super Eagles in the tourney paved way for the emergence of South Africa whom hitherto were considered underdogs in African football. Nigeria was further punished for its ill-advised action by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) with a ban from AFCON 98 in Burkina Faso, and thus wasted a generation of talents that could have dominated African football. The South Africans would also finish with the silver medal after they lost 2-0 to Egypt in the final and as a result maintained their rising profile in African football. From the Nigerian perspective, South Africa’s successes in those two AFCON tournaments were not down to their brilliance but out of mare luck of being in the right place at the right time. This view point infuriated South Africans and thus the source of the rivalry. In truth, Abacha’s order robbed a truly talented and world-class group of Super Eagles players the chance to dominate the African continent. They were clear favourites to win the title in 1996 the chances that another team would be able to stop them was very slim. That Super Eagles class won the AFCON title in 1994, was one of the most exciting teams at the USA 94, and made history as the first African country to win the Gold Medal of the football event of the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta. The Super Eagles class of 1996 missed out on AFCON 96 and a chance to defend the title they won in 1994 South Africans however, were not pleased with the arrogance and continued to lay claim to their new position as a top ranking football country in Africa. Grudge match In AFCON 2000 which was co-hosted by Ghana and Nigeria, the country met for the first time and for the Super Eagles of Nigeria, it was time to silence the pretenders. After Nigeria’s nervy win over Senegal in the quarterfinals, South Africa convincingly defeated joint host, Ghana, to set the stage for a grudge semi-final encounter between the two countries. The game provided an opportunity for the two nations to set the record straight, a challenge that was relished by the Nigerian players. Two quick first-half goals from winger Tijani Babangida was enough to condemn the Bafana Bafana to the sword to send Nigeria to the final and put South Africans in their place. Getty Images Nigeria put South Africa in their place with a 2-0 win in the semifinals of AFCON 2000 (Matthew Ashton/EMPICS via Getty Images) “It was a match that we took personal,” former Super Eagles star Austin ‘Jay Jay’ Okocha to South African media in an interview during a recent visit to the country. “Before the match, we were arguing a bit about who was the best in Africa. We felt that South Africa won the 1996 AFCON because Nigeria didn’t take part and we were of the belief that we were the best in Africa. It was a chance for us to claim bragging rights, which we managed to do but we had an advantage because the match was played in Nigeria.” The two nations continued the rivalry in subsequent meetings with Nigeria coming tops at every turn. This dominance included a 4-0 win in AFCON 2004, another 2-0 and 1-0 victories in 2008, a 2-0 win in a friendly in 2013 and a 3-1 victory in African Nations Championship (CHAN) in 2014. Getty Images Super Eagles AFCON 2004 (FRANCK FIFE/AFP/Getty Images) South Africa’s only win in that era came in an inconsequential 2004 Mandela Challenge friendly match that finished 2-1. It hasn’t remained like that in recent years. Three consecutive meetings between the two nations ended in stalemates but it was the Bafana Bafana that had the last laugh in November 2014. The Super Eagles, after a string of poor results, were left in a precarious situation in their last qualifying match for AFCON 2015 and had to win away at South Africa to qualify. Having secured a first place spot in group A of the qualifier, the game was a dead-rubber for South Africans but in a bid to keep alive the flame of the rivalry, the Bafana Bafana came in full force to stop Nigeria. The Super Eagles went into the game looking unprepared, and deservedly got punished with Tokelo Rantie scoring in both halves to hand South Africa a two-goal lead. Nigeria fought back with two goals from substitute Sone Aluko to level matters but it was too little, too late for the defending champions who missed out on a chance to defend the trophy they had won in South Africa 2013. Effectively, this was the second time South Africa had stopped Nigeria from defending their AFCON title. The first time in 1999 due to political tussle and in on the field of play in 2014. South Africa returned again to hurt Nigeria in an AFCON 2019 qualifier as the Bafana Bafana beat the Super Eagles 2-0 in Uyo in June 2017. That loss didn’t linger as Nigeria had to quickly turn their focus to an important doubleheader against Cameroon in the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifier. In the return leg of the AFCON 2019 qualifier, Nigeria needed to avoid defeat to seal qualification and laboured to a 1-1 draw in a game that they had two goals incorrectly ruled out for offside. Since the beginning of the rivalry that erupted out of political bickering, it has gone up a notch because of the deep rivalry for economic and political dominance in Africa. But still, the possession of a strong desire of both Nigeria and South Africa to get one over another stems from Abacha’s headstrong order and the grudge continues on Wednesday in Cairo. Mynd44 https://www.pulse.ng/sports/football/stoked-by-politics-the-history-of-the-nigeriasouth-africa-football-rivalry/lvwltjv |
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