Super Eagles coach Stephen Keshi
says a place in the quarter-final should take precedence over his record as the
first African to lead an African team to the second round at the FIFA World
Cup.
Last year he became the first black
African coach to have won the Africa Cup of Nations in 21 years, and last
Wednesday he helped Nigeria secure a place in the round of 16 at Brazil 2014.
Super Eagles coach Stephen Keshi
The former Nigeria captain said.
“For me, my team and country come before any personal glory.
“That we made the second round and
are able to achieve this against all odds is all that matters.”
There have been suggestions in some
quarters that Keshi’s achievement in winning the Nations Cup and taking his
team to the knock-out stages has not been given the value it should by the
international media.
“What is important is to focus on
what lies ahead – not Stephen Keshi and his record,” Keshi said.
Nigeria will face France for only
the second time at senior level on Monday in Brasilia.
In their previous clash, the Super
Eagles beat France 1-0 in a friendly in Saint Etienne in June 2009
, but Keshi
says it will be a different ball game against the French as Nigeria aim to
equal Africa’s all time best.
Cameroon, Senegal and Ghana have all
reached the quarterfinals in 1990, 2002 and 2010 respectively.
“We are not bothered about the past
but only interested in this present day,” Keshi added.
“My boys know what I expect and our
opponents will not make life easy for them.
“The Super Eagles have never made it
to the quarterfinals so they can make history of their own.
“There’s no motivation bigger than
that.”
Keshi is one of only two men who has
won the Nations Cup as a player and a coach – the other being Egypt’s Mahmoud
El-Gohary.
In 1994 Keshi captained the Super
Eagles to their second continental success in Tunisia and 19 years later he was
in charge of the side as they won the trophy for the third time in their
history in South Africa.
He also led Togo to their first –
and to date only – appearance at the World Cup finals, but was sacked a few
months before Germany 2006. He is the only African coach to have qualified two
nations to the World Cup tournament.
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