International Football
THROUGH ALEX IWOBI, NIGERIA BACK AT EVERTON, 70 YEARS LATER
It was on the training ground of Everton FC that Nigeria’s national team first trained on a foreign soil in 1949.
Sports
Village Square recalls that it was also on the same ground that the team took
what is easily the first official group photograph on August 31, 1949.
Seventy years on, another Nigerian national team player, Alex Iwobi goes to Everton ground as the sixth Nigerian for Everton, which beat the deadline to make him the seventh signing of a productive summer transfer window on Thursday.
Before
Iwobi, there had been Daniel Amokachi at Everton. He was part of the FA Cup
winning side in 1995.
He played six times for the club and scored two goals in seasons 1994-95. There was also Victor Anichebe who played 10 matches for Everton in the seasons 2008 to 2011.

Yakubu Ayegbeni also featured for Everton from 2008 to 2010 and played 24 matches and scored seven goals. Henry Onyekuru also made a cameo appearance for Everton this year.
But the Nigerian with most matches for Everton is Joseph Yobo who had 55 matches for Everton from 2008 to 2011.

The latest Nigerian in Everton is Iwobi. Born in Lagos, Alex Iwobi moved to England at the age of four and spent his formative years in the east London borough of Newham, home to Premier League regulars West Ham United.
However, it was cross-city Arsenal who spotted the youngster’s early footballing promise and, in 2004, signed him up as an eight-year-old to their Hale End academy.
Cultivating a reputation as an
offensive-minded player who could make things happen but also work hard for his
team, Iwobi progressed through the Arsenal ranks to earn his first-team debut
in an October 2015 League Cup last-16 match against Sheffield Wednesday at the
age of 19.
The nephew of Jay-Jay Okocha, the early suggestions were that the young Iwobi
had dutifully studied his idolised uncle, his game – like Okocha’s – being
based on flair, skill and an abundance of natural ability.
Iwobi made his Premier League debut as a late substitute against Swansea City
four days later and would go on to amass another four appearances off the bench
before netting on his first top-flight start in March the following year – a
2-0 win over Everton at Goodison Park.
His eye-catching performance on Merseyside that afternoon proved the catalyst
to him starting all but one of Arsenal’s remaining eight league fixtures –
adding another goal, against Watford, and two assists – as the Gunners
overhauled north London neighbours Tottenham Hotspur to claim second place in
the Premier League behind shock 5000-1 winners Leicester City.
Having won the Victory Shield with England in 2011 and represented the Three
Lions at Under-16, Under-17 and Under-18 levels, Iwobi’s form saw him handed
his first competitive senior appearance for Nigeria at the end of the 2015/16
campaign, the forward’s switch of allegiance to the Super Eagles already having
been signified by his involvement in a friendly against DR Congo the previous
October.
Like on his first Premier League start for Arsenal, he
marked the occasion with a goal as Nigeria defeated Zambia 2-1 in a 2018 World
Cup qualifier. He was named in Nigeria’s provisional 35-man squad for the
Olympic Games that summer but did not feature in the final 18-man party.
Iwobi quickly shelved that disappointment and was picked for Arsenal’s opening
game of the 2016/17 season against Liverpool, providing an assist for Theo
Walcott in an eventual 4-3 defeat for the Londoners.
Despite sustaining a thigh injury that kept him out of the Gunners’ following
two league fixtures, he was quickly reinstated by boss Arsene Wenger and went
on to make 27 starts in a campaign that yielded 39 run-outs in all
competitions, four goals, eight assists and an FA Cup winners’ medal. After
featuring in early round wins over Preston North End, Southampton and Sutton
United, Iwobi was selected in Arsenal’s squad for their 2-1 Wembley victory
over Chelsea in the final.
A notable breakthrough campaign also included another international goal
against Zambia in October, on this occasion Iwobi’s cool, sweeping finish
proving enough to inflict a 1-0 defeat on Nigeria’s opponents but, more
importantly, seal the country’s place at the following summer’s World Cup
finals in Russia.
Iwobi and Arsenal were back at Wembley to face Chelsea in the Community Shield
ahead of the 2017/18 campaign and this time there was a starting role for the
youngster as the Gunners overcame their capital city rivals on penalties
following a 1-1 draw.
That triggered another profitable season in 2017/18, Iwobi adding a further 39
appearances, three goals and seven assists as Wenger’s 22nd and final campaign
at the Arsenal helm ended in a sixth-placed Premier League finish and League
Cup final loss to Manchester City in which the forward came off the bench for
the final 17 minutes.
Having led his nation to Russia, Iwobi featured in all three of Nigeria’s World
Cup group matches in the summer of 2018 but defeats against Argentina and
eventual finalists Croatia proved fatal as the Super Eagles failed to qualify
for the knockout stages.
Unrattled by the blow, Iwobi returned to Arsenal and enjoyed his most
productive goals coring season to date last term, kicking it off by applying a
clinical finish to a flowing, 18-pass team move in a 3-2 opening weekend loss
against old foes Chelsea.
It was against the same opposition that his sixth and final goal of 2018/19
came 10 months on, albeit against the backdrop of Arsenal’s crushing 4-1 Europa
League final defeat in Baku.
Nevertheless, a fruitful campaign also saw the improving Iwobi add a further 51
Arsenal appearances to his tally, while his record of nine assists was bettered
only by France international forward Alexandre Lacazette.
It means the Everton-bound Iwobi leaves the Emirates having contributed 15
goals and 27 assists in 149 games. Of those, he started a hefty 103.
And Iwobi’s impact at international level continues to be felt, too. An
integral figure as Nigeria finished third in the Africa Cup of Nations last
month, he notched the winner to settle a thrilling five-goal contest against Cameroon
in the last-16 – his sixth international goal.
The Super Eagles’ 1-0 victory over Tunisia in the
third-place play-off saw Iwobi collect his 36th cap at the age of just 23.
Everton had to bide their time in their pursuit of Iwobi but beat the transfer
deadline to land their man on Thursday evening, tying him to a five-year deal
until the summer of 2024.
He became the Blues’ seventh summer acquisition, reuniting with former colleague Walcott, but was not registered in time to be eligible for Saturday’s Premier League opener at Crystal Palace.
International Football
Guinea names Portugal’s Duarte as new national coach

Well-travelled Portuguese coach Paulo Duarte has been named as Guinea’s new coach, less than a month before their next round of World Cup qualifiers.
Duarte, 56, has twice previously coached Burkina Faso and taken charge of Gabon and Togo, while also coaching at clubs in Portugal, France, Tunisia, Angola and Saudi Arabia.
Guinea’s football federation gave no contract details when they made the announcement on Monday, but said they would be looking for Duarte to “restructure their national team”.
Guinea trail leaders Algeria by eight points in their World Cup qualifying group with four games remaining, leaving them with only a slim chance of qualification.
They play Somalia away on September 5 and then Algeria at home on September 8 in their next two qualifiers although a stadium ban means Guinea have moved their home game to Casablanca, Morocco.
-Reuters
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International Football
Veteran coach Van Gaal says he is cured of cancer

Veteran coach Louis van Gaal says he has been cured of cancer and is keen for a return to the higher levels of the game.
The 73-year-old announced three years ago that he was suffering from prostate cancer, but told a Dutch television talk show, “I’m no longer bothered by cancer.”
When he announced his illness, Van Gaal was the coach of the Dutch national team, but he has not worked since the last World Cup in Qatar in 2022.
“Two years ago, I had a few operations. It was all bad then. But it all worked out in the end. I have check-ups every few months, and that’s going well. I’m getting fitter and fitter,” he said.
Van Gaal, whose career has included stints at Ajax Amsterdam, Barcelona, Bayern Munich and Manchester United, reiterated a lack of interest in returning to club management but said becoming the national coach of a top-tier country could tempt him back.
He now serves as a special advisor to Ajax.
-Reuters
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International Football
Like father like son, Davide Ancelotti becomes Brazil’s Botafogo manager

In a compelling twist of football destiny, Davide Ancelotti is stepping into his own spotlight as he begins his first head coaching role at Brazilian club Botafogo—just months after parting ways with his legendary father, Carlo Ancelotti, at Real Madrid.
The 35-year-old has been appointed as Botafogo’s new manager, the club announced on Tuesday, following the sacking of Renato Paiva. Davide, who has spent the last decade working alongside his father at some of Europe’s top clubs—including Bayern Munich, Napoli, Everton, and Real Madrid—has signed a one-year deal with the Rio-based team.
This marks a significant milestone for the younger Ancelotti, whose career has long been shaped by his father’s influence, but who now faces the challenge of carving his own identity on the touchline.
The move comes shortly after both father and son departed Real Madrid at the end of last season, with Carlo taking over the Brazilian national team. Now, in a poetic alignment, father and son find themselves on different paths within Brazilian football—one leading the Seleção, the other steering the fortunes of a storied domestic club.
Botafogo’s decision to appoint Davide follows a controversial parting with Paiva, who was dismissed just days after their exit from the Club World Cup. Though he oversaw a stunning win over Champions League holders Paris Saint-Germain, a 1-0 extra-time loss to Palmeiras in the round of 16 proved to be his final act after just four months in charge.
As Davide Ancelotti begins this new chapter, all eyes will be on whether the son of one of football’s most decorated managers can step out from his father’s shadow—and perhaps, in time, build a legacy of his own.
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