The Borneo Post

Skipper hails ‘best Nigeria team I’ve played in’

-

Born in the Netherland­s and educated in England, Super Eagles captain William Troost-Ekong has not looked back at internatio­nal level since opting to represent Nigeria.

Part of the team that lost to Lionel Messi and Argentina at the 2018 World Cup, Troost-Ekong is currently taking part in his third Africa Cup of Nations and he kept a remarkably cool head to score the decisive penalty in the 1-0 win over hosts Ivory Coast on Thursday.

That result left the three-time continenta­l champions primed to clinch a spot in the last 16 when they play Guinea-Bissau in their last group game in Abidjan on Monday.

“It is so early still, but my belief in the team has stayed the same. If I look at the players we have now, I think it might be the best team I have played in for Nigeria. That is with all due respect to some of the legends that have been there,” the 30-year-old centre-back, who won his first cap in 2015, told AFP.

Amid all the talk of Nigeria’s fearsome attack, spearheade­d by African footballer of the year Victor Osimhen, it was Nigeria’s defence that perhaps surprising­ly stood out against the Ivorians, with Troost-Ekong marshallin­g a five-man back line.

“I think we have the most exciting attack in Africa. We have the best player in Africa who is our number nine. But I was not surprised, I think I know what the defenders can do as well and I believe so much in this group,” he said.

“I think we have maybe been underrated a little bit defensivel­y.”

Troost-Ekong,who is wearing boots at the AFCON made from bamboo and other sustainabl­e materials, was born just outside

Amsterdam to a Nigerian father and Dutch mother, and was capped at youth level by the Netherland­s.

He admits he dreamed of representi­ng the Oranje senior team before a call from Stephen Keshi, then the Super Eagles coach, convinced him to pull on a Nigerian shirt.

“I watched a lot of football with my Dad. He was always watching the Super Eagles, but growing up in Holland, I also dreamt about playing for the Dutch national team,” said the defender, who moved to the UK aged 12 to attend boarding school.

“But when I got the phone call from Stephen Keshi at the time, who was a player and a legend who I watched growing up as a kid, especially as a central defender, I was kind of taken aback, and for him to ask me to play for Nigeria, I didn’t have to think twice.

“I think I said yes before I even had to think about anything or ask anyone because it just felt right, and I haven’t looked back since. Something really feels right about playing for Nigeria.”

Troost-Ekong, who has family in the southern city of Uyo as well as in Lagos, spent several months on holiday in Nigeria every year while growing up and says the country ‘felt very much like home and still does.’

 ?? ?? William Troost-Ekong
William Troost-Ekong

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia