THISDAY

. . .Brilliant Footballin­g Career Doesn’t Translate to Good Coaching- Onigbinde

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Nigeria’s 2002 World Cup coach Festus Onigbinde has insisted that newly appointed Super Eagles assistant coach Joseph Yobo was a brilliant footballer during his playing days but that does not guarantee him success in the dugout.

To drive home his point, Onigbinde cited Pele and Franz Beckenbaue­r - two of the best players that graced the game - but were forced to end their coaching careers prematurel­y, while Jose Mourinho, one of the best coaches in the world, enjoyed limited success as a footballer.

“Pele and Franz Beckenbaue­r went into coaching and had to pull out and those are two of the best players the world has produced,” Onigbinde said.

“There is a difference between being a player and being a coach. Somebody with PhD in Mathematic­s may not be able to transfer the knowledge to people if he doesn’t have the methodolog­y.

“I want to cite myself as an example. In 1983 after attending interviews and I was employed to handle the national team, some ex-players in the national team came up to say I had no business handling the national team because I didn’t play in the national team. Some of them said I didn’t touch football in my life. With all modesty, am I a failure as a coach?

“Mourinho is a good coach, in which national team did he play? Yobo was a fantastic player, he was one of the pillars in my defence in 2002.

“If people who employed him are convinced he has gained knowledge and experience as a coach, I am not aware of that.”

Onigbinde pointed out that Yobo does not have the coaching experience and added that the Nigerian Federation have a reason for appointing the former Everton defender as an assistant coach.

“We all know the process of employment anywhere in the world, are they employing him as a player or as a coach?

“Which experience are they talking about, is it experience as a coach or experience as a player? I wish Nigeria the best of luck.

“Do you agree with me that there’s a difference between being a good coach and a good player.

“Yobo was part of my World Cup team in 2002, so I know him as a very strong dedicated player but I have not seen him as a coach. The people who employed him must have had their reason for employing him.”

When asked to highlight the difference between the appointmen­t of Sunday Oliseh and Yobo, Onigbinde answered: “When Sunday Oliseh came in, he was a fantastic coach with brilliant success.

“Yobo was very close to me when he was playing in my team, so I wish him the best of luck. I am not criticizin­g his employment.

“People who appointed him must have ensured that he has relevant qualificat­ions. I am not saying he is not qualified, that’s between him and his employers’’.

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