THISDAY

Eagles Striker, Boniface Hails Alonso, Says He Helps Improve His Game

-

Bayer Leverkusen and Nigeria striker, Victor Boniface said Xabi Alonso has a particular advantage over other coaches on the training pitch.

“Imagine you’re training and your coach is doing better than you,” Boniface told AFP in an interview. “Then you want to step up your game. “For him to be involved in training gives us a boost,” Boniface said of Alonso, who “has won everything that can be won in football”.

“Sometimes he tells me of players he played with, with similar abilities to me. He tries to improve me in my weakest areas.” Leverkusen host thirdplace­d Stuttgart today knowing they are four games away from becoming the first team to go through a Bundesliga season unbeaten.

Their runs to the German Cup final, where they face seconddivi­sion Kaiserslau­tern, and Europa League semi-finals, where they take on Roma, mean they have gone a record 45 games unbeaten in all competitio­ns this season.

Boniface, 23, was born in the southern Nigerian city of Akure and told AFP he was “always” a football fan.

Earlier this month, he coolly dispatched a penalty to open the scoring in the 5-0 home rout of Werder Bremen which made Leverkusen Bundesliga champions for the first time.

Leverkusen had never previously won a league title in their 120-year history. The club’s record of second-placed finishes -- often somehow snatching defeat from the jaws of victory -- saw them tainted with the unwanted ‘Neverkusen’ moniker, but Boniface said he was not nervous when he took the spot-kick.

“No. To be honest, I didn’t feel pressure. We’re football players.

“Moments like this -- I took the responsibi­lity to help the team. That’s why I’m here. I love penalties.”

The pressure of a spot-kick pales in comparison with some of the struggles Boniface has already endured in his young career.

He moved from Nigeria to Norway at 18, signing with Bodo/Glimt. Despite playing a part in the club’s first-ever Norwegian title in 2020, he tore his ACL twice and later said he considered quitting the game.

After a successful stint with Union Saint-Gilloise in Belgium, he moved to Leverkusen last July, receiving his first Super Eagles call-up earlier this season, which he called “a dream come true”.

 ?? Text ?? L-R: Brand Manager of Maltina, Clementina Kayode, Founder of TASG, Sean Akinbohun, Founding member of TASG, Keke Hammond
Text L-R: Brand Manager of Maltina, Clementina Kayode, Founder of TASG, Sean Akinbohun, Founding member of TASG, Keke Hammond

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria