Former
Nigeria national team coach, Clemens Westerhof has revealed that
players bribed their way into the national team in the past.
Westerhof, who coached Nigeria to success at the 1994 Africa Cup of
Nations in Tunisia and also led the Super Eagles to their first-ever
Fifa World Cup in the United States in 1994, said the players who did
not merit a place in the national team got call-ups after giving money
to the selectors.
“We had a situation where we had the wrong people in the wrong places, even in the (Nigeria) FA,” Westerhof told supersport.com.
The Dutchman went on to specifically state that monies usually
exchanged hands between national team selectors and the players when
places in the national team were considered.
“We had cases where players paid money to the coach and said ‘I want
to play for the national team’ and the coach would accept. They bought
their way into the national team and it was an unbelievable situation.
Very sad. I know these things,” an angry Westerhof said.
With Nigeria set to compete at the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations from
January, Westerhof said things have changed for the better under current
head coach, Stephen Keshi.
“My captain (Keshi) is there now and you can see the changes because he selects the right people.
“Nigeria beat Liberia 6-1 in a 2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier
and outclassed Venezuela (in an international friendly earlier this
month). The results come because players are now selected on merit.
“If Keshi can manage to hold that group together things will get even
better. If there is discipline everywhere; the players sleep in time
and live like professionals, work like professionals and think like
professionals and even go to the toilet like a professional, then you
will see Nigeria will come back,” he said.
Westerhof, 72, began his career as an assistant coach with Feyenoord
Rotterdam in the Dutch Eredivisie. He has also coached Vitesse Arnhem,
the Zimbabwean national team, the Sporting Lions of Zimbabwe’s Premier
League, and the Bush Bucks and Mamelodi Sundowns of South Africa’s
Premier Soccer League.
In addition, he has served as technical director of the Harare-based
Agatha Sheneti Youth Academy and also of the Harare United club, which
was linked to the Academy. In 2001 he was technical director of Dynamos
FC, Zimbabwe’s biggest club, but lasted in the position just a few
months.
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