Worthy of note are the individual honours won by the Nigerian
players. Kelechi Ihenacho unsurprisingly became the most decorated,
winning the tournament’s Adidas Golden Ball Award for the overall best
player, alongside the Silver Boot Award for being the second highest
goal scorer. |
The final was a rematch of the 6-1 win Nigeria inflicted on the Mexicans in Group F play and sees the Golden Eaglets lay hands on the junior world trophy for the fourth time in their history, one better than South American giants Brazil.
When the final whistle went in the UAE capital, fans and players alike rejoiced, fingers pointed to the sky, with what has become the traditional Nigerian celebration of: "yes, yes yes!"
Mexico kept the ball for a full two minutes at the start of the game, moving it around well and making the Nigerians chase. El Tri even managed the first chance on goal after six minutes. Osvaldo Rodriguez crossed from the left, but Alejandro Diaz couldn't keep his close-range effort the right side of the post. Two minutes on and Ivan Ochoa – who scored twice in the semi-final win over Argentina – saw his off-balance header pushed over the bar by Dele Alampasu.
The corner came to nothing for the Mexicans, but Nigeria benefitted greatly by bursting out on a classic counter-attack. Kelechi Iheanacho went flying up the pitch. With just one Mexican defender in position, the No10 Golden Eaglet laid the ball in for Taiwo Awoniyi who then fed it on to Musa Yahaha, who had a little help from Erick Aguirre. The Mexican midfielder mistakenly hit the ball into his own net in an attempt to recover.
With the score 1-0, Musa Muhammed was giving the Mexicans fits with his rampaging runs up the right side. He pinned the opponents back at every opportunity. As the first half pushed toward the interval, the Africans upped their tempo in search of a second goal. Yahaya rattled the crossbar with a stunning effort from 20 yards out after 38 minutes. Pressure was mounting and the fans in the stands were on their feet when Awoniyi's bicycle-kick from the penalty spot forced Raul Gudino into a magnificent reaction save in the dying moments of the half.
The second period began with a frenzy of attacks at both ends of the pitch, but it was Nigeria who made theirs count, making it 2-0 in the 56th minute. Captain Muhammed unleashed a wicked swirling shot that Mexican keeper Gudino simply couldn't hang on to. He spilled a rebound directly to the feet of the most dangerous man on the pitch, and Iheanacho made no mistake dispatching his sixth goal of the tournament.
With a quarter-hour to go, Mexico managed to carve out a rare second-half chance, but Ochoa's header from close-range slipped wide of the post as the holders began to wilt under the ceaseless pressure of the buzzing Nigerians. Muhammed added a third with ten minutes to go, curling a sublime free-kick into the top corner.
Congratulations Nigeria.
Worthy of note are the individual honours won by the Nigerian players. Kelechi Ihenacho unsurprisingly became the most decorated, winning the tournament’s Adidas Golden Ball Award for the overall best player, alongside the Silver Boot Award for being the second highest goal scorer.
Nigerian goalkeeper, Dele Alampasu won the Adidas Golden Gloves Award while the entire team won the FIFA Fair Play Award.
Nigeria has now become the most successful team in FIFA Under-17 World Cup history. Click to signup for FREE news updates, latest information and hottest gists everyday
Advertise on NigerianEye.com to reach thousands of our daily users
I will always pledge to Nigeria my dear country. Oh our Golden Eaglets, U've indeed done us PROUD
ReplyDeleteup Nigeria
ReplyDeleteDespite these useless rulers the masses are still a great people.
ReplyDeletesuper eagle should lern from this small boys
ReplyDeletethe cotch is he from nigeria or brazil.God bless us only dat we no like our self
ReplyDeleteGod bless Nigeria,
ReplyDeleteGod bless Eaglet,
More victory
This is a superlative performance, lets all learn from these boys and replicate their feat in all of our endeavour
ReplyDeleteIt is a well deserved victory. The coach and the boy should be appreciated by Mr President, and other Big Shots in naija.
ReplyDeleteCongratulation to boys wey sabi play ball!!!...Odun Tutu
ReplyDeleteGOD! make this "GOOD LUCK" in our SOCCER translate into GOOD GOVERNANCE from GOODLUCK JONATHAN and his TEAM.
ReplyDeleteUP SUPER/GOLDEN EAGLETS!
UP EL-MATOSKY!
Though the victory should re-enforce our hope in Nigerian Soccer instead of worshiping the premier leaque.
ReplyDeleteIt tells me also that we don't need foreign coach.
What is lacking in papa eagle is commiment and dedication as some of them played better for their clubs. These children have no dual loyalty. Secondly they are showcasing thieir talent to the world
They have done marvelously well. They deserve a very good handshake. But those Igbo haters will not comment about Iheanacho who is an Igbo boy.
ReplyDelete@anon 3:30pm, when will U grow up and remove sentiments from Ur blood stream. These boys represented Nigeria not Imo or Abia or any "Igbo state". We are congratulating the team and not an individual. If U feel like "worshiping" any player then na U sabi.
ReplyDelete