Nigeria: Will Kelechi Iheanacho follow John Obi Mikel's road to mediocrity?
Sunday’s Community Shield was a
light aperitif; dispensed with, focus inevitably turns to the Premier League
season in store, and the narratives set to be explored and unfurled in the
current weeks and months. One of the chief questions, from the standpoint of
the Super Eagles, is in what capacity the lavish talents of Kelechi
Iheanacho are to be utilized.
For the second preseason in a
row, the youngster has put hardly a foot wrong.
The caveat last time around was
Manchester City’s inability to snag him a work permit, an inconvenience that
has now been corrected. With Stevan Jovetic off to Inter, and a move to Roma
seemingly inevitable for Edin Dzeko, Iheanacho may very well be third in the
Citizens’ striking pecking order going into the season.
Consider also that Sergio
Aguero’s blitzes of brilliance are invariably punctuated by multiple injuries
within the season, and Wilfried Bony is still finding his feet at the Etihad.
At some point, Iheanacho will surely get a chance to show what he’s got.
This can only be good for the
player’s development. The dicier subplot to resolve is whether it is in
the interest of the national team.
Is Iheanacho set for a breakout
campaign at Manchester City?
On the surface, it is a
ridiculous concern—the Super Eagles can only benefit from having the prodigious
18-year-old playing regularly in the biggest league in the world. However, his
appearances will continue a trend that, if unchecked, will complete a
position-change from creative wide man to central striker.
While he scored six times for the
Golden Eaglets side in 2013 as they triumphed at the Fifa U-17 World Cup in
UAE, it was clear that his goals were not the main attraction. Indeed, four of
that tally came in one game: a freakish 6-1 demolition of Mexico; he scored
only twice more in the remaining six games, and one of those in the final.
Instead, what stood out was his unique vision and creativity.
Employed as one of two playmakers
behind first Success Isaac, then Taiwo Awoniyi in a 4-3-2-1/4-3-3 hybrid,
Iheanacho thrived when drifting centrally between opposition lines of defence
and midfield. His initial wide position often made him difficult to track, and
from this zone he wreaked absolute mayhem. He completed the tournament with
seven assists, none more beautiful – or totemic – than his slide rule pass for
Awoniyi’s opener in the quarter-final against Uruguay.
His lock-picking abilities
fuelled a sense of excitement about his arrival; Nigeria has struggled for
overt creativity since the declines of Kanu and, to an extent, Jay-Jay
Okocha—players who, in their right, were the final hold-overs of the national
team’s golden era in the mid-to-late 90s.
However, since joining City, he
has featured mostly as a pure centre-forward. In a way, you could lay it at the
door of the broad spectrum of attributes he possesses: he is a very composed
finisher and, standing at over 6ft, is no soft touch. His goals for Manuel
Pellegrini’s side also suggest he is doing well enough in the role, and he
continues to provide assists, as Raheem Sterling can attest.
However, the Chilean’s imagining
of the player could, in the long run, be detrimental to the Super Eagles.
Nigeria is not short on young strikers with great potential (Imoh Ezekiel,
Michael Olaitan, the aforementionaed Awoniyi and Isaac, to name very few), what
it does lack is competent playmakers.
Iheanacho could become the player
City want, but not the one that Nigeria needs.
If this story arc tugs at the
fringes of memory, that is because there is recent form for the national team
being deprived of a great talent through a change in role.
Can Mikel ever truly say that he
has made the most of his immense talent?
John Obi Mikel , himself a
prodigy with the world at his feet, made a move to nouveau-riche Chelsea to
much acclaim. What Nigeria got back was half the player, generously
watered-down and disinclined to produce the sort of sublime, effortless
brilliance that had seen him share a podium with Lionel Messi.
The Super Eagles persisted in
fielding Mikel in the role: surely there was something left, the embers could
still be coaxed into, if not a raging blaze, at least a flickering candle. The
experiment failed calamitously, leading Samson Siasia, under whom Mikel had
blossomed in the beginning, to lament, “Chelsea destroyed the player Mikel once
was!”
Pulling in two completely
different directions is an entirely apt illustration—by the analogy, the club
role exerts greater stress, as international breaks are intermittent. In the
end, the limit of elasticity entailed Nigeria had to accept Mikel for what he
had become, rather than what had been expected.
At some point in the near future,
when his evolution is complete, Nigeria will have to accept the Iheanacho that
has been sculpted at Manchester City. That is not necessarily a bad thing:
Robin van Persie underwent a somewhat similar transmutation into a fearsome
centre-forward and, in the process, has become the top scorer in the
history of the Dutch national team. Still, whatever heights the
teenager hits as a striker, there will always be the sense that a great
opportunity has been lost
Feelers around new boss Sunday
Oliseh indicate that Kelechi Iheanacho will be a key component of the new Super
Eagles. The question once again is - what version will he be hoping to get, and
will he be prepared for the inevitable disappointment?
For that matter, will the entire
nation be?


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