The past week saw a handful of the Super Eagles players put aside their
erratic club forms in scintillating fashion and perhaps it is all the
pointer to the good tidings to come for the national team, pleasingly in
a World Cup year.
The mood around the Super Eagles fold has been
buoyant following the excitements of last year, and now, it is one that
is primarily billed to be built on: having bested virtually all and
sundry since German tactician Gernot Rohr took over the reins, be it
African Champions, Cameroon or two-time World Cup winners, Argentina,
this team has thoroughly shown they mean business and would likely take
some stopping in Russia come June.
At club level, Kelechi
Iheanacho, it must be said, had seen his profile at Leicestershire
dwindle significantly, no thanks to his experiencing less fortunes to
Jamie Vardy and Shinji Okazaki.
His double against Fleetwood Town
which inspired Leicester City into the fourth round of the FA Cup last
Tuesday, the second of which came with a bit of VAR historic trivia was
heartwarmingly one to kick on with.
Well, it is still in the
melting pot whether Claude Puel still regards his importance at the King
Power as he had enthused albeit after so much speculations in the
running window.
Alex Iwobi's prodded effort against Crystal Palace
on Saturday snapped a long-standing, worrying goal drought and you
could feel the joy and relief the youngster felt when it hit the back of
the net — he would only feel much better with more of that.
Urgency and self-push is an indisputable prerequisite of course.
It
is trite to wax lyrical about the potentials of Wilfred Ndidi which he
had time and again shown in bountiful amounts for the Foxes in the
English top-flight and should the bustling starlet replicate any of his
tenacity for the national team in five months time at the Eurasian
country, then your guess is as good as mine.
Then, Chelsea's
Victor Moses continue to be full of both endeavour and now, even end
product and if you had watched him run onto Charly Musonda's floated
pass against Brighton last weekend, you would always have expected
something special even though the goal seemed a bit underappreciated
given that the Blues were already home and dry.
Super Eagles
dependable defender, Abdullahi Shehu is expected to be unveiled by
Turkish giants, Bursaspor any time from now and it is fitting he signed
off with Anorthosis Famagusta on a scoring note having skippered them
into title contention in the Cypriot First Division.
Legendary status in the far away southern coast of Larnaca intact, perhaps.
At
a modest 150/1 odds, Nigeria are not expected in any way to even be
breaking the quarter final brass ceiling at the rendezvous in Russia but
teams would only underestimate them at their own perils.
Punters can sign up to and bet on the latest betting offers for the team and the players to come off greatly in Russia.
Five-time
champions, Brazil and 2014 edition winners, Germany remain top of the
betting logs on 5/1 each while France and Spain are just adrift with 6/1
and 7/1 respectively.
There is no gainsaying that Nigeria,
primarily as outsiders to win the much coveted title would need to be at
their very best to do so but if there latest indulgence for their
respective club sides is anything to go by, then the embers of hope for
the Nigerian hopefuls has been fanned.
Emmanuel Chinaza
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