The Executive Committee of the NFF, named Le Guen as Sunday Oliseh’s replacement. But in a dramatic turn of events, the Frenchman rejected the role and claimed he never applied for the job, neither was he interested in coaching the former African champions.
Onigbinde, who is a former FIFA/CAF Technical Advisor, says heads should have rolled in the Glass House.
“A portion of FIFA rules talks about a game being brought into disrepute,” Onigbinde told Completesportsnigeria.com.
“The NFF by that singular act of shabbily handling the purported appointment and or recommendation of Le Guen and even making it a public discourse, to me, have brought Nigeria into disrepute and should have resigned or be sacked were it to be in other climes.
“That a football federation interviewed a coach on Skype and announced to the world he has been recommended for appointment, only for the coach to say no, I don’t want your job, keep it to yourself.
“What a shame, what an embarrassment.”
No comments:
Post a Comment