Eriksson and England face Nigeria next (Allsport).
INCONSISTENT EAGLES UP NEXT
By Damian Spellman, PA Sport
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The 'Group of Death' proved fatal for Nigeria long before coach Adegboye
Onigbinde sat down to select his team to face England on Wednesday.
Most commentators - and even Sven-Goran Eriksson - would have expected both
sides to go into the final group game in Osaka with little decided and
everything to play for.
For England, Sweden and Argentina, the riches of qualification for the
knock-out stages remain very much up for grabs, but for one of Africa's leading
lights, only pride is at stake after a disastrous campaign by the standards they
have set themselves.
The Super Eagles made the second round at both USA 94 and France 98 as
football's fastest-developing continent threatened to have a major say on the
biggest stage.
But they will return home this time around after further disappointment
followed their failure to find a way past Senegal in the semi-finals of the
African Cup of Nations in Mali.
Whether England run out against a side desperate to board the plane home or
one determined to ensure that they leave the tarmac having at least restored
their reputation with a rousing display remains to be seen, but Eriksson's men
have prepared, as they must, expecting the latter.
And that, in essence, is Nigeria's problem.
Scintillating at best, inept at worst and with a dozen shades of grey in
between, it is their unpredictability which is both their strength and their
weakness, a facet which is as much a problem to Onigbinde, who replaced Shaibu
Amodu after the disappointment in Mali, as to the teams which stand in their
path.
The Nigerians were not at their best in their opening game against Argentina,
where they eventually succumbed to Gabriel Batistuta's header, and were a little
unfortunate not to get at least a point from their clash with Sweden, a game in
which they led until Henrik Larsson's double snatched back the advantage.
Worryingly for England, they have yet to hit the heights of which they are
well capable, and that is all the warning Eriksson and his players need as they
go in search of the point they know will secure their passage.
Cameroon striker Patrick Mboma has watched at close hand how one of Africa's
strongest football nations has risen to the fore, but admits that their form can
be a mystery.
"Nigeria are also one of the best teams in Africa, but the problem is that
you cannot predict what they will do," he said. "They can impress in one game
and they can also play so badly that you think they're nothing.
"Everywhere, they have quality players and technically, they're probably the
best side in Africa.
"Cameroon and Nigeria are very similar. They're also very powerful but
probably more technical. But the Cameroon team is more compact compared to
Nigeria, who maybe have better individual players.
"They didn't reach their target in the African Cup of Nations and they
changed their coach, and that's not the best way to prepare for the World Cup.
"It can be one man for himself, and that's not the best way to play
football."
The internal strife and the setbacks of the last week or so send Nigeria into
the England game with much to prove, but what is not in any doubt is the quality
they have within their squad.
Talented 19-year-old striker Julius Aghahowa is currently coveted by a series
of European clubs for his pace and power and, as he showed against the Swedes,
he has an eye for goal.
The Shakhtar Donetsk frontman is a genuine threat if he is allowed to run at
defenders or play on the shoulder of the last man, and Eriksson will be hoping
that he does not get a chance to see at close hand the 12-somersault celebration
which greeted his opening strike in the competition.
But much of the hope in the Nigerian camp will rest upon the ability of
playmaker Jay Jay Okocha to unlock the England defence.
The Paris St-Germain schemer enjoys legendary status in his own country and at
28, has won a wider audience, including Bolton boss Sam Allardyce, with his
exhilarating brand of football.
Okocha has nimble feet, passes intuitively and is dangerous in front of goal,
and those qualities make him a major threat to England's hopes.
However, no matter how concerted Eriksson's efforts to force his players to
concentrate on Nigeria's strengths, he will have wasted no time in underlining
their weaknesses at the back.
Former Derby defender Taribo West is the inspirational mainstay of Onigbinde's
rearguard, which has also included Crewe's Efe Sodje, but pace is not his
biggest asset and England have that in abundance.
The pattern of the game may largely depend upon which Nigerian side turns up;
the one capable of incisive, free-flowing football, or the other, a group of
individuals seemingly with little else in common but the same coloured shirts.
If the latter proves the case, England have the armoury to ease their way
through to the last 16 with few worries, but if the Super Eagles decide to fly,
Eriksson's side could have their work cut out.
With Nigeria already out of the competition, that may soothe the pain of their
premature exit, and it might also rekindle a few memories of that famous night
in Italy 12 years ago when Cameroon threatened to end Bobby Robson's World Cup
dream.
Mboma was a tearful spectator then and will be an interested onlooker this
time around, but he admits that it is a tough one to call.
"I wouldn't put my money on Nigeria but, as an African, I can say that they
can beat England," he said.
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