By NATION TEAM sportsdesk@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Wednesday, June 5 2013 at 19:33
Posted Wednesday, June 5 2013 at 19:33
Kenya had held on gallantly until 10 minutes from
time when a ball that seemed harmless was looped by Mohammed Musa into
the net after he overpowered Ochieng’.
The result all but ended any slim hopes Kenya had of a World Cup ticket.
The Stars who play Malawi away in just over a week
remain winless and rooted at the bottom of Group F as the Nigerians go
top with eight points from four matches.
Malawi drew 1-1 with Namibia in Blantyre.
Kenya had a great game in both halves matching the
Nigerians in all departments but it was evident the absence of Dennis
Oliech was telling.
It was a breathtaking first half in which Stars managed to hold the Super Eagles.
Victor Wanyama, captaining Kenya for the first time, was solid in midfield cutting out all the moves by the Nigerians.
So frustrated were the Eagles that they changed
their game plan in the first half, first starting with short, crisp
passing using John Mikel Obi as the anchor man in the midfield.
When that did not work, they resorted to counter
attacks which also did not work as the Kenya defence of David Owino,
David Ochieng’, Brian Mandela and Mulinge Ndeto did not allow them
space.
Orchestrated by Mikel
Their third strategy, again orchestrated by Mikel
was long balls but then again this failed and they decided to pack the
midfield, but nothing seemed to work.
So pressured were the Super Eagles, had it been a
basketball game their bench would have exhausted their time outs by the
first half.
It was Kenya who had the first and only open
chance of the game when a move from David Owino, through to Francis
Kahata and Jamal Mohammed ended on Wanyama but his final ball went over
the bar.
Save for that, none of the goalkeepers was tested
all through the half, Vincent Enyeama for Nigeria and Duncan Ochieng
of Kenyan.
Kenya coach Adel Amrouche was missing on the
Kenyan bench as he was serving a one-match ban because of his red card
in Calabar in March.
The ban meant he could not access the dressing
room and the bench and was not to in any way get close to the team
during the match.
In his absence, his assistants James Nandwa and Ken Odhiambo took charge.
But fans started demanding for changes in the team as Kepha
Aswani, playing in place of suspended captain Dennis Oliech showed
little pace and urgency up field.
Aswani’s control was poor and he had problems going past the Nigerian defence.
Nigeria had their first real chance at the start
of the second half. A back pass from an off colour Jamal Mohammed was
poorly cleared by goalkeeper Duncan Ochieng, the ball reached Mohammed
Musa whose effort was blocked by Ochieng.
Kenya bench made their first change, bringing in Stephen Waruru for the ineffective Aswani in the 55th minute.
Tension hit Kenya when Wanyama started wobbling.
First he seemed to have pulled a calf muscle as he chased a ball then he
again went down in an off-the-ball incidence.
The Stars’ medical staff made frantic efforts to ensure the Celtic man remained on the pitch.
Wanyama struggling
With Wanyama struggling and the Kenya bench keen
to have him remain on the pitch, Nandwa brought in Patrick Osiako for
Peter Opiyo midway through the second half.
It was a blunder by David Ochieng’ who failed to
cover well as Mohammed Musa lobed over the advancing Duncan Ochieng’ to
score with 10 minutes of play remaining.
That goal dampened Kenya’s spirits. The players looked crestfallen as fans started streaming out of the stadium sensing defeat.
That is how it ended. Kenya was felled and with it a ticket to Brazil was lost
Elsewhere, Cameroon skipper Samuel Eto’o will miss
Sunday’s World Cup qualifier against Togo because of injury but may be
fit to face DR Congo a week later.
Eto’o suffered a hamstring problem during Saturday’s Russian Cup final.
Cameroon coach Volker Finke said: “Eto’o... has
been recommended by his club to rest for a few weeks. So he will likely
miss the match in Lome.
“But I’m sure he will be present for the match after that against DR Congo on 16 June in Kinshasa.”
Anzhi Makhachkala’s physiotherapist, Stijn
Vandenbroucke, wrote to the Cameroon Football Federation (Fecafoot),
suggesting the player should miss the matches.
He has recommended that the striker should be
allowed to rest and Anzhi also offered to treat Eto’o back in Europe if
Fecafoot are happy with the arrangement.
However, Eto’o flew to Cameroon on Monday so that the Indomitable Lions’ medical team could examine the injury.
And Finke seems optimistic that Eto’o will be fit to help the
Group I leaders - they have six points, one ahead of Libya, while DR
Congo have four and Togo just a single point so far.
Played full 120 minutes
Eto’o played the full 120 minutes as his side lost on penalties to CSKA Moscow in the Russian Cup final.
His club commitments also meant he missed
Cameroon’s goalless draw in Kiev against Ukraine, in what was Volker
Finke’s first match in charge of the Indomitable Lions.
Egypt centre-backs Wael Gomaa and Ahmed Hegazy
played significant roles in a 1-1 World Cup warm-up draw with Botswana
on Tuesday.
A blunder by Gomaa, 37, gifted the visitors a
fifth-minute lead in the international friendly held behind closed doors
at the Cairo Air Defence Stadium.
Gomaa from seven-time African club champions
Al-Ahly under-hit a back pass to goalkeeper Sherif Ekrami with
disastrous consequences.
Democratic Republic of Congo-based striker Jerome Ramatlhakwane chased after the ball and his shot went into the net off Ekrami.
Botswana, ranked 21 places below Egypt in Africa,
retained the lead until Hegazy used his height to good advantage on 37
minutes.
Ahmed Hamoudi crossed from the right and a couple
of slow-reacting defenders allowed the Egyptian to head down past Kabelo
Dambe.
Botswana host Ethiopia on Saturday in a World Cup
Group A qualifying fixture and Egypt are away to Zimbabwe in Group G 24
hours later.
Spectators are barred from attending local and
international football fixtures in Egypt amid post-Arab Spring security
tensions.
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