The
delegation of Senior National Team of Democratic Republic of Congo, otherwise
known as Simba, flew into Port Harcourt on Thursday night ahead of Monday’s
2018 FIFA World Cup Send Forth encounter with the Super Eagles.
Ranked 38 in
the world (nine places ahead of three –time African champions Nigeria), the
Simba themselves came very close to a Russia 2018 ticket, conceding to Tunisia
only on the last day of the race.
A period of
loss of concentration, which enabled the Carthage Eagles to score two quick
goals and tie their encounter in Kinshasa on 5th September 2017 was their
undoing, as subsequent victory over Libya in Monastir was neutralized by
Tunisia’s own defeat of Guinea.
Yet, the
Simba, who won the Africa Cup of Nations on home soil in 1968 and in Egypt six
years later, is n
ever a team to be under-rated. The team holds the record of
being the first African side south of the Sahara to fly Africa’s flag at the
FIFA World Cup, way back in 1974.
Nowadays,
the likes of Gael Kakuta, Benik Afobe and Cedric Bakambu lead the line for the
Simba, and though a painful loss the World Cup ticket was, they look forward
with high hopes to the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations race, in which they hammered
neighbouring Congo 3-1 at the start of the campaign 11 months ago.
Rivers State
Governor Ezenwo Nyesom Wike will be chief host as the Super Eagles test
strength against the feisty visitors at the Adokiye Amiesimaka Stadium on
Monday, with scores of other prominent Nigerians and tens of thousands more to
have a last opportunity to cheer their team before departure to the FIFA World
Cup finals in Russia.
Nigeria’s
squad includes Captain Mikel John Obi, Ogenyi Onazi and Ahmed Musa – who all
featured at the last World Cup in Brazil – as well as Olympic bronze medallists
Abdullahi Shehu, William Ekong and Oghenekaro Etebo. They provide the spine for
a young team that was actually the youngest to make it out of the qualifying
series.
Young and
confident performers like Leon Balogun, Olaoluwa Aina, Ikechukwu Ezenwa, Brian
Idowu, Wilfred Ndidi, John Ogu, Joel Obi, Kelechi Iheanacho, Moses Simon and
Alex Iwobi add fluorescence and swagger, and the experience of the likes of
Kenneth Omeruo and Elderson Echiejile would do no harm.
Monday’s
clash will be the seventh official clash between both countries, with the most
famous encounter being an Africa Cup of Nations battle in a sunny Dire Dawa,
Ethiopia in March 1976, in which a young Eagles squad overhauled defending
champions DR Congo (then Zaire) by four goals to two.
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