On May 9, the national senior female football
team, Super Falcons and their Malian counterparts will lock horns in an
all-important 2016 Olympic Games qualifying match at the National Stadium,
Abuja. Both teams have become familiar foes having met during the qualifying
matches of the 11th All Africa Games (AAG) in September at which the Super
Falcons won 9-1 on aggregate.
Going by the outcome of the AAG qualifiers, it
can be said that it would be an easy ride for the Falcons as they overcame
their opponents 8-0 in the first leg after holding them to a 1-1 draw earlier
in Mali. But it might not be as easy as the African champions might think. The
Malian team will seek to break the jinx of qualifying for the football event of
2016 Olympics Games for the first time.
The Super Falcons on the other hand will seek to
qualify for their fourth Olympics Games appearance after the 2000, 2004 and
2008 editions. They couldn’t advance from the group stage in the 2000 edition
but reached the quarter-finals stage in 2004 and also crashed out from the
group stages in the 2008 edition.
Although the Falcons seems to have an edge over
their opponents in terms of experience, the Malians now have an idea of what
the Nigerian team entails having met twice in the last one month.
So, in view of these, they may not be an easy
ride for the Super Falcons the second time in a row. But, in spite of the
information the Malians may have about the Super Falcons, they still have a
plus which is the caliber of players in the team. Currently, foreign-based
Desire Oparanozie and Iniabasi Umotong are in camp with the home-based to beef
up the team’s attack.
Oparanozie netted in a brace in the AAG qualifiers.
Oparanozie netted in a brace in the AAG qualifiers.
Also, if Asisat Oshoala of England’s Liverpool
Ladies will be available for the match, it will be a plus for the team as she
scored a brace in the AAG qualifiers also. However, the Super Falcons’ coach,
Edwin Okon, seemed not to be carried away with the array of advantages in their
favour as he has said that they were working to perfect their strategies.
“ Our camp is bubbling with sweetness. You can
see that preparations are high; we are not sleeping and we cannot sleep. “We
just have to work to make sure that we beat Mali well here so that when we get
to their turf we won’t have to do too much work there. So, we are mentally,
tactically and physically ready,’’ Okon said.

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