Nigeria - Bosnia-Herzegovina Preview: Rivals for Group F second spot meet
Safet Susic's men acquitted themselves well in their
World Cup debut against Argentina but know it will count for nothing if
they fail to beat the Super Eagles
By Peter Staunton in Cuiaba
The nature of Nigeria's drab 0-0 draw with Iran left Super Eagles
fans dejected, as their best chance of three points disappeared without a
trace. The reality of the matter, however, is that they are now more or
less involved in a straight shootout with Bosnia-Herzegovina for a
place in the second round. Simply put, if they beat Bosnia in Cuiaba on
Saturday, they will eliminate their opponents from the running.
That task is easier said than done given the disparity between the
opening day performances of both sides in Group F. Nigeria, aside from
one spell in the first 15 minutes, were unable to create substantial
openings in what turned out to be one of the worst games of the
tournament so far against Iran.
Stars of the Africa Cup of Nations triumph like John Obi Mikel and
Victor Moses failed to adequately instigate attacks and the tactical
preparation of the Big Boss, Stephen Keshi, has also been called into
question.
Balls were punted towards Emmanuel Emenike without any degree of
certainty and the decision to field Ramon Azeez as the advanced
midfielder also backfired. Peter Odemwingie could be preferred at the
weekend.
Keshi has plenty of tactical conundrums in front of him ahead of
Saturday's clash, not least with the injury sustained by first-choice
centre-back Godfrey Oboabona.
The World Cup could not have started any worse for Bosnia, who were
undone by an own goal in the early moments of their debut game against
Argentina at the Maracana. They settled well thereafter, however, and
will be given plenty of encouragement by the manner in which they
dictated the game to their more illustrious opponents for long spells.
That they were defeated by a moment of Lionel Messi brilliance is no
great shame, although moral victories count for nothing at World Cups.
Bosnia have plenty of attacking threats to disrupt Nigeria, with Edin
Dzeko now due a good performance following a game of relative anonymity
against the Argentines. Zvjezdan Misimovic, another Bosnia mainstay,
will have to step up his intensity and move the ball quicker through
midfield if Dzeko is to profit. Miralem Pjanic and Muhamed Besic, in
particular, were impressive and may find their efforts will be less
fruitless against the west Africans.
One false move, however, and Bosnia are out. There is significant
pressure to cope with as Nigeria are within 90 minutes of eliminating
Safet Susic's enterprising outfit at the very first juncture.