Coach says Super Eagles job almost killed him
Former coach of the Super Eagles, Sunday Oliseh has claimed that that he almost died as manager of Nigeria' senior national team manager.
Oliseh
controversially resigned from his position as chief coach of the Super
Eagles in February 2016 citing contract violations, unpaid wages and
benefits to players and assistant coaches.
Oliseh it could be recalled spent several weeks in a German hospital, missing the training camp of the Super Eagles Team B ahead of the 2016 Africa Nations Championship.
During the tournament, the former Super Eagles coach was said to be in constant paranoia from fear that certain people are after his life.
In his latest expose
since quitting as Super Eagles coach, Oliseh reveals a host of traumatic
experience he had in his four stint in charge of the national team.
The 41-year-old coach recalls the day health scare he got when he nearly collapse during training.
ALSO READ: Sunday Oliseh: I don't talk to Amaju Pinnick
''One
day whilst coaching the super Eagles in Abuja stadium prior to the
Burkina Faso game I all of a sudden felt dizziness, light headedness,
headache and could barely stand. I managed to finish the session before
calling on the doctor into my room who was clueless to what was
happening," he writes on his personal website.
"From then on it was sleepless nights, loss of appetite, high blood pressure and before I knew it I started losing weight.
"After
several visits to doctors abroad nothing was found though the doctors
found anomalies they couldn’t pin point the actual illness to.
"Prior
to the away trip to Burkina Faso for the final CHAN qualifier game in
Port Harcourt after lunch I was struck with the worst feat of this
illness again. Could not walk, talk, dizzy and felt like I was going to
pass out."
After he flew to Germany for check-up, Oliseh reveals that he "diagnosed to have narrowly escaped a total collapse in Nigeria.
He was then bedridden for weeks, losing seven kilos.
"My
family was petrified and all feared the worst. One thing was for sure
though: had I not taking that evening flight to Germany when I did,
there was a strong possibility of a far worse outcome. Thank God for his
mercies," the coach says.
"All through
the last 4 months of my tenure as coach I was far from my complete
healthy self and coached the team and stayed in my bedroom. Often on my
bed or sofa," he adds.
Oliseh's assistant, Jean Francois Losciuto also suffered a health scare when he injected a injected a small metal while eating in Pretoria where the Super Eagles Team B were camping ahead of the 2016 Africa Nations Championship.
According to Oliseh,
his assistant , Loscuito collapsed in the lobby of the hotel and was
rushed to the hospital where doctors refused to operate unless payment
was paid in advance.
With the Nigerian Football Federation (NFF)
nowwhere to be found, Oliseh says he had to put up a deposit payment
that allowed the hotel to admit and stabilize him before operation.
"Eventually he was operated on and what was dug out from his stomach was the scariest experience we ever saw till then," Oliseh writes.
Oliseh also claimed
that his family member was nearly kidnapped during his stint as coach of
the Super Eagles and blamed the NFF for it.
"In
October 2015, with the belief that I had millions from the Nff,
kidnappers attacked a family member of mine’s home in Lagos, but thanks
to God the intended victim was not at home," the former Super Eagles coach reveals.
"Shaken
at the news, I called Mr Amaju to inform him of my displeasure of his
false public declarations in my regard and there and then the seed of
Resignation started to grow in me. Is this worth my peaceful family
suffering?"
Since his resignation, Oliseh has
been in constant tussle with the NFF who keep insisting that they don't
owe the former Super Eagles coach.
Oliseh claims
that after his appointment in July 2015, he was paid in August for two
months but did no longer get any payments till January 2016.
"My assistants
were worse off as they received just a month’s pay as at January
2016.The Nff and its allies in public claimed otherwise!All equipment’s I
used to coach, even as down to simple cones and tactics boards, I had
to buy them all myself as the super eagles had none available!" he writes on his websites.
Oliseh who resigned
as Super Eagles coach in February 2016, claims that he is still owed by
the NFF due to an international law which states that "if after
serving your employer as a coach a demand letter of payment and they
refuse to pay, you are still entitled to the total sum of the remaining
totality of your contract should you resign."
"As
at today by my reckoning, I am still being owed wages and should it
come up to CAS (The international Court of Arbitration of sports) the
NFF will be forced to pay me the sum of the contractual remaining 28
months’ salary in addition to the owed wages," he adds.
He
further blasts the Technical Committee of the claiming that he didn't
receive any help from them during his time as Super Eagles coach.
"There was no
help received from this committee and all technical information we asked
of via telephone, emails were all ignored. We never saw them," Oliseh reveals.
In the post on his website, Oliseh also reveals that he first got a from the NFF just a day after late Stephen Keshi was sacked as Super Eagles coach in June, 2015.
He
reveals that he rejected the job several times before an intervention
of a phone call from a highly ranked federal government official.
He ends his piece by revealing that "he
had never felt so deeply unfairly treated, betrayed, wickedness,
ingratitude and fear of my dear life as was the case when I coached the
super Eagles of Nigeria."
"Thank God I came out of this alive with hindsight!" he says.
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