Friday, June 7, 2013

Keshi: It’s not yet finished



Coach Stephen Keshi has warned that the task of qualifying the Super Eagles for the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil was not yet finished.
Nigeria on Wednesday defeated the Harambee Stars 1-0 in Nairobi, to stretch their lead in Group F to eight points, with two matches yet to play against Namibia on  June 12 in Namibia and Malawi in September.
Speaking after the match at the Arap Moi Stadium, Keshi said that he was delighted with the win but stressed that his players must not get carried away with their latest conquest.

“It was important to win this game and I am happy that the players got the three points that we came to Kenya for. It was a good result and it shows that we are learning with every other game. But the job is not yet finished.
“We still have two key games to play and it is important for us to stay focused on the target of qualifying for the World Cup. We will continue working hard to ensure that this goal is achieved”.

Arsenal can afford Rooney, hints Gazidis

Arsenal chief executive Ivan Gazidis has added fuel to the speculation linking Wayne Rooney with a move to the Emirates Stadium, revealing that the Gunners have the financial power to attract the 27-year-old.


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Arsene Wenger has already confided that it would been hard not to bid for the striker should he become available, while it is believed that Rooney is open to a move to north London. And now Gazidis has put more more weight behind any move for the England international, saying that Rooney's likely transfer cost and wage demands would be well within Arsenal's budget.

When asked if the Gunners could afford a €20 million-plus deal, plus €200,00-a-week wage, Gazidis told reporters: "Of course we could do that. We could do more than that.

"We have a certain amount which we've held in reserve. We also have new revenue streams coming on board and all of these things mean we can do some things which would excite you. "If Arsene thinks signing big names is the right thing to do, yes. The fact is this year we are beginning to see something we have been planning for some time, which is the escalation in our financial firepower.

"We can look at some options that weren't really in our financial capability. It's a progression over the next two seasons. It's quite significant for the club." While Gazidis refused to name any transfer targets, he believes Arsenal's ambition can see them emulate Champions League winners Bayern Munich.

"We should be able to compete at a level like a club such as Bayern Munich. I'm not saying we are there by any means, we have a way to go before we can put ourselves on that level," Gazidis continued.

"I think we are an extraordinarily ambitious club.

"This whole journey for the past 10 years has been about putting us up with the best in the world and now the question is turning that platform now into on-field success."