Celestine Babayaro questions Joseph Yobo’s coaching credentials

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Babayaro also questioned the discipline of African international sides when it comes to challenging at the highest level.
“If you talk about (winning) the World Cup it will take a long time,” he insisted.
“Don’t forget I used to play for the national team of Nigeria, the difference is massive. For some reason our African teams are not as disciplined as the European sides and this is me being honest.
“I have seen the way the Europeans do their things. The discipline is so different.
“For us to be able to win the World Cup it will take a while unless if we get our act right before we can see a World Cup coming to Africa.”
Despite a lack of success at the World Cup African sides have twice won the men’s football tournaments at the Olympics, including when Babayaro won the title with Nigeria in 1996, four years before Cameroon claimed gold.
Babayaro, who also played for Belgian side Anderlecht and England’s Newcastle United, says it is different at youth levels, with the men’s events at the Olympics limited to under-23 teams with the addition of up to three overage players.
“The Olympics is the Olympics, the youth competitions are the youth competitions – it’s nothing like the grade A level which is the World Cup,” he explained.
“The World cup is a different ball game, different animal. To be able to win that, it takes a lot of things to come together. You can’t have half and half.
“Everybody has to be on point. From the federation we need to stop hearing these things when you are in camp that this person has not been paid his wages or salaries or his bonuses things like that.
“You never hear this on the European side so that’s why I am saying they need to get their acts right before a World Cup can be achieved.”
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