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Today In Sports History: Nigeria defeats Ghana to win FIFA U17 WC title

Ghana Nigeria Wc U17.jpeg Black Starlets lost to Nigeria

Fri, 4 Sep 2020 Source: happyghana.com

On this day 4 September 1993 (Exactly 27 years ago today) The Golden Eaglets of Nigeria beat Ghana’s Black Starlets to win the FIFA U-17 World Cup at the Tokyo National Stadium in Japan.

Goals Scored

Nigeria : Wilson Oruma(3)

Peter Anosike(75)

Ghana : Joseph Fameye (80)

Champions:

In an all-African showdown in Asia, Nigeria overcame Ghana in the Final to take the laurels at Japan ’93. The Golden Eaglets stood out from start to finish, their outstanding physique, impeccable sense of organisation and progressive tactics combining to make them the most feared team in the tournament.

Having future stars of the calibre of Wilson Oruma (top scorer in the competition), Nwankwo Kanu, Peter Anosike, Ibrahim Babangida and Celestine Babayaro at their disposal certainly helped too.

Nigeria’s 8-0 thrashing of poor Canada at the start of the proceedings set the tone; South American giants Argentina hardly fared much better, going down 4-0, and then it was the turn of Australia (2-0), Japan (2-1) and Poland (2-1) to suffer at the hands of the all-conquering Nigerians

Ghana were the last hurdle, and a 2-1 win in the Final was enough to send the Golden Eaglets flying home with the coveted trophy safely in their grasp.

Surprises:

This tournament belonged to Africa, as two teams from the same continent faced each other in the Final for the first time in FIFA history. The difference between the two African giants was Nigeria’s extra ruthlessness in front of goal. One of the most heart-warming moments in FIFA history came at the medal ceremony, as the two sides climbed the podium together to applaud the fans. Unforgettable…

Chile came from nowhere to clinch third place, showing admirable faith in the 4-4-2 formation devised for them by coach Leonardo Véliz. Frank Lobos, Hector Tapia, Manuel Neira and Sebastian Rozental all shone as they took second spot in Group D, before rolling over the Czech and Slovak Republic in the quarters. Ghana proved a step too far, but the penalty shoot-out victory over European Champions Poland in the third place play-off was far more than Chile could have hoped for at the outset.

Player of the Tournament:

For once, the adidas Golden Ball did not go to a member of the winning side. Ghana’s Bayer Leverkusen midfielder Daniel Addo was the young recipient, his natural athleticism and buckets of speed helping him to excel. And his visible enjoyment at getting in on the scoring act must have swayed the judges too. His three goals were invaluable to his team’s progress, as was the support of team-mates Sebastian Barnes and Michael Edusei, who made the Team of the Tournament alongside him.

Rising Stars:

Leonardo Biagini (ARG), Sebastián Rozental (CHI), Daniel Addo (GHA), Gianluigi Buffon (ITA), Francesco Coco (ITA), Francesco Totti (ITA), Hidetoshi Nakata (JPN), Celestine Babayaro (NGA), Nwankwo Kanu (NGA), Wilson Oruma (NGA), Ibrahim Babangida (NGA), John O?Brien (USA).

Elsewhere;

On this day 4 September 1919(Exactly 101 years ago today) Bill Johnston won his second US Open title after beating Bill Tilden 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 in the final.

On this day 4 September 1972 (Exactly 48 years ago today) The United States 4 x 100m medley relay team of Mike Stamm, Tom Bruce, Mark Spitz & Jerry Heidenreich set world record 3:48.16 to win gold at the Munich Olympics; Mark Spitz became 1st athlete to win 7 Olympic gold medals at a single Games

On this day 4 September 1972 (Exactly 48 years ago today) Kenyan legend Kipchoge Keino followed his 1,500m gold in Mexico City with an Olympic record 8:23.64 to win the 3,000m steeplechase at the Munich Olympics

On this day 4 September 1992 (Exactly 28 years ago today) In his record 115th and final US Open singles match, Jimmy Connors was beaten by Ivan Lendl 3-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-0 in a 2nd-round night match

Source: happyghana.com