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Tuesday, 3 May 2016
Arsenal and Super Falcons Player, Asisat Oshoala, Wants to be an Inspiration to Others
Only 21, and already an idol herself for younger generations of female
football players in Africa. Arsenal ladies and Super Falcons attacker Asisat Oshoala spoke to FIFA explaining how she developed from playing six-a-side football with boys in Ikorodu to donning the jersey of Liverpool football club and then Arsenal Football club.
Excerpts from the interview after the cut....
“When I was in school I used to play football with boys,” Oshoala told
FIFA.com. “I was in this six-a-side team. The boys always used to say
to me: 'Don’t go to the front, just stay at the back. Just kick the balls
out. You can’t score goals. You can’t dribble past defenders.'
"And then the day came where we made it to a final. I dribbled two or
three players and scored a goal. 1-0. End of the game. I remember
saying to them, 'Look at that. You don’t believe in me but look at what
I can do.”
“When you have this determination, and people see this determination
in you, eventually they have no choice but to give you the support you
need to get you where you want to go,” explained the Arsenal Ladies
player.
“I didn’t think I was even going to get to pass the ball at the U-20
(Japan u-20 Female World cup tournament) because I was so young,”
said the midfielder. “I thought I was just making up the numbers.”
Oshoala came on as a substitute in the 76th minute of Nigeria’s opener
against Korea Republic. Her performance for those final 14 minutes was
so impressive that she started every subsequent match at the
tournament, helping Nigeria get to the semi-finals.
“Then and there I learnt that when given an opportunity, you give it
your best,” she said. “You might not see them, but someone is always
watching. It was a great lesson for me. It’s something I’ve carried from
Japan into every match I play now.”
“Canada was a massive one for me,” she said. “I wanted to do better. I
wanted people to come not only watch my team, but I wanted them to
come watch the girl who is determined, the girl who is always ready to
give her best.”
Perhaps one of the most important moments took place against
England in their final group stage game of Canada 2014. Locked at 1-1,
England’s Bethany Mead missed a penalty in the 53rd minute. Just six
minutes later, Oshoala was brought down in the box and given the
same chance to snatch the lead.
“It was a crucial penalty for the team,” she said. “We had to score. We
had to win the game to qualify for the next round. It wasn’t planned
that I take it. We had a penalty taker, but I could see that she was
scared. I walked up to her and said, 'I’ll take it for you.'
"I wanted the challenge, I remember thinking, ‘I’m the old player in the
team, I’m the one that played at the previous U-20, I should be able to
step up and do it for my team.”
“The Women’s World Cup was something completely different,"
Oshoala recalled. "I’d never experienced playing for such big crowds. I
remember having to reprimand myself a few times.
"I kept having to remind myself to not go onto the pitch and just start
looking at my idols and not play football. I kept refocusing on this
thought, ‘I’m going to go there and play the game I have inside me.'”
“I want to be an inspiration to others,” she said. “So whenever I’m
given the opportunity to represent my country I have to give my best.”
She told FIFA.com
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