There was confusion in the beginning.
A fresh-faced John Obi Mikel told reporters sometime in 2005: “I am pleased to get the chance to play for one of the biggest clubs in the world.”
That ‘big club’ was not Chelsea. It was Manchester United. There are even pictures of him holding up the No 21 shirt.
Then Chelsea showed up.
The Blues insisted they already an agreement with the Nigerian and their coach at the time, Jose Mourinho, wanted the player.
We will have to wait for Mikel Obi’s (auto)biography to know what truly transpired after then. But what we do know, is that Chelsea paid their United £12m and another £4m to Lyn. The player moved to the Stamford Bridge club.
The limelight was instantly on the teenager that was causing rancour among big clubs. Maybe Mikel Obi – 19 years at the time – was worth the hype.
Indeed, he was. I am yet to find anyone who wasn’t held captive by the group of boys that represented Nigeria at the FIFA Youth Championship held in the Netherlands in 2005. From Taiye Taiwo, the explosive full back with a vicious left foot to Chinedu Ogbuke, the electric winger, the football sometimes was magical. They were only stopped in their tracks at the finals by a Lionel Messi-inspired Argentina.
At the hub of all the creative play was a lanky Mikel Obi. Prodigiously gifted, deceptively quick and blessed with a marvelous range of passing, Mikel was hailed as a hybrid of two of Nigeria’s best players, Kanu Nwankwo and Jay Jay Okocha. Trust us to become emergency soothsayers. We looked into our crystal balls and prophesied that he was the next big thing in attack.
Mourinho had other plans. The Portuguese promptly stifled all his flair, by converting him into a deep-lying midfielder. He became the full-time whistle in flesh. Whenever he was introduced from the subtitutes, you knew that was Mourinho shutting up shop and throwing the keys in the River Thames. Perhaps the Portuguese was too keen to find Claude Makelele’s successor. Mikel would be crowned as Chelsea’s Young Player of the Year that season.
You see, Mikel Obi is that type of footballer coaches could trust. And his biggest cheerleader – over his two regimes – was Chelsea’s perennial interim manager, Guus Hiddink.
But 372 matches, 10 years, 10 different managers and 6 goals later, it was time go.
There was confusion at the end.
First, there was talk of finally playing for United and a potential reunion with United. Then the Marseille rumours. Valencia even went as far as travelling to London over Christmas to hold talks with the player.
In the end, he has gone to China and signed for Tianjin TEDA. And many observers have been quick to suggest it is because of the money on offer. I beg to differ. First, it is a £140,000-a-week deal. Nothing spectacular, when you look at what Oscar, Tevez, Hulk, etc are earning in the Chinese Super League.
Also, at 29, Mikel Obi has won everything there is to win in Europe: the Champions League, Europa League, Premier League, FA Cup, League Cup and Community Shield. All bar the FIFA Club World Cup.
There is nothing else left to accomplish – maybe except the Ballon d’Or.
‘Ifreke Inyang tweets via @Ifreke
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