Throughout his career, Nwankwo Kanu has made his living off the
back of having an exquisite touch few men of his size possess, and an
instinctive finishing ability that saw him shine on the game’s biggest stages.
While a veteran of three FIFA World Cups™, were you only
given 15 minutes of his career to see, you could do far worse than the climax
to Arsenal’s 3-2 victory over Chelsea. Played 15 years ago today, the 6ft 6in
Nigerian struck a memorable hat-trick that provided a perfect collage of the
finer points of his game.
Two down to Gianluca Vialli’s side, who had not conceded at
Stamford Bridge all season – largely thanks to World Cup-winning duo Marcel
Desailly and Frank Leboeuf in the centre of defence, things looked bleak for
the Gunners. However, the former Ajax and Inter Milan striker inspired an
unlikely turnaround, with his winning goal becoming the stuff of North London
legend.
“I have very good memories of that game,” the Olympic gold medal
winner told FIFA.com. “It felt great to score against such a formidable team as
Chelsea and it just shows the game is not over until it is over.
“I was not particularly out to get the better of Marcel, Frank or
[goalkeeper Ed] de Goey that day, I just wanted to play my game and bring out
the best of the tricks in my bag to outwit my opponent and score for my team.”
After a pair of headers from Tore Andre Flo and Dan Petrescu had
put the hosts ahead either side of half-time, and cruising with 75 minutes on
the clock, Kanu took the sting out of Marc Overmars’ mis-hit shot to expertly
toe-poke Arsenal back into the game.
Seven minutes
later they were level, with the same duo combining. Overmars skipped into space
beyond Leboeuf, before firing low across the box. He found his West African
team-mate, where Kanu opened his body to cushion the ball into space, thumping
the ball emphatically beyond the Dutch stopper. The momentum had violently
swung, but it took until stoppage time for the Arsenal frontman to complete his
treble, but it was worth the wait.
Having charged down Albert Ferrer’s clearance on the left flank,
Kanu was presented with the unexpected and imposing frame of De Goey, charging
along the byline and out of his area. To his credit, the former Super Eagles
star was coolness personified. “I worked the goalkeeper into a position where I
could sell a dummy to him, which of course he bought,” he recalled.“I lifted up
my head and picked out the far top corner of the net, which I quickly curled
the ball into pretty much from where I stood.”
The former African Player of the Year does himself something of a
disservice, as the goal was extraordinary. Standing no more than two yards from
the touchline and just inside the penalty area, placing the ball high over
Desailly and Leboeuf who were stationed on the goal-line, it was an exceptional
finish to cap an exceptional 15 minutes from him.
“I expected him to cross,” Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger admitted
after the game. “If he hadn’t scored it could have upset you because he really
should have passed. However, great players can prove you wrong. It is one of
the best goals I’ve seen.”
It was a stark change in fortunes for Kanu, who had missed a
penalty against Fiorentina in the UEFA Champions League in midweek, but
starting in place of Dennis Bergkamp – a man Kanu fondly called “’the eye’,
because of his fantastic foresight” – he repaid the fans in perfect style.
Kanu now spends his time helping run the Kanu Heart
Foundation, which has helped carry out open heart surgery on 485 children
from Nigeria and around Africa to date. “ Winning the double with
Arsenal and being part of ‘the Invincibles’ [who went a season unbeatenin
2003/04] are good memories but starting the foundation tops them all,” he said
with earnest. “But with 300 kids still on the waiting list, we have to do all
we can to save the lives of these children.”
No comments:
Post a Comment