The Former Super Eagles midfielder, Etim 
Esin, says Uruguay pose the first real threat to the Golden Eaglets’ bid
 to win  the FIFA U-17 World Cup for a record fourth time in the United 
Arab Emirates.
The Eaglets defeated Iran 4-1 in Al Ain 
City  on Tuesday to book a Saturday quarterfinal date with the South 
Americans, who defeated Slovakia 4-2 to qualify.
The match promises to be explosive with both sides flaunting same statistics at the
 tournament: three wins and a draw.
 “For me, this is the first test for the
 Eaglets in the competition. The team has been playing the likes of 
Iraq, Iran and Sweden and they have scored 18 goals, conceding just 
five,” the former Flash Flamingoes player told our correspondent on the 
telephone after the game.
“But we will be able to assess their 
chances of winning the competition with the Uruguayan game. We’ve never 
had it easy playing against South American teams, so let’s see how it 
goes. And I think the match will bring the best out of the boys.
“South America always present highly 
technical teams, who are very difficult to beat. Let us not forget that 
Uruguay like the Eaglets, have not lost a game so far. The Eaglets 
shouldn’t allow their success go to  their heads.
“I am proud of our boys; they have shown
 the zeal to succeed. They’ve been winning, and winning brings 
confidence. It will help them on Saturday.”
 The Chile ’87 U-20 World Cup Flying 
Eagles star said he was impressed with the individual  players in the 
UAE 2013 squad, saying they had a future.
He described the use of the Magnetic 
Resonance Imaging as a blessing for Nigeria, saying it helped  coach 
Manu Garba  in picking players with the right age for the team.
He said, “Before, we used to have 
players, who retired after playing the U-17 World Cup. But I think we 
have a relatively young squad now and it is evident; the boys are doing 
very well. My priority is not about winning the cup but about the way 
the boys are playing.
“From what I see of this team, they can 
grow gradually to become future Super Eagles players and world stars. 
But monitoring these players is another area we should look at, if we 
hope to build stars for the future.”
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