Mikel John Obi

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Mikel John Obi
Personal information
Full name John Michael Nchekube Obi
Date of birth April 22, 1987 (age 19)
Place of birth Plateau State, Nigeria
Nickname Obi-Wan Kenobi
Position Midfielder
Club information
Current club Chelsea
Number 12
Youth clubs
Plateau United
Ajax Cape Town
Professional clubs*
Years Club Apps (goals)
2005
2006
2006-
Lyn
Manchester United
Chelsea
6 (1)
0 (0)
7 (0)
National team**
2005- Nigeria 4 (1)

* Professional club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only and
correct as of 17:56, 16 December 2006 (UTC).
** National team caps and goals correct
as of February 10, 2006.

Mikel John Obi (born April 22, 1987) is a Nigerian footballer. He is a central midfielder who currently plays for Chelsea.

He was born John Michael Nchekube Obi, the son of a former civil servant. Mikel was playing top-flight football for Plateau United aged 15 and, by 2003, was gaining headlines for his country at the FIFA Under-17 World Championships held in Finland. After a brief spell in South Africa with Ajax Cape Town, Mikel gained global recognition in 2005 by starring at the FIFA World Youth Championship where Nigeria were beaten 2-1 in the final by Argentina.[1]

During the 2003 FIFA Under-17 World Championships, commentators continually misspelled his middle name of "Michael" as "Mikel". He decided to keep the new name, saying that it had a special ring to it.

Contents

[edit] Controversy regarding transfer to England

On April 29, 2005, a few days after Mikel turned 18, English Premier League side Manchester United F.C. announced that it had struck a deal with Lyn Oslo to sign the player.[2] United's website also claimed that they had done a deal directly with the teenager and that he had signed a contract to join them. Mikel's agents were bypassed as the club persuaded the youngster to sign a 4 year contract without representation. Lyn Oslo allegedly sent a fax to his agents abroad, claiming their services were no longer required by Mikel. Reports said the deal was initially worth £4m,[3] and would see the player arrive at Old Trafford in January 2006. A rival Premier League side, Chelsea F.C., later issued a counter-claim suggesting that they already had an agreement with Mikel and his agents, but Lyn Oslo denied this claim. However, subsequent reports indicated that Chelsea had been involved in arranging the player's original move to Europe with a view to signing him at a later date.

Mikel expressed his delight at joining United in a hastily arranged press conference, where he was pictured holding up a Manchester United shirt, which bore the squad number 21. Following his signing of the contract to join Manchester United, there were claims from Norway that he had received a number of threatening phone calls from unknown sources. Mikel was assigned a security guard and moved to a safe hotel. However, on May 11, 2005, the midfielder went missing during a Norwegian Cup game against Klemetsrud; he had not been selected for the match but had been watching from the stands. Whilst the player was believed to have left with one of his agents, John Shittu, who had by now flown in to meet Mikel, his disappearance sparked massive media coverage in Norway and also provoked a police enquiry after the Lyn Oslo director Morgan Andersen made claims in the Norwegian media that Mikel had been 'kidnapped'. These claims were later repeated by Manchester United's assistant manager Carlos Queiroz, who accused Chelsea of being involved in the alleged 'kidnapping'.[4]

It subsequently emerged that Mikel had travelled to London with his agent John Shittu to get away for a while from the situation in Norway. Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson considered travelling to Oslo to visit Mikel, but decided against this after Mikel was reported to have left the country.[5] Staying in a London hotel, Mikel stated on Sky Sports News that he had been pressurised into signing the contract with United.[6] He also claimed that he had asked the clubs for a week to think about it, but that this request was refused and the clubs pressured him into signing without his advisors being present. Mikel told the British media that Chelsea were the club he genuinely wanted to sign for. In response to these events, United made an official complaint to FIFA about the handling of the affair by Mikel's agents and Chelsea.[7] FIFA replied to this complaint in August 2005 stating there was no evidence to support a case against Chelsea FC. However, from this complaint FIFA did open an investigation against Manchester United and Lyn Oslo. Both these cases were settled when Chelsea FC intervened by volunteering to settle through arbitration with Lyn Oslo and Manchester United.[8]

In the summer of 2005, Mikel played for Nigeria at the FIFA U-20 World Youth Championships held in the Netherlands. He had an excellent tournament as Nigeria reached the final, where they were unlucky to lose 2-1 to Argentina. Mikel won the silver ball after being voted the tournament's second best player. Mikel did not resume duties with Lyn Oslo immediately after the tournament, and the club lodged a complaint with FIFA. On August 12, 2005, FIFA ruled that Mikel should return to Lyn Oslo to see out his contract with the Norwegian club, whilst they would decide at a later date whether the contract he signed with United should be upheld or cancelled.[9][10] In early September 2005, Mikel complied with the FIFA decision and returned to Lyn Oslo after a three month absence. During the same month, Lyn director Morgan Andersen again claimed that Mikel would be joining Manchester United in January 2006, despite both the player and his agent continuing to insist that he does not want to play for Manchester United and was coerced into signing the contract against his wishes, and without the presence of his advisors (a violation of FIFA and English FA rules which falls under "The FA handbook" page 219, I General Rules, Article 1.1. Violation of that rule violates the "Code of Conduct" rules under FIFA guidelines of the game - it was this rule violation that John Obi later cited in a complaint to FIFA against Manchester United). This issue was resolved with the transfer to Chelsea as all previous issues were dismissed as shown in a statement from Chelsea's official website.[11]

[edit] International career

Mikel made his debut for Nigeria's senior team on August 17, 2005, when he came on as a second-half substitute in a 1-0 friendly win over Libya. He did not play for the national team again prior to being named in the squad for the 2006 African Cup of Nations. In Nigeria's first group game, which was against Ghana, Mikel was an unused substitute. However, he was introduced into the second game, against Zimbabwe, early in the second half. Within ten minutes of coming on, he had supplied both the corner that resulted in Christian Obodo heading the game's opening goal, and scored Nigeria's second goal. He made his first international start in Nigeria's final group game, a 2-1 victory over Senegal. As of February 7, 2006, Mikel has earned four international caps and scored one international goal. During the cup, Mikel said that he had been instructed not to make any public comments about his club career.[12]. FIFA is to investigate claims that Mikel had received death threats.[13]

[edit] Transfer to Chelsea resolved

On June 2, 2006, Chelsea, Manchester United, Lyn Oslo and John Obi Mikel reached a settlement to resolve the future of the player. Mikel's registration will be transferred from Lyn to Chelsea; Manchester United have also agreed to terminate their option agreement with Mikel. Under the terms of this agreement Chelsea will pay Manchester United £12million, half paid upon the finalisation of the contract and the other half in June 2007, and Lyn £4million, half payable immediately, and half payable in June 2007. As a result of this settlement, all claims in this matter - which Chelsea were never an official party to - were withdrawn. [14] On July 19, 2006 Chelsea were granted a work permit for the midfielder after they completed the £16million signing in June 2006. [15] On July 31, 2006 he stated that he prefers to be called Mikel John Obi instead of John Obi Mikel, as he had most commonly been called[16].

[edit] Chelsea career

On September 12, 2006, Mikel made his first start for Chelsea in the Uefa Champions League against Levski Sofia and took a powerful shot which the goalkeeper failed to save and Didier Drogba pounced on the rebound. Mikel received many positive comments for his performance in the match. However, since being sent off in a match against Reading on October 14, 2006, Mikel was fined on three separate occasions by Chelsea for turning up late to training. At the time Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho was also believed to have strong reservations about his lifestyle outside of Stamford Bridge and the club were reportedly considering offloading the player. [17]. Mikel was dropped for over a month, during which his father Michael voiced his concerns over his son's behaviour.[18]. After improved punctuality and showings at training sessions, Mikel earned a recall for Chelsea's Champions League group away game against Werder Bremen on the November 23, 2006. Mikel missed an excellent chance to place Chelsea ahead when he headed over the goal under no pressure during the 10th minute, in their 1-0 defeat.

[edit] Statistics

Club Performance
Club Season Premiership FA Cup League Cup Europe Others Total
App Goals App Goals App Goals App Goals App Goals App Goals
Chelsea FC 2006–07 7 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 10 0
Total 7 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 10 0

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Spiro, Matt. "Mikel thrives on centre stage", UEFA, 2006-01-30. Retrieved on 2006-06-03.
  2. ^ Man Utd get Chelsea target Mikel (HTML). BBC Sport (2005-04-29). Retrieved on 2006-06-05.
  3. ^ Obi makes plea for Chelsea switch (HTML). BBC Sport (2005-06-18). Retrieved on 2006-06-05.
  4. ^ Carlos Demands Authorities Act On Mikel Saga (HTML). Manchester United website (2005-05-13). Retrieved on 2006-06-05.
  5. ^ Man Utd seek Obi transfer probe (HTML). BBC News (2005-05-13). Retrieved on 2006-06-05.
  6. ^ Obi desperate to sign for Chelsea (HTML). BBC Sport (2005-05-20).
  7. ^ Man Utd/Lyn go to Fifa in Obi row (HTML). BBC Sport (2005-05-18). Retrieved on 2006-06-05.
  8. ^ Chelsea to sign Jon Obi Mikel (HTML). Chelsea Football Club (2006-06-02).
  9. ^ Decision of the Dispute Resolution Chamber (PDF). Lyn Oslo. Retrieved on 2006-06-5.
  10. ^ Fifa orders Obi's return to Lyn (HTML). BBC Sport (2005-08-12). Retrieved on 2006-06-05.
  11. ^ Chelsea to sign Jon Obi Mikel (HTML). Chelsea Football Club (2006-06-02).
  12. ^ "Obi Keeps Mum", Supersport News, 2006-01-27. Retrieved on 2006-06-02.
  13. ^ "Man Utd ask for Chelsea sanctions", BBC, 2006-01-30. Retrieved on 2006-06-02.
  14. ^ "Reds Agree £12m Mikel Fee With Chelsea", Manchester United, 2006-06-02. Retrieved on 2006-06-02.
  15. ^ "Champs Chelsea secure Obi Mikel permit", ESPNsoccernet, 2006-07-19. Retrieved on 2006-07-19.
  16. ^ "July Diary: Overlapping seasons and emotions", Chelsea FC, 2006-08-01. Retrieved on 2006-08-11.
  17. ^ "Sorry Mikel attempts to save Chelski career", Football365.com, 2006-11-17. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.
  18. ^ "Mikel Antics Causing Concern", Sky Sports, 2006-11-16. Retrieved on 2006-11-23.

[edit] External links


Chelsea F.C. - Current Squad

1 Čech | 3 A. Cole | 4 Makélélé | 5 Essien | 6 Carvalho | 7 Shevchenko | 8 Lampard | 9 Boulahrouz | 10 J. Cole | 11 Drogba | 12 Mikel | 13 Ballack | 14 Geremi | 16 Robben | 18 Bridge | 19 Diarra | 20 Ferreira | 21 Kalou | 22 Hedman | 23 Cudicini | 24 Wright-Phillips | 26 Terry | 40 Hilário | 41 Ma-Makalambay | Manager: Mourinho