Top Stories

Former Nigerian goalkeeper, Joe Erico is dead

Ex-International and former Super Eagles assistant coach, Joe Erico died on Thursday at the age of 72.

Erico, popularly known as ‘Jogo Bonito’, passed away on Thursday morning in Lagos surrounded by his family, after a brief illness.

A close friend to the family member, Tomiwa Aghedo confirmed the story saying the country’s coaching icon gave up the ghost after complaining of stomach ache.

“I feel sad informing you that coach Joe Erico passed on this morning [Tuesday],” Aghedo told Goal.

“He complained of stomach ache yesterday and he was subsequently rushed to the hospital, where he was told to present his Covid-19 test result before he would be attended to.

ALSO READ:  ‘Musa’ll be a good signing for West Brom’

“Coach Erico went for the test as directed and very early this morning he passed away. It’s terrible news at this point in time and every one of us is devasted.

“We are consoled by the fact that he served Nigeria with all his strength and he lived a good life worthy of emulation.”

Erico began his football career with the Nigerian Police Force, NEPA, Nigeria Railways, Electricity Connectors of Nigeria and Julius Berger – where he won several diadems.

He attracted the national teams’ selectors in 1968 and he was picked to man Nigeria’s goalpost alongside Prince Zion Ogunfeyimi by coach Tiko Jelisavcic for the 1976 Africa Cup of Nations staged in Ethiopia.

There, he played a crucial role as Jelisavic’s men placed third after defeating Egypt 3-2 in the play-off at the Addis Ababa Stadium.

Sadly, his promising football career came to a halt years later while on international duty.

Erico went into administration and he handled his boyhood club Julius Berger where he introduced the Jogo Bonito style – a distinct style of flair in Brazilian football.

ALSO READ:  ‘Musa’ll be a good signing for West Brom’

He was part of the coaching crew that qualified the Nigeria U23 squad for the Sydney 2000 Olympics. Unfortunately, he was fired on the eve of the competition by the Nigeria Football Federation.

Two years later, he was recalled to the national Super Eagles setup as assistant to Amodu Shuaibu. Alongside Amodu and Stephen Keshi, Nigeria qualified for the 2002 World Cup staged in South Korea and Japan. Again, he was axed by the NFF after the country placed third at the 2002 Afcon in Mali.

Coach Erico is survived by his wife and four children. His burial arrangements will be announced in the coming days.

Sporting Tribune

Recent Posts

Giwa rallies support for Osun athletes at table tennis festival

A frontline Osun West Senatorial aspirant for 2027, Quadri Temitayo Giwa, on Monday, made a…

1 hour ago

Dembele’s brace sends PSG past Liverpool into UCL semis

Kvaratskhelia found Dembele, who beat Mamardashvili with pace and power from 20 yards out to…

1 hour ago

UCL: Lookman shines in Atletico’s aggregate win over Barcelona

Atleti will face either Arsenal or Sporting CP in the semi-finals as they look to…

2 hours ago

Mascherano resigns as Inter Miami head coach

The 2025 campaign was record-breaking, with Miami scoring a combined 101 goals across regular season…

2 hours ago

Gov Radda donates 10m to para athletes in Katsina

"We also call for the recruitment of additional coaches and organising secretaries to strengthen our…

2 hours ago

Athletes storm Abuja for National Open Kickboxing Championship, Workshop

The week-long programme aims to upgrade the officials about the new rules of kickboxing, prepare…

3 hours ago

This website uses cookies.