Mahrez: The next king of African football!

The award ceremony for the 2016 Best African Player of the Year comes up in January in Nigeria.
It is ironic that Nigeria may have one of the strongest national teams in the continent of Africa at the moment, yet the country does not have a single representative in the last five shortlisted players for the 2016 African Player of the Year Award. That speaks volumes.
At the start of the year 2016 the Nigerian national team was in shambles. The Nigerian people had lost all confidence in an unstable team that was ‘wobbling and fumbling’ from match to match, unable to score goals, unable to win matches, unable to convince anyone that they had the same DNA as the team that had made the Super Eagles brand a globally appreciated and respected phenomenon that always entertained with glimpses of huge possibilities in world football.
The two years preceding 2016 were ‘bad’ for Nigerian football, and indigenous coaches were made to bear the brunt of responsibility for not producing a national team of class and of really outstanding players worthy to be crowned best in Africa – an award that Nigeria had completely dominated at a time not too far away in the past.
Looking back at the past few months, even I, the unofficial leader of the anti-foreign coach for Nigeria advocacy group, is now left holding feebly to my nationalistic ideals, and looking on as a change truly has come for the national team with the introduction of a foreign coach and a few players, suddenly, have begun to look good enough candidates to wear the coveted African crown in the near future. Unfortunately, for the 2016 Awards, their surge into reckoning is coming too late in the day.
Last week, Africa made their choices and no Nigerian was shortlisted for the award, understandably. Their own time will come from 2017 when one of the present set of players dazzling beautifully in the Premier League, and with several others coming up faintly on the horizon in other teams in Europe, will reclaim their lost crown and glory. I can guarantee that Victor Moses’ and Kelechi Iheanacho’s names will be high up on the list of candidates in 2017!
That’s why I am in agreement completely with CAF’s final choice of the five players from whom a 2016 African player of the year will be chosen.
Who do I think will eventually wear the crown?