Many Zambian players are failing to break into Europe’s top leagues because of poor player representation, weak development systems, and declining discipline standards at the grassroots level, according to football coach Nebert Phiri.
Phiri, who is currently head coach of Neelkanth FC in the Copperbelt Provincial Division One League, said that despite Zambia having quality talent, most players end up in “small leagues” abroad before returning home after short stints without making meaningful progress in their careers.
He argued that many transfers involving Zambian players are driven by poorly connected or opportunistic FIFA agents who focus on quick financial gains rather than long-term player development.
“An average football player who has a well-connected FIFA agent is still average,” Phiri said. “What we are seeing is players going to places like Egypt, playing for two seasons, and coming back home to the same club that sent them. They don’t last 10 seasons because they were never prepared for that level.”
Phiri claimed that, “we have quality players in Zambia, but the system has been designed by certain people to promote average talent. Real talent is suppressed, while players who cannot handle competition at the highest level are pushed onto big platforms and eventually fail.”
Zambia not lacking talent- Phiri
He questioned why Zambia has produced very few players competing in elite competitions such as the UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, and CAF interclub tournaments, arguing that the issue is not a lack of talent but poor identification and exposure.
“If football is to improve, we must encourage FIFA agents to identify real quality and push players into Europe’s top five leagues – the English Premier League, La Liga, Serie A, Bundesliga and Ligue 1. Almost all Zambians abroad are in small leagues, and that tells you something is wrong.”
Phiri also pointed to poor coaching methods and weak discipline structures during player development as a major setback.
He alleged that corruption at the grassroots level has also affected talent identification, with some coaches recommending players based on personal gain rather than merit.
“Our talent is available, but we have failed to identify it properly. Instead of producing players who can move from Arsenal to AC Milan to Real Madrid over a 15-year career, we celebrate players moving between the same local clubs within three seasons and call it success,” Phiri said.
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