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NFF Secretary Wants Equal Fans’ Attention On Other Sports

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Bolaji Ojo-Oba has challenged Nigerian sports fans to ask critical questions of other sports the same way they ask of football.
Speaking in Abuja early in the week, the FIFA/CAF Match Commissioner and Security Officer said he is of the view that should Nigerians ask of other sports even one tenth of the questions they usually ask of football, leaders of those other sports might also sit up and do something for general sports development.
“I am aware that football is King of sports, but let us not continue to pretend that football is the ONLY sport. That football is the ‘King of sports’ does not mean it is the only sport. Every minute, every hour, we ask questions of football, of the administrators, of the coaches, of the players, of the referees, and so on.
“But we keep quiet about the failings of the other sports and those other sports remain comatose.
“The present administration at the NFF has won five trophies, won Olympic silver, made good changes to administration in terms of personnel and physical edifice, got more partners from the private sector than ever, focused on areas of development and achieved harmony within its rank. Yet, the critics are unsparing, for God knows what.
“This country won her first Olympic medal in boxing (1964 Tokyo Games), and then won another bronze at the 1972 Munich Olympics, and then a silver at the 1984 Games in Los Angeles, long before football won in Atlanta in 1996. What has happened to Nigeria boxing? ”Our country used to be heavyweight in weightlifting at the top level, and there was an era we were much–reckoned with in volleyball in Africa. Where is Nigeria volleyball now?
“There was a Governor’s Cup tennis tournament in Lagos recently where all Nigerian players were beaten black and blue, and several years past, we used to be in serious play in the Davis Cup. What has happened? Recently, there was a FIBA African Basketball Championship in Libya where our team performed woefully. That was allowed to ride without much noise.
“In August, our track and field athletes went to the world championship in Berlin and failed to win a single medal, a trend that had been on for eight years or so. At the Atlanta Olympics 13 years ago, we won gold in women’s long jump. What has happened to athletics? ”Our country used to be the leading light of table tennis and wrestling in the African continent. What has happened to those sports?
“I can go on and on, but nobody appears to care about those sports, most of which have more medals at the Olympics than football. The so–called critics have failed us because they only talk about football, out of more than 30 sports.
“Football is the only sport doing something to lift Nigeria’s name, and yet the detractors go on without end about their perceived ‘downward trend’ of Nigeria football. Those critics also have questions to answer about the genuineness of their intention,” Ojo-Oba said.

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