Sports
Sports: Grappling With Mixed Fortunes
The Sports Sector in Nigeria has always been viewed as one
of the areas of national life that should put the country among the top players
in Africa and the world.
With a population of over 150 million people, the expectation
may not be out of place considering the potentials we are endowed with.
But after 52 years of nation-hood, the sector and indeed
expectations have been a mixed tale of raised hopes disappointments, heartache
and outright embarrassment.
From the 1964 Tokyo Olympics where Nigeria made her Olympic
debut with Nojim Maiyegun winning bronze, the country’s only medal at the Games
in boxing 61-71kg category, the Atlanta 1996 Games where we recorded our best
performance in the history of the Games with two gold, one silver and three
bronze medals to the recently concluded London 2012 Games where the country’s
athletes flopped abysmally, it has been a case of one step forward and several
steps backward.
To date, Nigeria has won a meagre 23 medals a total of two
gold, 10 silver and 11 bronze medals in nine Olympic outings from 1964 in Tokyo
to 2012 in London.
The London 2012 Games marked the highest point of the
country’s slide into the precipice of sports ignominy.
Team Nigeria had raised hopes of a good outing owing to the
performances of Nigeria’s athletes like Blessing Okagbare, Damola Osayemi,
Chika Chukwumerije, the weightlifting and boxing prior to the Games.
Unfortunately, all of them flattered to deceive and the
country left the Games empty handed to the utter embarrassment of the
Government and People of Nigeria.
The humiliation was so much that a national inquest was
called and President Goodluck Jonathan
moved to take concrete steps to restructure and reposition the sports sector.
Contrastingly, the country’s sportsmen and women have farred
better in the Commonwealth Games where it has achieved medal success in every
Games that it participated in, with the 1994 edition in Victoria the most
successful to date. The country achieved 37 podium places, harvesting 11 gold,
13 silver and 13 bronze medals.
Nigeria made its Commonwealth Games debut in 1950 finishing
with a solitary silver medal in men’s high jump, while the Federal Republic of
Nigeria officially joined the Commonwealth in
1960.
To date, the country has recorded a total haul of 176 medals
involving 50 gold, 55 silver and 71 bronze medals.
However, the most pleasing performance by Nigerian athletes
came from the recently concluded London 2012 Paralympics Games.
Where the able bodied athletes went and failed woefully,
physically challenged Nigerians stormed London determined to make up for their
compatriots’ earlier disappointment.
At the end of the day, the Paralympians won six gold medals
and a couple of silver and bronze.
Indeed, the Paralympians, with their performance, have made
giant strides that opened a vista to the potentials of the physically
challenged in our society.
However, despite the current elixir in the country
occasioned by the glorious performance of the paralympic contingent, the truth
remains that our sports can achieve much more glory than it has dared to since
independence.
Football in Nigeria, in spite of being one of the uniting
factors has nose-dived in terms of quality, achievement and organisation.
The Nigerian Premier League, touted as one of the best in
the country which ordinary should supply national team materials to respective
national sides is enmeshed in myriad of problems.
From leadership squabbles leading to litigations to poor
organisation, poor funding and lack of sponsorships, the league is currently in
shambles looking for identity.
Consequently, the clubsides can hardly hold their own in
Continental club competitions.
Apart from Enyimba International FC, Aba no other Nigerian
side has been able to cart home the slite club competition in the continent the
CAF Champion League.
Only four others, Rangers, shooting stars sports club, 3SC
Lobi Stars and Bendel Insurance have been able to bring home glory in the
second and third class competitions.
The situation in the national teams is not different from
that of the league.
Gone are the days when the national teams, be it the Super
Eagles, Flying Eagles, Olympic Eagles and the Golden Eaglets steamrolled them
and instilled fear in opponents even before matches were played.
Now, the national teams, especially, the Super Eagles
struggle to qualify for tournaments despite having immeasureable potentials on
paper.
Apart from the women football teams, Super Falcons,
Falconents and the flaminigoes, who have given Nigerians something to cheer in
the game, from the African women Championships, FIFA women’s U-20 and U-17
World cups, football in Nigeria has been marred by poor performance and
near-success syndrome.
After failing to qualify for the 2006 World Cup in Germany,
the Super Eagles Failed to fly at the South Africa 2010 World Cup, the first to
be held in Africa and capped it all by failing to qualify for the 2012 Africa
Cup of Nations in Equatorial Guinea and Gabon, which saw the untimely exist of
coach Samson Siasia as the national team gaffer.
The youth teams have also found it tough re-enacting the
nation’s glory days of the 1980’s and 1990s.
But the trend had not always been like this. It is believed
that the major problem with sports in Nigeria is that of policy implementation,
inadequate funding, selfish administrators and poor infrastr4uture.
It is no longer news that Sports facilities across Nigeria
are in terrible shape and this in no small way has affected the development of
Sports in the country.
Poor management of facilities and poor preparations have
been largely responsible for the poor performance of the nation’s Sportsmen and
women in both continental and world championships, making it difficult to
develop and inject fresh blood into Team Nigeria’s contingent.
The situation has even worsened to the extent that the
entire country can only boast of one stadium, U.J. Esuene Stadium, Calabar,
good enough to host Super Eagles’ International matches.
The Abuja National Stadium built about 10 years ago at the
cost of N57.6 billion of tax payers money and others like it is today best
described as a national embarrassment in terms of maintenance.
But all hope is not lost. Nigeria is endowed with abundant
manpower and resources that if the current restructuring effort is followed up
sincerely, the country has the capacity to bounce back and reclaim its place in
the continent and the world.
According to the President, Sports Writers Association of
Nigeria, SWAN, Saidu Abubakar, “until and unless the right things are done
starting from the statutes, especially that of the Nigeria football federation,
NFF, and their elections, coupled with intensifying school Sports and credible
league without government owned clubs, we shall remain where we have been since
the advent of professional soccer and modern Games”.
For the Team Manager of ABS FC, Ilorin, Alloy Chukwuemeka,
faulty Sports Policy and government’s overbearing influence have been the major
bane of the sector.
He however, stated the need for all relevant stakeholders in
the industry to come together to fashion out a new policy framework to chart a
new course via an all indusive sports summit.
However, the expected Sports revolution in Nigeria may have
begun if the decisions of the body, Nigeria Academicals Sports Committee,
NASCOM, recently formed by the National Sports Commission, NSC, on the
directive of President Goodluck Jonathan to revive grassroots Sports through
the schools, are implemented.
According to the committee six national grassroots
championships for academicals in Football, Swimming, Basketball, Tennis, Table
tennis and Track & Field have been put forward with the aim of eradicating
age cheats and keeping the supply line of national athletes open and running.
Nigeria’s sports is indeed full of potentials but the
dividend can only be reaped when the right policies and committed
administrators are made to succeed.
Sports
Amusan Clinches Gold, sets record in Taiwan
Nigeria’s world record holder, Tobi Amusan, continued her impressive 2026 season by winning gold and setting a new meet record in the women’s 100 metres hurdles at the New Taipei Athletics Open in Taiwan on Saturday, Tidesports source reports.
Amusan crossed the line in 12.72 seconds despite running against a slight headwind of -0.3 metres per second, finishing well clear of Chinese Taipei’s Bo Ya Zhang, who took silver in 13.17 seconds.
The performance erased the previous meet record and underlined the 29-year-old’s consistency as one of the dominant forces in women’s hurdling on the international circuit.
The New Taipei victory adds to a string of strong outings this season for the Nigerian. Earlier in the campaign, Amusan claimed her first Diamond League win of the season in Rabat, Morocco, clocking 12.28 seconds to break her own meeting record of 12.45 seconds set in 2025.
That time equalled her season’s best, which she had also posted at the Xiamen Diamond League.
Before Rabat, Amusan had recorded a third-place finish in Shanghai with 12.41 seconds and a runner-up spot in Xiamen with 12.28 seconds, where she was edged by American hurdler Masai Russell.
The season has also included a continental triumph, with Amusan winning gold in the women’s 100 metres hurdles at the African Championships in Accra, helping Nigeria to its first gold medal of the competition.
Her 12.28-second performance remains among the fastest times globally this year and ranks as one of the finest of her distinguished career.
Only her world record of 12.12 seconds, set at the 2022 World Championships in Eugene, Oregon, and the 12.24 seconds she clocked at the Meeting de Paris last year stand above it in her personal all-time list.
A three-time Diamond League champion, Amusan will be looking to reclaim the overall title this season while also preparing for the Diamond League finale and the Commonwealth Games later in the year.
4th
Super Falcons Must Improve- Coach Madugu
Super Falcons head coach Justin Madugu has offered an honest assessment of his side’s performance after Nigeria defeated Senegal 2-1 in an international friendly at the Remo Stars Sports Complex in Ikenne, admitting there is still considerable work ahead of the 2026 Women’s Africa Cup of Nations, Tidesports source reports.
Goals from Asisat Oshoala, who converted a first-half penalty, and Toni Payne gave Nigeria a commanding lead before Sokhna Nogaye’s long-range effort in the 86th minute reduced the deficit and set up a tense finish.
While the nine-time African champions secured the result and met their primary objective of assessing squad depth, Madugu acknowledged the performance was not without its shortcomings.
“It’s a good result, and naturally, when you play any game, you always want to win. This is a preparatory game, and the aim is to assess our readiness, test the strategies we want to execute in the competition, and give players the opportunity to showcase what they can do to provide us with more options,” Madugu told official54fx.
“These are the matches we use to identify which players are fully ready for the WAFCON. It was not a bad game for us, but as you know, there is always room for improvement. Yes, we did well, but we know there is still a lot of work to be done.”
The two sides meet again on Monday, June 8, in the second match of their friendly double-header as both nations continue their WAFCON preparations.
Sports
Govt, Allen Onyema to Immortalise Stephen Keshi
As Nigeria buries one of its legendary football heroes this weekend, the spirit of another late football hero of the same generation is being evoked.
As the body of late Henry Onyenmanze Nwosu, MON, is being committed to mother-earth on Saturday, June 6, in Naze, near Owerri, on
Sunday, June 7, 2026, the first in a two-part series of activities in remembrance of late Stephen Okechukwu Keshi, MFR, the one referred to as ‘the Big Boss’ by the football faithful, will take place in Lagos at the 10th Memorial Lecture organised yearly by a Foundation established by his friends and family at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs, Lagos.
Also, on July 28, 2026, exactly a day to the date (July 29) that Stephen Keshi died 10 years ago in 2016, his contributions as a sports diplomat within Nigeria’s strategic foreign affairs will be showcased and acknowledged. His name will be inscribed in gold letters on ‘the NIIA Sports Diplomacy Wall of Fame’ in everlasting memory of the great Nigerian football hero and patriot.
His name will be an addition to those of 69 other sporting heroes from Nigeria’s history that have already been found deserving of a place on famed Wall.
The ‘NIIA Sports Diplomacy Wall of Fame’ is a national monument established by an agency of the federal government of Nigeria, the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs, to immortalize Nigerians that are known to have made major contributions to Nigeria’s international politics and diplomacy objectives through sports.
On July 28th 2026, it will be 3 years since the edifice was erected within the premises of NIIA in Lagos sponsored by Dr.Allen Onyema and his AirPeace Airline. It is an environment of water fountains, a beautiful garden and a Black marbled-wall on which the names of Nigerian sports heroes considered deserving are inscribed.
The existing list will now be extended to include the name of former Nigerian Green Eagles Captain and national team Coach, Stephen Okechukwu Keshi, CON. He has been considered worthy, and his contributions identified, justified and approved by the NIIA.
The extension of the space on the wall to accommodate his name, plus the small ceremony to be done in his honour, will be courtesy of Dr. Allen Onyema and AirPeace Airline.
Stephen Keshi played and captained the Nigerian national football team. He also coached and managed the National team of Nigeria to an African Cup victory, qualified and took another African national team, Togo, to the FIFA World Cup, personally opened the way and assisted a whole generation of Nigerian and other African football players in the transition to professional ranks in Europe.
Meanwhile, inside the sports diplomacy department of the NIIA, a few other Nigerians athletes are being considered for a place on the wall in the very near future. They include world record breaker and holder,Tobi Amusan; first and only female Olympic Gold medalist, Chioma Ajunwa, and the Atlanta ‘96 ‘Dream Team’ and Olympic Gold medalists.
The honours list is not based on sports achievements only, but on impact in the international diplomatic and political space in conformity with Nigeria’s foreign affairs agenda and objectives!
I remember the great ‘Stefan’, as I called Keshi, very fondly. He called me ‘Segunda Fero’!
Sports
“Nigerian athletics has fallen”
Former national 400m hurdles champion, Olympian Henry Amike, has called for greater investment in athletics, athletes’ welfare, training and competitions to restore Nigeria’s competitiveness in track and field events.
Amike who spoke in Abuja Thursday said the pace of development in Nigerian athletics has fallen short of expectations despite the achievements recorded by previous generations of athletes.
“We expected that after we left the scene, people would take over immediately, but it has taken almost 40 years before things like this are coming up. We are not happy with what we have seen in Nigerian track and field,” he said.
He said that their technical expertise and experience could contribute significantly to policy formulation and institutional reforms within the sector.
Amike, one of Nigeria’s most accomplished track and field athletes, represented the country at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles and the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul.
He competed in the 400 metres hurdles and 4×400 metres relay events.
The Olympian’s most notable international achievement came at the 1987 World Championships in Rome, where he became the first Nigerian athlete to qualify for the final of the men’s 400m hurdles. His personal best time of 48.50 seconds stood as Nigeria’s national record for 35 years before it was broken in 2022.
Amike also won medals at continental competitions and was widely regarded as one of Africa’s leading hurdlers during the 1980s, contributing to Nigeria’s growing profile in international athletics.
Amike, who served as a legislative assistant to the speaker of the House of Representatives, has confirmed his intention to contest the Lagos West Senatorial District seat in 2027.
According to him, his political agenda will focus on youth empowerment, sports development, education and broader socio-economic issues affecting residents of the senatorial district.
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