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Harnessing Nigeria’s Sports Potential

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To many observers
within and outside the country, Nigeria is a nation endowed with so much human and material resources that it ordinarily ought to rank among the best in several sectors of human endeavour in the comity of World nations.
This is, arguably more true in the sports sector in which, with over 120 million people, Nigeria should rub shoulders with the best sporting countries and achievements that there are available.
Indeed, the potentials to achieve such lofty heights abound. From the king of them all, football, to boxing weightlifting, athletics, cycling, team sports and others, the country certainly does not lack in manpower, talents and potentials.
However, sports development in the country has yet to take the sector to the expected level. Despite the fact that sports at the moment remain the only true unifying factor in Nigeria, the sector has continued to witness serious hiccups, especially, in areas of management and policy implementation.
From the evolution of sports as physical and social activities that people freely engaged in, it has permeated the Nigerian society just as it was in many other societies worldwide. Sports development in Nigeria has witnessed a lot of metamorphosis from the colonial pre-independence to post independence eras that it has gone from being just a social phenomenon, entertainment and recreational pasttime to becoming a visible and prominent business phenomenon that could no more be ignored in the socio-political and economic environment of any nation.
Sports touch the hearts of millions of people. They promote national unity and image. An efficient sports system is expected to assist in nation building, provide youth empowerment, wealth creation, employment generation, good health and social mobilisation.
Expectations are that Sports development would contribute to the growth and development of the Nigerian economy, while the overall objective of sports in Nigeria is to become one of the 20 best sporting nation of the world.
A cursory look into the progress made by the sector in 54 years, post independence, would reveal some pockets of positive returns but deep rooted anomaly that has tended to put the march to realising the overall objective on an unwavering leash.
In the recent past, sports in the country have had a mixed-grill of exciting memories and disheartening experiences. While football has consistently kept the country in the map of world achievements, athletics blazed the trail in decades past and need new efforts to be rekindled. At the last Olympics, London 2012 Games, Nigeria performed abysmally when she failed to win any medal, only for the paralympians to, barely three weeks after, raise the profile to 13 medals, six gold, five silver and two bronze.
Also in 2012, the highest number of participants ever in the history of the National Sports Festival, NSF was recorded at the 18th edition, Eko 2012, when 11,045 athletes and officials from all the 36 states and the FCT participated.
In football, the Super Eagles won the 2013 African Cup of Nations held in South Africa to mark the third time Nigeria would rule Africa in the game. The U-20 women national team, Falconets also made the nation proud when they made it to the final of the FIFA U-20 Women World Cup in Germany in 2010, a feat the team repeated a couple of months ago in Canada.
The National U-17 male team, Golden Eaglets after a lull in winning laurels won silver in the 2013 African U-17 championships in Algeria only to conquer the world at the World Cup in United Arab Emirates a couple of months later to secure an unprecedented fourth U-17 world title for Nigeria. At the 2012 World chess Olympiad in Turkey, Nigeria won gold and silver medals, while she finished third position at the 2012 Senior African Wresting championship in Morocco.
These few milestones indicate slight improvement in the stock of sports in the country since the disappointing performance at the 2012 London Olympics.
Indeed, time was when the country was the continent’s leading light in athletics, especially, the sprints, youth soccer, boxing and weightlifting. Unfortunately, the lead position in the areas were lost to poor foresight, lack of planning and executive of policies.
However, the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan took steps to improve Nigeria’s performance in sports, when a Presidential Sports Sector Retreat was held, and a strategic and sustainable sports development and funding plan was fashioned out, to raise a pool of talents and to put Nigeria back on the global sports map. New strategic management activities, which included capacity building and early talent detection to enhance qualitative performance were also introduced.
The new strategic management activities for qualitative performance and mass participation include the capacity building of coaches and administrators, early talent detection and development, policy direction on partnership and collaboration, sports facilities maintenance, central national sports programmes, and national performance monitoring and evaluation.
Also, more forms of competitive sports have been introduced and facilities have continued to be improved and expanded both at the federal and state levels. In addition, the idea of a zonal network of federal stadia has been accepted, with locations in Kaduna, Lagos, Enugu and Abuja.
But the developmental progress has not matched the huge potentials inherent in the country. Regrettably, a myriad of factors, chief of which are maladministration, corruption, lack of professionals in key managerial positions, policy summersaults, selfishness, poor maintenance culture and absence of a conscious effort to institute global best practices in managing the sub sectors and athletes, have combined to hold down development in the sector. The recent crisis in the Nigeria Football Federation, NFF is an apt pointer to the malady in the country’s sports sector.
Undoubtedly, Nigeria boasts all the endowment to take sports to the highest point of development and achievement. It is a belief shared by renowned sports administrator, coach, one of the Icons of Nigeria’s efforts at re-inventing the sports sector and a university Don, Dr. Ken Anugweje.
He, however, is of the opinion that Nigeria has not taken advantage of her potentials and has been left behind by current top sporting nations of the world. According to him, the country failed to move with the time and continued to do the same thing the same way it has been over the decades.
The Doctor, who has contributed to turning the University of Port Harcourt into the leading University in sports in West Africa said that until conscious efforts are made to focus on school sports, early talent discovery and weaning, the county would continue to lag behind. Also, sports academies under big sports institutions with clear cut policy on personnel, catch-them-young approach and up to date data keeping and athlete monitoring would go a long way to taking the country a step closer to expectation.
The first and only Nigerian to win an individual Olympic gold medal, Chioma Ajunwa is of the opinion that Nigeria’s performances in sports in recent times have declined drastically and that the need to reposition it in line with world best practices cannot be over-emphasised.
She believes that the sector has been poorly managed by the wrong hands and so advocates that people with expertise should be allowed to manage sports in order to turn the potentials into results.
“There is need to professionalise sports in Nigeria, and its subsequent removal from the mainstream of civil service. People with expertise, both athletes and managers should be allowed to come in and manage sports. The government in making sports policies, should see the sector as a specialised filed where only the experts should prevail”, said Ajunwa.
For former triple jumper, Mr J. J. Kio, sustained competitions at the grassroots level, especially, the primary and secondary schools would continue to throw up quality talents that would sustain the supply chain for top national and international athletes that will keep Nigeria at the level her abundant endowment deserves.
The Secretary of club owners in Nigeria, Mr. Alloy Chukwuemeka on his part noted that sports development efforts in the country would continue to go in circles unless the absence of an active base for sports development in educational institutions and the communities are addressed. Also, inadequate funding, non-functional database for planning and development, absence of deliberate policy on talent identification and development inadequate corporate support and absence of legislative backing for the establishment of key sports institutions are clogs in wheel of progress as well as frequent changing of sports administrators and lack of both institutional and human capacity for sports development.
Truly, the horizon is bright for Nigeria’s sports industry to excel on and off the field. But the multiple challenges of infrastructure provision and maintenance, selfishness in management, policy implementation and most importantly, athletes morale, motivation and welfare must be addressed. While the sustenance of the country’s achievements should be ensured through deliberate national efforts to develop a comprehensive sports master plan that will be the marker for sports programming at the three tiers of government, focus must be maintained on multiple medal winning sports like combat sports, swimming, weightlifting boxing, cycling, scrabble and chess.

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Football Pundit Lauds Chelle’s Effort In Monitoring Nigeria League Players

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A well-known football pundit in the State, Chief Christopher Okonkwo has lauded the efforts and vision of the Super Eagles Coach Eric Chelle for going from one venue of the Nigeria Domestic Nigeria Professional Football League match to the other in monitoring Nigerian players, with a view to invite some exceptional good one discovered into the main stream of the Super Eagles team.

Okonkwo, who made the commendation in an interview at the Port Harcourt Club recently, described the positive move by Coach Chelle as a good step in the right direction, noting that the practice was how its been done in the past among any contracted coach assigned to tinker the Super Eagles team.

“Truly, it has been an old tradition in the country seeing any newly engaged Coach to lead the National team, visiting some our Nigeria League venues during the league matches to spot light some good talents that could be used to beef up some grey areas in the department of Eagles team”

He, however, frowned at the current situation where our coaches had continously been over depending on the use of foreign based players during invitation of players to the National camp, thereby, relegating the domestic home based league players to the background as if they have nothing much to offer to the team.

“I can vividly recall that the likes of great players in the mode of Finidi George, Taribo West, Kanu Nwankwo, Austin Okocha, Richard Owobokiri, Emmanuel Osuigwe among others started from Nigeria football league before they graduated to play in Europe through which they later invited to Super Eagles camp to represent Nigeria”

“Besides, I’m also of the view that going to secondary school football competitive games could equally serves as a a good platform to discover budding talents that could be nurtured to become great stars in near future”, Okonkwo frankly added.
Okonkwo, therefore, prayed that any football coach to be engaged by the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) to tinker the Super Eagles should be told not to confine himself in staying in big hotel alone but to be visiting some of our local league match venues, with a view to discover some good players that can be drafted into the Super Eagles team.

“Indeed, I stand to be challenged that there some young good players in the Nigeria Professional League. If spotted and exposed, could give the some of the invited foreign based players a stiff competitive fight in securing a postion in the team”, Okonkwo emphatically stated.

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LGA Boss Pledges To Reintroduce School Sports 

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The chairman of the Khana Local Government Area (LGA) of Rivers State, Bariere Thomas, has revealed that plans are underway to commence school sports at the primary and secondary school levels in the area.
According to him, school sports that were primarily used to discover young talents had become a thing of the past, adding that one of the ways to discover young talents is to organize programs that will expose talents at the grassroots level.
Thomas said this on Saturday in an interview with sports journalists shortly after a novelty football match between Khana All-Stars and council appointees.
The match was held to mark the birthday of Felix Ibor, the Supervisor for Education in Khana LGA, at the Bori Police Station field.
The LGA boss reiterated that organizing competitive sporting events in primary and secondary schools is one of the best ways to bring out the best in young people and help to achieve their potential.
“What we are doing in the Khana Local Government Area is to consolidate on the sports we know, which are wrestling, cycling, football, and others,” he said.
He added that he is concerned about the competitive nature of wrestling on the global stage; at Khana LGA, for instance, they are focusing on how to consolidate the sports they know more about.
Thomas described Felix Ibor as an academic whom he has known and worked with since before he became LGA chairman.
He commended both teams for the novelty match, saying that it was held to celebrate Ibor’s birthday.
Ibor thanked the chairman and both teams for celebrating with him, and he prayed that God would also bless them.
Meanwhile, Ibor also presented a set of Jessy to the chairman for the council team.
Kiadum Edookor
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Ezechukwu Eyes Double Gold In African Champs

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Teenage Nigerian sprinter Miracle Ezechukwu has set her sights on winning both the 100m and 4x100m relay titles at the 24th African Athletics Championships in Accra, while also targeting a new personal best in the process, Tidesports source.

Ezechukwu, one of the youngest members of the Nigerian contingent at the championship in Ghana, said her ambition was to win the 100m title in style and cap it with a new personal record.

The fresh secondary school graduate explained that she is fully focused on contributing to Team Nigeria’s medal hopes and is determined to deliver strong performances across her events.

“My main objective in Ghana is to clinch the 100m title and the 4×100m,” Ezechukwu told Tidesports source.

“Nigeria can be assured of my very best and my commitment to the Team. I would love to set a new personal best in Ghana, but anything that comes, I will take it. The spirit in the team is high, and I think we are ready to go,” she said.

Ezechukwu, who was part of Nigeria’s women’s 4x100m relay squad at the World Relays in Botswana, said the experience gained from that competition has strengthened her mindset heading into the continental championships.

She admitted that she learned valuable lessons from her previous outing, including a difficult moment during the relay where an early error affected the team’s rhythm, but said she has used the experience to improve her discipline and composure.

“The secret is just being disciplined, training hard and trusting my coach and believing in God, and the result will show,” she added.

The teenager is part of a 41-member Nigerian team comprising 24 female and 17 male athletes competing at the championships, which begin today at the University of Ghana, Legon.

Nigeria are expected to compete across multiple track and field events as they aim for a strong finish against the continent’s elite athletes.

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