Editorial
PH And Successful Olympic Qualifier
On Sunday, July 19 of this month, Port
Harcourt, the Rivers State capital will
host the nation’s Under-23 football team, Dream Team VI and its Congolese counterpart in the first leg qualifying match for a ticket to the African championships towards the football event of 2016 Rio Olympic Games in Brazil.
The main bowl of the Adokiye Amiesimaka Stadium is the venue for the crucial tie. In fact, it will be the first official football match to be played in the main bowl of the facility.
Given the priority attention the administration of Governor Nyesom Wike has attached to the game, being the first international match that will be hosted by the state after a lull, and the maiden sports assignment of his government, an 11-man Local Organising Committee, LOC, has been working round the clock for the success of the event. The committee’s brief is to ensure the smooth organisation of the game in line with the state’s famed traditional hospitality, organisational savvy, victory compelling vocal support and patriotism toward national assignments.
The Tide is confident that the committee, led by a former Commissioner for Sports in the State, Hon Boma Iyaye and peopled by technocrats like ex-international, Chief Adokiye Amiesimaka, has the competence and experience to deliver an impeccable event.
It is expected that the match will attract the crème-de-la-crème of sports fans, personalities and businessmen from within and outside Nigeria. That is why we think that the task before the LOC is enormous. It must not only ensure that the venue and facilities are top notch but should see the event beyond a football activity.
The opportunity must be used to show to the world that Port Harcourt is once ready to play its leading role in sports and economic promotion and development. That the city is not only safe for recreation and investment but a destination of choice for tourism and other business opportunities.
Furthermore, the hosting of such international contests in Port Harcourt is a positive development that would certainly rub off on the environment. Such age grade international games have the potential to rekindle the interest of our youth in sports and steer their minds away from crime as a means of survival.
Indeed, the LOC must perform their jobs creditably in all fronts to bring about the expected success to the Dream Team VI and the State, while Nigerians and Rivers people in particular must turn out in their numbers with patriotic zeal to support the national team as it prepares and takes on the Congolese opponents.
The match day can only be termed a complete success, if the stadium had a full house. Half filled or half-empty terraces would not be good enough. This calls for immediate and adequate mobilisation through effective publicity of the match, especially as the match holds at the Greater Port Harcourt City axis of the metropolis. With D-day about a week away, time is now a luxury the committee can ill-afford. Football fans in and around the state, and Nigeria must be sensitized to be at the stadium and cheer the Dream Team VI to victory.
The Tide believes that the successful hosting of the match and sustenance of the interest in sports thus far shown by the present government will attract more grade A national, continental and global competitions and activities to the state in the coming months.
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