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After NFF Election’s Intrigues, A New Era?

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I salute the newly elected President of the Nigeria Football Federation, NFF, for surviving the hurdles that stood in his path at the elections that almost did not hold following the abracadabra of court orders, an old tactic that once again succeeded in providing the Joker in a beleaguered electoral process, in the dying minutes to September 30.
Manipulating the electoral process through court orders is not new in NFA elections. It was deployed several times in the past to drive agenda in support of any candidate favoured by the government. This time around, the same ‘weapon’ was effectively used against the Sports Ministry, rendering it helpless in determining who became President of the Federation.
It was not possible that the Ministry of Sports would not have a preferred candidate. But, without doubt, Ibrahim Musa Gusau was not the choice this time around.
The Ministry’s support had worked well in the past, particularly since State FA Chairmen became the dominant force in the Elective Congress of the Federation. Whosoever secured the votes of the majority of the State FA Chairmen, determined who became President.
When Amos Adamu was the most powerful man in Nigerian sports, he would get the Minister of sports to call up State Governors to instruct their State FA Chairmen to support the Government’s pick of Chairman.
He might also influence where the elections held, using the opportunity to get the host State governor to fete members and influence their votes.
Eventually, the elections became a ‘money-game’. Whoever had the fattest purse would pay their way through ‘poor’ State FA Chairmen to success. Gradually, the power to elect the President receded from the Sports Ministry.
That’s what came to the open following last week’s elections in Benin City. Ibrahim Gusau, not the preferred candidate of government, won the Presidential election.
He was the choice candidate of some mostly Northern State FA Chairmen who were determined to return the levers of power of Nigerian football to the North. That was the primary motivation. Money, of course, was recklessly spread amongst the delegates. They collected it, but did not deliver the votes, leading to ugly scenes at the end where refunds of the ‘bribes’ were demanded by some losers.
In Benin, all permutations failed except the one that a few friends had told me weeks before the elections had been hatched, sealed and delivered to Ibrahim Gusau by his supporters.
In several circles, the talk of Ibrahim Gusau becoming the next President had been long in muted discourse. Former Secretary General of the NFA, Mallam Sani Toro, had told me. So did Benedict Akwuegbu, the former Super Eagles player from Jos. Ben actually withdrew from the Presidential race in order to support his friend, Ibrahim Gusau.
A few other influential friends had also confided in me that only an amendment to the Elective Congress could produce anybody else but Gusau. The votes had been computed long before the elections.
It happened just as they had predicted. On the eve of the elections, I told Onome Obruthe, my colleague in The Sports Parliament, the popular Nigerian television show, and he would not believe me. Until it actually happened.
The Northern group were, as usual very smart in their strategy and politics. In discussing with most of the presidential candidates (excluding the eventual winner) I kept wondering where they got the confidence that they exhibited from; how they believed that without changing the fundamental rules of the ‘game’ they could win.
Each of them demonstrated belief in the quality of their manifesto, their antecedents in the game, their qualifications, their public presentations, and assured financial support from their State governors and some stakeholders.
Little worked this time, except the solid and untouchable pact of Ibrahim Gusau with his group of loyal FA Chairmen that insisted it was the turn of the North to rule, by an embedded member that is untainted by the shenanigans of the out-going regime. In a pact was non-negotiable, with or without financial resources to bribe delegates, the person will be delivered as the next President to promote their interest.
The other northerners in the list of candidates were all outside the loop of that understanding and stood no chance. Gusau was an insider. He is a smart politician. He is a team player to the core, an old war horse in the NFF politics. I knew this from almost two decades ago when I sought to become Chairman of the NFF. I recall my close encounter with him.
He was Chairman of Zamfara State FA and well-established within the NFA hierarchy. I knew the influence he wielded, even then. I knew the ways of the north. I grew up there. My step-mother was a Kanuri-Fulani woman from Gombe. I spoke the language even better than mine.
As part of my strategic consultation, I drove all the way from Lagos to Gusau in Zamfara State to meet with Ibrahim Gusau. When he saw me at his doorsteps, he almost collapsed in a pleasant shocked.
His words during that encounter demonstrated to me the sort of person that he is. He liked and respected my person and my place in Nigerian football.
He also more than appreciated my coming all the way to consult with him personally. He knew my capacity to deliver on my vision and plans for Nigerian football. But there was only one issue, he had given his word to another candidate, a respected Northerner that he believed would also deliver.
His word was his bond, he told me. He could easily lie to me and assure me he would work for me and then do otherwise. But he would not because to do so would be to pay a heavy spiritual price, later.
My respect for him, from that day, grew.
I thanked him and left, knowing that the man belonged in the group of decent and honourable persons. I also sensed he was one to watch out for in the future.
From that evening in Gusau we became ‘remote’ friends, respecting each other and sharing the occasional banter. During one of the sittings of the 10-Year Football Masterplan, Ibrahim Gusau presented the official paper from the NFF. That session revealed what were going on inside the NFF that were not in tandem with what the committee was developing as recommendations.
I sensed he would bid to be the next NFF Presidential candidate. I do not know what all the other candidates depended on to change the dynamics of an election that was designed to stop anyone attempting to break into the exclusive club of State FA Chairmen.
Till the very end, my contacts kept insisting that Gusau would coast ‘home’ to victory for as long as the elections held last week in Benin. He was the one that stood most resolutely against the idea of an Amaju-Third term agenda, and told him so to his face.
That’s why, even if he did not ‘blow’ Dollars like some others did, did not have the academic and professional credentials that some dangled, did not display the sophistication and flamboyance of some, did not enjoy the advantage of having the elections in his own State, and did not even have the support of the Sports Ministry, to have beaten the odds and won the elections meant he earned it!
What shape will an NFF under Ibrahim Gusau take?
Already the sound bites from him speak loudly.
I can already see deft moves to smoothen the rough road ahead. As a man of some compromise, he would give up a lot to survive, particularly to make his reign more peaceful and, hopefully, more successful.
He said he will work closer with the Sports Ministry; he will embrace some dialogue with the Players Union; he will pursue the Presidential ‘advise’ of expanding the elective Congress but not at the expense of surrendering the power of State FA’s; he will work with the newly introduced Interim Management Committee, IMC, and give the domestic leagues a new fillip.
Generally, I foresee that his reign will be more peaceful, inclusive, and very different from the experiences of the last eight years.
If he steers clear of all the ‘wahala’ of previous regimes and charts a new path, he might bring about a new era for Nigerian football.
I wish Ibrahim Gusau the best of luck during his reign after he must have first survived the remnant of a few dark and scattered clouds that still hang quietly and dangerously around the 30th of September elections.
Odegbami, an Ex-International lives in Lagos

By: Segun Odegbami

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La Liga: Atletico Bring Real Back To Earth

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Atletico Madrid scored five goals against city rivals Real for the first time in nearly 75 years when they fought back from behind in a pulsating derby.

It was only the fourth time Atletico had scored at least five in a Madrid derby, the last occasion being a 6-3 victory in November 1950.

Real lost for the first time this season, having won all six of their opening La Liga matches as well as their first Champions League tie, a 2-1 victory over Marseille.

The last time Real conceded as many in La Liga was a 5-1 defeat by Barcelona in October 2018.

Robin le Normand’s header had given Diego Simeone’s side an early lead that was overturned by superb goals from Kylian Mbappe and Arda Guler.

But Alexander Sorloth levelled the game at 2-2 in stoppage time at the end of the first half.

And the hosts took charge after the break when Julian Alvarez, who had hit the post in the first half, converted from the penalty spot before curling home a brilliant free-kick.

Atletico went into their shell, but held their cross-city rivals at bay until Antoine Griezmann grabbed their fifth goal deep into stoppage time.

The result maintained an impressive record against Real in La Liga for Simeone’s side, who have not lost in their past six league encounters with Los Blancos.

PSG Regain Top Position In France (7)

Paris St-Germain returned to the top of Ligue 1 with a comfortable victory over Auxerre at the weekend.

Illia Zabarnyi scored his first goal for the club since his summer move from Bournemouth when he volleyed in at the back post from Vitihna’s cross at the Parc des Princes in Paris.

The home side doubled their lead when Lucas Beraldo headed home from Senny Mayulu’s cross.

PSG moved above Marseille, who beat them on Monday, as they made it five wins from their opening six league matches.

Auxerre had their chances, with a fierce shot from Kevin Danois striking the woodwork and Sekou Mara having a header cleared off the line.

There were further opportunities for Luis Enrique’s side but Achraf Hakimi’s dink was ruled out for offside and Bradley Barcola sent a header over the bar.

Auxerre are 13th in the table with four defeats from six matches.

PSG travel to Barcelona on Wednesday in their second Champions League group stage match.

Before the PSG match, Marseille scored two late goals to move level on points with hosts Strasbourg and go top of Ligue 1 on goal difference.

Strasbourg looked on track to move four points clear at the top until the 78th minute as Abdoul Ouattara’s goal had them ahead.

But former Arsenal and Chelsea striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang grabbed the equaliser, and Amir Murillo completed the turnaround as the clock ticked into added time.

Aubameyang was first to the rebound following his own shot to level the score after goalkeeper Mike Penders spilled the initial shot.

Penders, on loan from Chelsea, seemed to have done better in stoppage time when he tipped substitute Robinio Vaz’s header onto the crossbar, but the rebound landed with Murillo.

Marseille were top with five teams all on 12 points, including Strasbourg who were in fifth place.

Kane Sets Elite Scoring Record With Bayern  (5)

Harry Kane scored twice in Bayern Munich’s win over Werder Bremen last Friday to become the fastest player this century to reach 100 goals for a club playing in one of Europe’s top five leagues.

The England captain won and converted a penalty on the stroke of half-time, before firing home from close range in the 65th minute to reach the century mark in just 104 games.

The previous record of 105 games was set by Cristiano Ronaldo while playing for Real Madrid in 2011, and matched by Manchester City striker Erling Haaland last year.

Former Liverpool winger Luis Diaz had opened the scoring when he deflected in a Jonathan Tah flick from a corner, while Konrad Laimer slipped home a late fourth as leaders Bayern preserved their unbeaten start to the season.

Kane broke two other records in his side’s 4-1 victory against Hoffenheim last weekend, during which he scored a hat-trick.

He reached 70 Bundesliga goals in just his 67th game in the competition, faster than anyone else in the league’s history.

Previously, the 32-year-old broke the record for the most goals scored in 50 Bundesliga games (54 goals), and the fewest number of games needed to reach 50 goals in the competition (43 matches).

On Friday, Kane also became the first player in Bundesliga history to convert their first 18 penalties, as well as score 18 consecutive spot-kicks.

Kane was the first player in Bundesliga history to finish top scorer in both his first two seasons, and the only player to score 25 or more goals in their first two campaigns in the competition.

He has started this campaign with 15 in eight games in all competitions – including two hat-tricks in five Bundesliga games, with Vincent Kompany’s side top of the league table with a 100% record.

Kane is the highest scoring Englishman in Champions League history (42 goals), and scored against all 20 teams he has faced in the Bundesliga.

Only Miroslav Klose has played against more sides, while scoring against all of them (28).

Kane joined Bayern from Tottenham Hotspur in a £100m transfer in 2023, having scored 280 goals in 435 games in all competitions for the Premier League club.

He has two years remaining on the four-year contract he signed with the Munich outfit, although he has recently been linked with former club Spurs and Manchester United.

But when asked on Friday if he was thinking of a Premier League return, Kane said: “No, not at the moment. I’m really happy here. I have two years left on my contract.

“I’m enjoying every moment. That is not in my thought process. I’m enjoying it with the team, with the coach, and hopefully we continue to be successful.”

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Forest Still Looking For Winning Formula 

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Ange Postecoglou’s difficult start to life as Nottingham Forest head coach continued as Omar Alderete’s first-half goal gave Sunderland victory at the City Ground.

The former Spurs boss, appointed on 9 September, has now lost three and drawn two of his first five games in charge, with Saturday’s loss coming in his first home game with Forest.

But the hosts will feel aggrieved by the manner of Sunderland’s winner, with the visitors awarded a free-kick when Nicolas Dominguez was penalised for simulation when he clashed with Trai Hume while attempting to clear.

Grant Xhaka sent the ball in from the set-piece and Alderete was there to direct it into the net.

Dan Ndoye came close to equalising just before the break with a deflected effort before Chris Wood headed over.

Elliot Anderson curled a shot just over the bar as Forest pushed for the leveller in the second half, while Robin Roefs, who has been excellent for Sunderland so far this season – saved well from Omari Hutchinson, Wood and a long-range Anderson effort.

But despite the pressure, Forest could not find a goal as promoted Sunderland’s third win of the season moved them up to third in the table.

Forest, meanwhile, are 16th with just one win from their first six Premier League games.

 

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Man Utd Lose, Again 

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Manchester United skipper Bruno Fernandes had a second-half penalty saved as Ruben Amorim’s side slipped to a Premier League defeat at Brentford at the weekend.

United were trying to fight their way back after Igor Thiago capitalised on some shambolic United defending inside the first 20 minutes to give the home side a two-goal cushion.

Benjamin Sesko pulled one back with his first goal since making a £74m summer move from RB Leipzig.

Fernandes was given the chance to level when Bees captain Nathan Collins dragged former Brentford forward Bryan Mbeumo back inside the area.

After a delay of almost five minutes, which included a video assistant referee red card check against Collins and Brentford making two substitutions, Fernandes’ low effort was turned away by Caoimhin Kelleher.

Brentford wrapped it up deep in stoppage time when Mathias Jensen drove a high shot past United goalkeeper Altay Bayindir from the edge of the area.

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