Editorial

Time To Play Politics Of Int’l Football

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A couple of weeks ago, Nigeria’s flag bearers in the Confederation of African Football, CAF clubs competitions, the Champions League and Confederation Cup, Rivers United and Plateau United FCs and Kwara United FC, respectively, were dished raw deals in the final round of their qualifiers for the group stage of their respective competitions.
All the clubs faced North African opponents in that decisive round. Rivers United played defending champions, Wydad AC of Morocco, Plateau United battled elite Tunisian Club, Esperance du Tunis, while Kwara United confronted Confederation Cup champions, FC Berkane of Morocco. The first leg encounters, all played in Nigeria, ended without much incident with the Nigerian clubs billed to be walking tight rope considering the manner and margin of their first leg victories.
While Rivers United beat Wydad 2-1 at the Adokiye Amiesimaka Stadium, Port Harcourt, Plateau edged Esperance 2-1 and Kwara United overcame Berkane 3-1. With all of them coming from behind to record slim victories, except Kwara United, which had a two-goal cushion, the return legs were considered an uphill task by many.
True to expectation, the Nigerian clubs had bitter tales to tell in the return leg matches as three of them fell to the superior antics and fireworks of their North African opponents. Esperance pipped Plateau United 1-0, Berkane beat Kwara United 2-0, while Wydad AC whipped Rivers United 6-0 to see all the Maghareb clubs advance to the next round of their competitions at the expense of their Nigerian counterparts. Perhaps, if the clubs had lost without much off- the- field incidents, there would have been minimal concern, but the worrisome stories that trailed the treatment handed out to the clubs on arrival, before and after the matches left so much room for suspicion.
All the clubs and Rivers United in particular were denied the opportunity to train as they were barred from leaving their hotel and security operatives used to limit their movement, they were even refunded money paid for a training facility secured independently. In fact, a lot of behind the scene manipulations were put up to not only ruffle the feathers of Rivers United, palpable hostility and intimidation were employed to unsettle the players on and off the pitch.
Beyond the antics of the teams, some of the actions and body language of CAF have raised some salient issues and concerns whether some sections of the continent are deliberately aided to have advantage over others.
We are concerned that in the last round of the qualifiers against the North African teams, all the first leg matches were scheduled to hold in Nigeria, while the return legs were at away venues. Also, all the match officials were chosen from the same region. While we are not questioning the fairness of the match officials, we think that having a neighbor as an arbiter can embolden one to try to do what he may not ordinarily do. Interestingly, this kind of scenario is not limited to the clubsides. Even the national teams at different times have had reasons to cry out as a result of maltreatment, hostility, violence and outright biased officiating that have denied them a level playing ground in continental matches.
That is why we believe that it is time for football administrators in the country, from the clubs to the national teams to begin to take more than a passing interest in the politics of international sports and football in particular. Often times, we go out of our way to make visiting clubs more than comfortable when they visit, while our teams go through terrible experiences away from home. Indeed, football is friendship and encourages fair play, according to FIFA, it is time to assert ourselves in the dark arts of football politics in the continent. While we neither preach hooliganism nor encourage undue hostility, we think that football has become a serious business and should attract the kind of approach that should see our teams getting the better of their opponents within the rules of the game.
It is also important that players and officials at national and club levels are duly educated in the politics and antics obtainable in the sport to enable them put in the graft needed to succeed at all times. They need the right training to be equipped against the naivety that has cost not only club sides but the national teams in crucial engagements.
Our officials at the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) should equally begin to bring their experience and contacts to bear in ensuring that lopsided provisions of CAF’s rule of engagement that seem to favour a particular region or section of member nations are identified and amended in the interest of all.
Football in Nigeria has come a long way, it has got to a stage the country should not be toyed with easily, whether at home or abroad and it is in her own interest for all stakeholders to know what is expected of them to deliver the goods at any point in time. Our club sides and indeed the national teams may not be able to attain the highest point possible if we continue to wallow in ignorance or play the nice guy, always.

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