Sports
TNVN Plan Ten Years Tennis Summit In Nigeria
Nigeria was once one of the best tennis-playing nations in the world. Although nobody from the country has won any of the Grand Slam titles, there was a time when Nigerian players were always in the equation when permutations of upcoming events were being made.
Then, especially in the 1970s up till the early 1990s, Nigeria had players like Nduka Odizor, David Imonitie, Tony Mmoh, and Sadiq Abdullahi, who not only brought glamour to the country’s game but was also good enough to compete successfully in the world circuit.
When Odizor, who was once ranked number 52nd in the world, eased off the challenges of Loic Courteau of France in the third round, seven-time Grand Slam winner John McEnroe’s doubles partner Peter Fleming of U.S. in the second round, and Guillermo Vilas of Argentina in the first round at the Wimbledon in 1983, many tennis watchers thought that at last, Nigeria had come to take its position in the comity of tennis playing nations. But that has not happened 40 years after.
Although Nigeria held its own in the Davis Cup, which is the tennis World Cup, up until the late 1990s, the country has not been able to fulfill its potential in the game that guarantees fame and fortune for its talented players.
As a matter of act, the country’s game has been on a downward spiral since the turn of the century such that it no longer features among elite African tennis-playing nations.
There have been efforts to revive the game in the recent past, but some of such efforts have not yielded the desired results. The introduction and/or revival of such competitions as the Ogbe Hard Court, Dala Hard Court, Governor’s Cup Lagos Tennis Championship, and the CBN Open Championship has only served to keep the game in the minds of its connoisseurs. They have not solved the problem of talent development that has bedeviled the country for so long. But that could be about to end.
Africa’s former number one star, Dr. Sadiq Abdullahi, believes that The Tennis Nigeria Vision Network (TNVN), which he champions, will, in 10 years from 2025, produce talented players that would take the country back among the world’s elite tennis-playing nations.
Describing TNVN as the formula the country needs to get back its place as Africa’s top nation in the game, Abdullahi said the programme has been formulated in such a way that talented young boys and girls across the country would find the pathway to greatness in the sport.
He explained: “TNVN is about identifying the most talented players from the zones. We have decided that if we can get two to four talented players from each of the zones and the FCT, then the vision will now seek resources for them, and take them through a path to success.
“The programme has residential and non-residential stages, which will lead to the after-school class and then to the elite programme. The first part of the vision is like a mini tennis stage, which ensures that every programme across the country will be registered with us. In it, the coaches will independently be working with their normal five to 10 players, with the best players identified and registered for proper development.
“We expect that every zone of the country will have an activity going on with players in the nine-to-five group and from this group we should be able to identify one or two talented players, who will move into the second phase, which is the primary school class. Once they get into primary school, we start monitoring and guiding them. But the primary school programme will still be non-residential because they are under-age.
“However, in agreement with their parents, we will take the talented ones to some designated schools, where they will be given specialised coaching to develop into elite players.”
Abdullahi revealed that TNVN would provide a tennis curriculum for schools involved in the project and ensure that they meet the requirements needed to continue being part of the programme.
“For example, if they are in a specialised secondary school, which starts from age 10, they will be in that school for six years, which means that they will graduate at 16 and after graduation, the best will join the elite programme. The Segun Odegbami School is willing to take four of the participants, boys or girls, who will stay in the school until they graduate at 16. If they meet all the criteria, they will move to the elite programme, which starts with players at age 17. They stay in the programme at the age of 17 or 18 and if they are outstanding, they will go into the professional ranks. But there are some conditions they have to meet to be in the elite class. That in essence, is what the vision entails.”
Abdullahi said TNVN would not be hampered by inadequate or lack of facilities as the participating schools must have at least two tennis courts to be part of the programme. He added that the project would encourage politicians to include tennis courts in their constituency projects to ensure the availability of the facility to even those who may not be part of the programme.
“Before you join us, you must have a programme and at least two or three tennis courts. But we can work with governments or politicians who want to do constituency projects. We can help them to build tennis courts if they want to build a sports centre.
“Facility is not the problem, but the funding. We need a lot of money for the programnme. It is developmental. Once a kid meets all the requirements and at 12 years old, that kid must be ready to attend world junior ranking events. At 12 years old, we will be taking the kids to the United States for further training and exposure. At 12, 13, and 14 you need to be in the junior circuit.
“Our problem is in identifying good coaches that will stay with modern coaching and then parental agreement, and all of that because if a kid meets our criteria, then we want to prepare that kid for the challenges in the circuit.
“If a kid does not attend world junior ranking events at 12, then he is not meeting the criteria. You see, the standard is very high.”
According to the Seoul 1988 Olympics star, if the TNVN project could get two talented players from each region and the FCT, it would have 12 solid players to train to international standards. That would guarantee Nigeria players for the Davis Cup and other top competitions.
“The project will start in 2025 and we are saying to Nigerians, give us 10 years and after these years, you will start seeing results. If somebody gets into the vision at 10, at 20 there must be something to hold on to. They should be on the pro circuit at 19 years. For the girls, maybe at 17 years. That is the vision.”
Abdullahi disclosed that one of the big challenges facing TNVN is how to sell the vision to corporate Nigeria and critical tennis stakeholders. He added: “This is a national developmental project that requires the buy-in of all stakeholders. This is my last effort at building something for Nigeria. It is not going to be easy and after it, I am done.
“However, I am excited because we have tennis courts in elite clubs in the country, even though some of the clubs do not allow children to learn with their facilities.
“In today’s world, one person cannot develop a player to international standard. We need everybody involved in tennis to be part of this project. We know that some people make money from organising tennis tournaments, but we are not trying to stop them. Rather, we will help them to make more money by developing players that will attract sponsors and big opportunities for the country.”
He acknowledged that North Africans and South Africa have good programmes that have kept their tennis on top in the continent. He added, however, that Nigeria’s population should be an advantage because the country has a large pool of talent to draw from.
“These countries have active tennis federations and good coaches. They have programmes that identify talents quickly, from ages nine and 10. Every opportunity they get, they train their kids to hit the ball correctly. They have better facilities than Nigeria, but we can overcome that handicap first by building a tennis culture in our people.
“When we have children of ages five, six, and seven years old, we can involve them in mini tennis, which doesn’t require that they leave their house to play the game. Parents can start training their children in small corners of their compounds, play with their children and get them started from that little space.”
He said that unity schools across the country would play significant roles in the programme because most of them have tennis courts.
“The plan is to identify the unity schools that have tennis courts and the leaders of the zones will now visit the schools to check out the state of the courts. Primary schools that also have tennis courts would serve as centres for the out-of-school programme.
By: Christian Okpara
Sports
Forest Embarrass Liverpool At Anfield
Liverpool’s season of abject misery worsened as they were beaten with embarrassing ease by a hugely impressive Nottingham Forest at Anfield.
Arne Slot’s Premier League champions were looking to bounce back from a heavy defeat at Manchester City, but instead ran into a Forest side revitalised under new manager Sean Dyche and looking back to their best.
Liverpool head coach Slot gave £125m British record signing Alexander Isak a start, but he was totally anonymous once more and only lasted 67 minutes.
Forest went ahead after 33 minutes when defender Murillo shot powerfully past fit-again Liverpool keeper Alisson to subdue an already anxious Anfield.
Igor Jesus had a second ruled out for handball, but Forest doubled their advantage 39 seconds after the break when former Liverpool defender Neco Williams set up Nicola Savona for a crisp finish in front of The Kop.
Liverpool could barely raise a response in a desperate display, Forest increasing their lead 12 minutes from time when Morgan Gibbs-White scored after Alisson saved from Omari Hutchinson.
It means Liverpool, who lie 11th before Saturday’s late fixture, have now lost six of their past seven Premier League games as Slot’s near £450m summer spending spree comes under further scrutiny.
Forest, meanwhile, are surging away from the relegation zone and are up to 16th.
Sports
Bundesliga: Oliseh Stars As Bayern Rebound To Thrash Freiburg
Michael Olise scored twice and provided a hat-trick of assists as Bundesliga leaders Bayern Munich came from two goals down to thrash Freiburg.
The visitors stunned the defending champions by taking a 2-0 lead after just 17 minutes when Yuito Suzuki scored from close range and Johan Manzambi rose highest to head home Jan-Niklas Beste’s corner.
Bayern, who had not lost in the league since March, responded superbly and had restored parity by half-time.
Teenager Lennart Karl fired into the bottom corner from Olise’s pass in the 22nd minute and set up the Frenchman for a fierce finish in first-half injury-time, although Freiburg goalkeeper Noah Atubolu should have done better.
Bayern took control in the second period as Dayot Upamecano headed home Olise’s corner to put them ahead for the first time.
England captain Harry Kane netted his 14th league goal of the campaign on the hour mark, before Olise made it three assists when he threaded a pass through for Nicolas Jackson to finish at the first time of asking in the 78th minute.
Winger Olise completed a sensational afternoon with his second of the game six minutes later, driving at the Freiburg defence and curling into the far corner.
A 10th victory in the first 11 games left Bayern eight points clear of second-placed Bayer Leverkusen, while Freiburg remain 10th in the standings.
Vincent Kompany’s side visit Arsenal in the Champions League on Wednesday with both sides having a perfect record of four wins so far in the league phase of the competition.
AS FAR Morocco Win African Women’s Champions League (8)
AS FAR held firm to beat debutants ASEC Mimosas 2-1 in the African Women’s Champions League final and become continental champions for the second time.
Hanane Ait El Haj put the Moroccan club ahead from the penalty spot in the 13th minute after Safa Banouk had been tripped by Aboa Yapo.
ASEC Mimosas rallied after the break and Ami Priscal Diallo netted a fine header from Sopie Brou’s cross to drag the Ivory Coast club level 10 minutes into the second half.
But AS FAR were handed a second spot-kick in the closing stages when Noura Diarra committed a rash challenge on Sofia Bouftini.
This time it was Zineb Redouani who stepped up to stroke home in the 85th minute and restore her side’s lead.
Asastasie Gbehi came close to forcing extra time but she poked wide of the post in stoppage time, and the centre-back was sent off after the full-time whistle for dissent.
AS FAR move level with South Africa’s Mamelodi Sundowns as two-time winners of the title, having first lifted the trophy in 2022.
The Rabat-based side will now take on Chinese’s Wuhan Jiangda on 14 December for a place at next year’s Fifa Women’s Champions Cup.
The winner of that match will face European champions Arsenal in the semi-finals of the inaugural competition early next year in London.
Sports
Barca Impress On Return To Camp Nou
Barcelona moved to the top of La Liga on Saturday with an emphatic win over 10-man Athletic Club in their first match at the Spotify Camp Nou since May 2023.
Robert Lewandowski scored their first goal back in their iconic home, which had been closed for extensive renovations, in the fourth minute.
Ferran Torres then netted twice in the second half, each assisted by wonderful skill from Lamine Yamal, who was aged just 15 in his only previous Nou Camp appearance.
Fermin Lopez also struck in the 48th minute, while visiting midfielder Oihan Sancet was sent off for a crude challenge on Lopez just six minutes later.
Large sections of the Nou Camp remained closed for the game, which was played in front of a 45,157 crowd.
The rebuilding work, which was originally scheduled to be finished in November 2024, will eventually increase the stadium’s capacity to 105,000.
Barca moved to 31 points from 13 games and top on goal difference, but Real Madrid had the chance to replace them, if they won at Elche in their game in hand, late last night.
Poland striker Lewandowski got his side off to the perfect start when he drove his low shot in off the arm of Athletic Club goalkeeper Unai Simon for an eighth league goal of the season.
The home side extended their lead in first-half added time as Yamal’s superb pass off the outside of his foot set up Torres for a good finish.
Lopez made it 3-0 three minutes after the restart, drilling a shot past Simon from near the penalty spot.
Sancet’s tackle from behind on Lopez was initially deemed a yellow card, but upgraded to red after the referee consulted with the video assistant referee (VAR).
And just before full-time, Yamal twisted and turned before sending Torres away to claim his second goal, which was originally disallowed for offside but overturned following a VAR check.
It was a dream return to their ground, with the reigning Spanish champions having mostly played at the 55,000 capacity Olympic Stadium on the city’s Montjuic hill since renovations on the Nou Camp began in June 2023.
They were forced to play two matches at the 6,000-capacity Johan Cruyff Stadium, home to their women’s team, this season after failing to get a permit for the Nou Camp through safety reasons.
Pogba Returns To Action In Ligue 1 (6)
Paul Pogba played his first minutes of professional football in more than two years as he came off the bench during Monaco’s 4-1 defeat by Rennes at the weekend.
The 32-year-old was introduced in the 85th minute at Rennes’ Roazhon Park, though his side were already four goals and a player down, following a red card for captain Denis Zakaria.
French World Cup winner Pogba broke down in tears when he joined Ligue 1 club Monaco last summer, after his four-year doping ban was reduced to 19 months by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas).
Pogba’s last competitive appearance was 811 days ago, when he featured for Juventus in a Serie A match against Empoli on 3 September 2023. He left Juventus by mutual consent in November 2024.
Pogba was provisionally banned from football for four years after a positive test for dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) in February 2024, following a doping test in August 2023.
Pogba maintained it was a mistake and that he was given a supplement without knowing it contained a banned substance.
The former Manchester United midfielder was permitted to return to football in March following the decision to reduce his ban.
Pogba watched from the bench as goals from Abdelhamid Ait Boudlal, Mahdi Camara, Breel Embolo and Ludovic Blas put Rennes out of sight.
Fellow substitute Mika Biereth pulled a goal back for Monaco in the 95th minute, but a second consecutive 4-1 defeat means Sebastien Pocognoli’s side drop to eighth in the table with 20 points after 13 games.
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