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Nigeria Not Serious To Succeed In Sports – Igali

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Following Team Nigeria’s poor outing at the recently concluded 2024 Olympic Games in Paris. France, former President of the Athletics Federation of Nigeria, (AFN), Mr. Dan Ngerem urged the Federal Government to overhaul sports administration and called for a sound management of athletes.
Adding voice to Mr. Ngerem’s lamentation on the decline in Nigeria’s sports is Dr. Daniel Igali, current President of the country’s Wrestling Federation and an Olympic gold medallist.
Speaking on Team Nigeria’s outing at the Paris Games in a no-holds-barred interview with a Lagos-based radio stations. Dr. Igali declared that Nigeria “is not ready to succeed in sports, we are just talking”.
Excerpts:
“I expected we would be probably able to get a podium performance but it wasn’t to be. As the President of the wrestling federation, I also want to tender my apology to the Nigerian nation, because the expectations were high, not because we had that much investment in wrestling but because we had programmed our athletes for about 10 years and expected one or two of them to get a medal.
He said that the federation presidents, secretaries and technical directors had a meeting with the Sports Minister and the Permanent Secretary some months before the Olympics about their preparations which dove-tailed into projections for medals.
“A lot of the Presidents made promises of winning one or two medals, the projections were about five or six medals from Team Nigeria at that meeting.
However, when I spoke, I was quite factual with the Minister, I made him understand that projections are done scientifically, based on your past two World Championships, because the World Championship is the closest thing to the Olympics. So if you have three world champions, you can say well, give or take, you expect two of them to come back as gold medallists. Or you may have silver medallists and you expect them to upgrade to gold. So I asked them, how many gold medallists did we have in all the sports. We had only one bronze in wrestling from Odunayo Adekuroye and that was what we were going into the Olympics with. So when I heard people (the Sports Minister, Senator John Enoh) say we were going to do better than Atlanta 1996, I asked from where?
Igali stressed that “I understand that we are a country that wants to win badly, we are optimists but let the optimism be based on reality”.
Asked what he thinks is the way forward, the Bayelsa State Sports Commissioner said, “I just hope the President (Bola Tinubu) will now look deep into sports, offer even 50per cent of the funds required for sports, because right now, the funding from government is about 5per cent of what sports require. Maybe President Tinubu should do convene a National Conference on sports development where we will all sit down and thinker with what we think we can do to get sports back on the right path towards the 2028 Olympics but really for 2032”.
Asked on the way forward out of the gloom, the Bayelsa-born sports administrator said that government is not funding sports development but competitions.
“What has been happening is that government doesn’t fund activities of the federations. There is no way you can make commensurate success or progression in sports if you don’t fund federations. I have been a Federation President for about 12 years now and I have not received 10 kobo for the internal programmes of the wrestling federation. Programmes for U-13, U-15, U-17, U-20 and the senior teams which are most times A and B. And we don’t have any. What Nigeria does now is to fund Games like the African Games, Commonwealth Games and the Olympic Games. Everybody wants to be at the Games because there is a lot of estacodes to earn”.
He stressed that what athletes and the federations need are other competitions like the Grand Prix in places like Egypt and Paris where athletes can actually be developed.
“There is no way you can go to the Olympics with your top who competes once a year and expect the athlete to defeat his counterparts from other countries who may have had 30 matches in one year.
When I was in the national team of Nigeria before I went to Canada, the total number of matches I had from 1990 to 1994 was 27 matches as a national athlete.
I went to Canada and in 1995, alone, I had 47 matches, in 1996, I had 52 matches and in 1997, I had 73 matches. In 1998, I was now in the national team and I came back to 54 matches. Then in 1999, I was now a world champion, so I didn’t have to go above 50 matches.
As a college(university) student, I was competing in about 15 tournaments, I was competing almost every weekend. That is where you begin to hone your skills and when you get to the mat, you are not scared of who is there. That is what our athletes need and it is expensive. If we really want to do sports, it is very expensive.
Still, on funding, Igali said he is disappointed with the private sector in Nigeria because of their lack of support for sports and athletes.
“One of our biggest problems in Nigeria is the private sector. They just don’t give a hoot about sports. Blessing Oborududu won the first Olympic silver medal in the history of wrestling and the highest medal in the Tokyo Olympics, do you know how much she got from the private sector? Zero Naira. Not one penny was given to her. It was only the Bayelsa State government that gave her N4million.
This was the same athlete who went back again to Paris with a fracture on her femur to compete. And we are talking about our athletes doing well at a major Games.
Igali disclosed that as a national champion in Canada, he got thousands of dollars from different private companies and sponsors from 1998 till 2000 when he won the Olympic gold.
“And we want to succeed in sports? We are not ready to succeed, we are just talking. I tell you this. after two weeks, this talk about our poor outing in Paris will die down and it’s going to be business as usual. We will go back to funding the African Games, Commonwealth Games and Olympic Games and get ready two weeks to each.
If we really want to fund sports, let us get ready and fund sports. We promised gold medallists in the Paris Olympics $5,000, meanwhile, Morocco promised $346,000 for the same gold and Ecuador had $150,000. We are not a serious country.
He also talked about the release of the paltry funds the government gives to sports which he said though he appreciates but regrets it comes very late almost always.
“Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom, serious countries as I am talking now, have already approved and released hundreds of millions of dollars for 2025 and 2026. If we are going to be serious with sports, we cannot look at it as the normal budgetary cycle, it must be multi-year cycle. What was due for this Olympics (2024) should have been released last year or a year before.
On the duty of the federations and the presidents, he said it is not their responsibility to look for funding for their activities, stressing that the large chunk of funding is the responsibility of the government.
“The truth of the matter is that it is Nigeria that is going to the Olympics and the government should do a chunk of the funding, even support can come from other sectors, the real responsibility is for the government.
The duty of the federations presidents is to get the right people to man the different areas that will provide support to your athletes, coaches and the right education for their administrators.
Talking about wrestling, we ought to have nine national teams, because at the cadet level, we have Greco-Roman, freestyle and female teams. You have the same for the junior and senior teams. So we should have at least nine national coaches, and nine national assistant coaches.
And we should have programmes for each of the cadres of national teams. The coaches should visit schools and recruit the right athletes. This is what is happening in other serious countries like Iran. Russia and the US. That is why sports is very expensive. The US budget for wrestling this year alone (2024) is $60m. What is the budget for Nigeria’s wrestling?
I want our athletes to win because I know we’ve done the barest minimum. Because of the resilience of our athletes, we have gotten to the point where there was an opportunity for us to clinch one or two medals.
So I’m disappointed and we have had that conversation among ourselves. Some of the athletes said they were expecting to do more and have apologised that they were not able to do that.
And I pity the Sports Minister. Some people are even calling for his head. A man that came a few months ago for an Olympics? And how much was released to him and when?
In conclusion, Igali lambasted the government for treating football above other sports and wondered which serious sporting country does that.
“We have turned Nigeria into two classes of athletes – footballers are the number one athletes and everybody else is second class. Football goes to AFCON, it comes back with a silver medal. What do we do for them, they shake the President’s hand, give them plots of land, give them houses, give them national honours.
A month after, our athletes go for the African Games (an equivalent of the AFCON), many of them, over 40 win gold medals, did they have any handshake? Were they promised National Honours? Did they get any plot of land in Abuja? Did they get any houses? What kind of a country are we?
Interview monitored from Port Harcourt.

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Gyokeres Situation, Transfer Under Cloud At Sporting

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Sporting have not received an offer for striker Viktor Gyokeres and there is no gentleman’s agreement for him to leave for £59million, says club president Frederico Varandas.
Sweden international Gyokeres, 27, has been heavily linked with Manchester United and Arsenal after scoring 97 goals in 102 matches during two seasons in Portugal.
He has a 100m euro (£85m) release clause in his contract.
It has been widely reported that, after staying at Sporting last summer, Gyokeres and Sporting agreed he could leave for 70m euros (£59m) this summer.
However, Varandas said the club’s only promise to Gyokeres was that they would not demand his full release clause.
“I can guarantee that Viktor Gyokeres will not leave for 60m euros plus 10m euros because I never promised that,” Varandas said.
“To this day Sporting has not had an offer for Gyokeres, neither today nor last season.”
Gyokeres spent three seasons with Coventry City in the Championship before joining Sporting under Ruben Amorim.
Manchester City director of football Hugo Viana was sporting director at Sporting last summer, when Gyokeres’ agent sought assurances about his leaving if a suitable offer arrived.
“One of the agent’s biggest concerns was whether we would demand the termination clause,” said Varandas.
“He wanted to guarantee certain things. And what was agreed? That Sporting would not demand a release clause now.
“For one reason: he was going to be 27 years old and no player leaves Portugal at 27 for 100m eurors or 90m euros.
“In that same meeting the agent wanted to anchor the exit to a value. I said this sentence: ‘It’s not worth us setting a value because I don’t know what will happen in a year’s time. I don’t know if it will be 40m euros, 60m euros or 80m euros. What I can guarantee is that I will not demand 100 million euros.’”

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Concacaf Opposes 64-Team W’Cup Plans

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Concacaf President Victor Montagliani has criticised a proposal to expand the 2030 men’s World Cup to 64 teams.
The plans, put forward by South American governing body Conmebol, have also drawn opposition from Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin and the Asian Football Confederation (AFC).
The tournament will be hosted by Spain, Morocco and Portugal, after the opening matches are held in Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay.
The 2026 World Cup, which will take place across the United States, Mexico and Canada, has already been expanded from 32 to 48 teams.
But Conmebol said it wanted to add more participants to mark the competition’s 100-year anniversary.
“I don’t believe expanding the men’s World Cup to 64 teams is the right move for the tournament itself and the broader football ecosystem, from national teams to club competitions, leagues, and players,” Montagliani told Tidesports source
“We haven’t even kicked off the new 48-team World Cup yet, so personally, I don’t think that expanding to 64 teams should even be on the table.”
Concacaf is the governing body of football in North America, Central America and the Caribbean.
The decision to expand the 2026 World Cup to 48 teams was taken in 2017 following a unanimous vote at a Fifa congress.
Fifa’s 75th congress will be held in Paraguay on 15 May, when Conmebol’s proposal could be discussed.
If the proposal is accepted, the 2030 edition would consist of 128 matches, double the number played under the 64-game format used from 1998 and 2022.
In March, Ceferin described the proposal as a “bad idea” while AFC president Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim Al-Khalifa said it would cause “chaos”.
“If the issue remains open to change, then the door will not only be open to expanding the tournament to 64 teams,” said Salman.
“But someone might come along and demand raising the number to 132 teams. Where would we end up then? It would become chaos.”

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Brazil Edge Paraguay, Book W’Cup Spot

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Brazil qualified for the 2026 World Cup this week with a 1-0 win against Paraguay in South American qualifying to give Carlo Ancelotti his first win as manager.
Real Madrid forward Vinicius Jnr scored from close range in the second half, finishing after fine work from Manchester United-bound playmaker Matheus Cunha.
The victory, Ancelotti’s first after a 0-0 draw against Ecuador on his debut last week, means Brazil has now qualified for every edition of the World Cup.
“We needed to win and qualify for the World Cup,” said Vinicius Jr.
“Now the coach will have more time to work. Of course today wasn’t one of our best performances, but the important thing is always to win.
“Now it’s time to celebrate qualifying.”
Elsewhere, World Cup holders Argentina played out an entertaining 1-1 draw with Colombia in Buenos Aires.
Liverpool winger Luis Diaz opened the scoring with a fine individual goal, dancing through three defenders before finishing past Aston Villa goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez.
Argentina was reduced to 10 men with 20 minutes remaining when Chelsea midfielder Enzo Fernandez was sent off for a high-boot challenge on Colombia’s Kevin Castano.
But Lionel Messi’s side found an equaliser nine minutes from the end through Lyon’s Thiago Almada, leaving Colombia four points clear of seventh-placed Venezuela.
Ecuador, Argentina’s nearest challengers, booked their spot at next summer’s tournament in Canada, Mexico and the United States after a 0-0 draw away at Peru.

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