Sports
Can Nigeria Overcome Her Pitfalls To Achieve Football Glory?
It is no news that the African cup of Nations qualifier games have reached feverish peak with the Super Eagles of Nigeria billed to lock horns with its Guinean counterpart in a make or mar encounter come tomorrow.
In their last game, the Super Eagles of Nigeria defeated Madagascar and immediately a flurry of jubilation, chest thumping and boasting followed as if we are on top of our group or has even qualified for the mundial.
The truth is; by that victory over a lowly side like Madagascar, who even did not have anything to play for in that match, we are trailing behind Guinea with three points, making it compulsory for us to beat them tomorrow if we must have any chance of qualification.
Now you hear people say if we can win the match here and Guinea loses by so and so goal margin we will qualify. This is taking us back to the recent past when every football loving Nigerian became a prayer warrior or to say the least, pool forecaster involved in permutation; perming two from five and vice versa just to ensure that the Super Eagles qualify.
Now, from the way things are going, it is obvious that we are back at the trenches again. This time around we better triple our prayers else we may not come out of the hole without our nose or head being reshaped. This is more so because the Guineans too can pray well to remain where they have gotten to by dint of hard work and good preparation.
We all started the qualification matches together and they overtook us. Now the same hard fighting Guinea team is coming to Abuja to play us. If they pull a draw here God forbid, we are finished, the hope of million football loving Nigerians like us would have been dashed. This makes it difficult investing hope on the Super Eagles. The question is: Can you spin your hopes on them?
What our repeated struggle to qualify tells us in the face is that even if our national team is grouped with non footballing nations like Sao Tome and Principe, we would still struggle to qualify. Why this trend in our football?
The answer lies more in our football administration. It’s no longer needful to look up the meaning of late preparation in the dictionary; it is well examplified in the way our football is being run. While some countries prepare for years to compete in major events, we usually start at feverish peak at the eleventh hour.
For instance, in the build up to the last World Cup at South Africa, we started serious preparation just few weeks to D-day and worst of all; we changed our coach and even the team amidst all the mudslinging and the clamour to satisfy all manner of interests.
Ultimately, we ended up not as the surprise team but as the surprised team. As our dreams faded, we were left with our ready-made excuse of bad coach or using the world cup as a laboratory to experiment for future projects and so on. While our neighbours, Ghana put in a superlative performance to the consternation of the world.
The problem with Nigerian football is that we have failed to accept that the system is flawed and programmed to always fail. We have always sown seeds of mediocrity and ignorance, apparently oblivious of the enormous potential of Nigerian football beyond our accomplishments on the field of play. Sadly, what we have achieved in the game so far, havemostly been by accident rather than design.
We neither truly merited them nor actually worked for them. We have to admit the truth that our success was achieved on the lure of the dollar in Europe, which attracted our players to clubs overseas and they come back fit and better to play matches for us.
The advent of Westerhof as catalyst to rebuilding our team in the early 90s around home-based players playing only at the local league and later top clubs in Europe remains the only testament to what Nigerian football became.
While we wallowed happily in the euphoria of all the strides of the 90s, lesser men, many of mediocre calibers, joined the band-wagon in search of their piece of the cake. Our football became heavily influenced by the luxury of misplaced government funding and the attendant undue interference.
What followed was the perennial appointment of a string of incompetent and self-seeking administrators in the cloak of NFA now NFF. We got men totally oblivious of the huge potential and marketability of the Nigerian game both locally and international circles. Sadly, they always went cap in hand begging for funds from ministers and literally handing control effectively back to them.
Nigerians enjoy the game of football. Despite our unceremonious exit from the first world cup on African soil,, we savoured the victory of flair over regimentation in South Africa as Spain beat Germany in the final, after a month of drama, theatrics, upsets, joyous fans, goals, and records, but the challenge for us is the future of Nigerian football and how we can be great again.
We have a big asset, a critical mass, a population estimated at over 150million soccer loving people. We have huge professional players abroad, even if we did not take Aiyegbeni or Kanu and his co travelers to the world cup. Nigeria has the tools, let us learn to use them.
In appraising our performance ahead of the future, our administrators usually take to blame game and buck passing. At the end of it all they will lapse into talks of sacking and hiring of Coaches, which will set the ball rolling for lobby and bringing in of the Lagaerbacks and Lagerbeers of this world as foreign coaches who will give us conditions of one month stay in abroad and one day stay in Nigeria, all in the name of scouting for players.
This is a bald and unsurprising lie, yet our administrators will accept with alacrity and give them big titles. We have been through this song-and-dance several times in the past, with the last being the title of technical adviser given to Lagerback. His performance was so abysmal such that public outrage about his choice by NFF became common place, forcing the Glass House to make a detour and midwifed the process that saw the engagement of Coach Siasia.
If any one takes a look at the records of some of the Coaches that once strode our football as foreign coaches, it could be seen that they are yet to be engaged by any country or even club for any serious coaching job since they left the shores of Nigeria, which point to the fact that they are spent forces that were simply repackaged and brought to us as coaches. These expired coaches found some members of our Football House as willing tools to pave way for their coming here with a view to using our football to revive their coaching career that was approaching its expiry.
My position is simply that we need to examine the structure and funding of football in Nigeria. There cannot be a better opportunity to cleanse our football than this period, after we have been brought down to earth with a bang in the last world cup and now struggling for a nation’s cup ticket.
In this era of privatization, we call upon government to be bold and stop funding football. This will discourage all the politics, politicking and court injunctions and counter injunctions associated with running football in Nigeria and save the game. Think of all the money spent by corporate bodies falling over each other to get sponsorship or rights of association with the world cup and the Nation’s cup – surely they can also be persuaded through sound organization to also extend to other aspects of the game.
The truth is that success comes only through long term planning, preparation and transparency. This, we are not doing at the moment. I pray that the outcome of tomorrow’s Nation’s cup qualifying decider proves me wrong. Let the cookie not crumble, because if it does, there will not be enough pieces for fair-weather pretenders running our football in this country.
Asi Prince Dateme
Sports
Amusan places third in Diamond League opener
The Nigerian, who arrived in China fresh from winning gold at the African Senior Athletics Championships in Ghana earlier on Wednesday, clocked a season’s best of 12.41s behind Olympic champion Masai Russell and Bahamian star Devynne Charlton.
Russell produced a dominant display to win the race in a meeting record and world-leading time of 12.25s, improving on her previous world lead of 12.40s.
Charlton, the reigning world indoor champion, finished second in 12.38s in one of her strongest outdoor performances to date.
Amusan, whose world record of 12.12s remains the fastest time ever run in the event, improved significantly from her previous season’s best of 12.84s set during her victorious outing at the African Championships in Accra.
The 29-year-old was competing in a stacked field that included reigning world champion Ditaji Kambundji of Switzerland, Jamaican pair Megan Simmonds and Ackera Nugent, China’s Wu Yanni and Americans Tonea Marshall and Danielle Williams.
Kambundji, who won the world title in Tokyo last year with a Swiss record 12.24s, finished fifth in 12.82s, while Jamaica’s Nugent placed sixth in 12.98s.
Marshall and Williams failed to finish the race.
Following Amusan’s victory in Accra, the three-time Diamond League final winner expressed gratitude to her supporters while insisting she remained determined to achieve more success this season.
“Beyond grateful to God, my team, supporters, and everyone who continues to believe in me through every season. Historic feeling. Still hungry for more. The mission continues,”
Sports
Falcons To Tackle Senegal in Pre-WAFCON friendly
The 10-time African champions are scheduled to take on the Teranga Lionesses on June 5 and 8 at the Remo Stars Stadium in Ikenne, Ogun State, in what will form a key part of their build-up to July’s continental tournament.
The fixtures were confirmed on social media platform X by Super Falcons Show, which announced the details of the encounter and venue.
“Nigeria’s senior women’s national team, the Super Falcons, will take on Senegal Women’s National Team in a double-header international friendly scheduled for June 5 and 8,” the post read.
“Both matches will be played in Ikenne, Nigeria.”
The friendlies come after Nigeria’s proposed training tour of the United Kingdom, which included a planned match against Jamaica, was cancelled due to scheduling complications linked to FIFA’s official women’s international window. The timing meant clubs would not have been obliged to release players.
With that tour shelved, the Senegal fixtures now offer a timely opportunity for coach Justine Madugu and his technical team to assess squad options, test tactical systems and strengthen team cohesion ahead of the WAFCON campaign and longer-term qualification targets for the 2027 FIFA Women’s World Cup in Brazil.
Senegal are expected to provide a competitive regional test, with their physical style and disciplined organisation likely to offer Nigeria a different tactical challenge across both matches.
The Super Falcons, who have dominated African women’s football for decades, will be aiming to use the double-header to fine-tune preparations as they pursue another continental title in Morocco next year.
Sports
Okpekpe Road Race Unveils Partners, Appoints Dr. Bojuwoye
Dr Bojuwoye, a seasoned medical professional with extensive experience in road running events across Nigeria, is expected to bring added value to the race through his expertise.
As medical director, his responsibilities will include overseeing emergency medical response, coordinating first aid stations along the course, ensuring athlete safety, and supervising medical volunteers and paramedics.
His role is critical in safeguarding the health of both elite and recreational runners, as well as spectators.
In addition to unveiling its new medical director, the organisers also announced five corporate partners for the 2026 edition.
The Development Bank of Nigeria (DBN), Petralon Energy, Razzl Drink, Dan Oil, and Carloha Motors have joined as sponsors, reflecting the race’s growing appeal across diverse sectors of the Nigerian economy.
The Okpekpe race, organised by Pamodzi Sports Marketing Company, has steadily risen in prominence since becoming the first road race in Nigeria to earn World Athletics label status in 2015.
It has since advanced to Gold Label Race status, attracting elite athletes from around the world and cementing its reputation as one of Africa’s benchmark road-running competitions.
Edo State, under the leadership of Governor Monday Okpebolo, has reaffirmed its commitment to supporting the race, citing its role in promoting tourism, community pride, and international recognition for the region.
Race Director Zack Amodu noted that the new partnerships underscore the event’s stature and its impact beyond sport.
We are delighted to welcome DBN, Petralon, Razzl, and Carloha Motors as partners for the 11th edition. Their support, alongside the backing of Edo State, not only strengthens the race but also reinforces its role as a platform for promoting excellence, youth empowerment, and community development,’ Amodu said.
Beyond its sporting significance, the Okpekpe International 10km Road Race has become a catalyst for social, health, and economic benefits.
It encourages fitness and healthy lifestyles, fosters social cohesion by bringing communities together, and generates economic activity through tourism, hospitality, and local commerce.
The event also showcases Edo State’s cultural vibrancy while contributing to Nigeria’s growing reputation in global athletics.
The 11th edition is expected to draw elite athletes, local participants, and international attention, further consolidating Nigeria’s place on the global athletics calendar.
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