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No Framework For Sports Dev – Dr Anugweje

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Sports in Nigeria has
over time elicited different reactions from different quarters – in fans, stakeholders and ordinary Nigerians.   From the days of past glories to the abysmal performance of the country at the last Olympic Games.
With London 2012 and the recent triumphs of the Super Eagles at the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations and the Golden Eaglets at the Under-17 World Cup in the United Arab Emirates, UAE, Nigeria’s development and strides in the sports sector have been viewed from different windows.
However,  a Medical Doctor, Dr Ken Anugweje, football coach, sports technocrat and administrator, a university teacher and one of the pioneer sports physicians in the country spoke to The Tide on the state of sports in Nigeria.
He delved into many aspects and x-rayed some of the major factors holding Nigeria back from advancing to the next level in sports development, expanding the frontiers of events and achievements and taking advantage of resources,  human and material available to the country.
Dr Anugweje believes that the sports industry has grown in Nigeria in terms of facilities and athletes having the opportunity to become professionals, working and earning a living within and outside the country.  But he stated that there are no yardsticks to measure or compare sports in different eras as most of the assumptions are in the realms of speculations.
“Generally, when  people talk about sports and try to compare sports in decades past and now, they usually focus on achievements, for instance , what have the Super Eagles been  able to win recently, what did they win the other time”.  ‘No, I don’t see sports like that. There was a recent argument that if the class of 1994 Super Eagles were to be around today, they could have won the World Cup in Brazil. But there are very many differences between different eras that comparisons would be like comparing apples and oranges, it’s not really possible”, he said.
Currently, the sports technocrat, who has led the University of Port Harcourt to five consecutive Nigeria University Game, NUGA Victories and three West African Games.  WAUG triumphs, believes that Nigeria is still dominating Africa in athletics, especially, the sprints with the Blessing Okagbares, Ogo Oghenevbkoros.
But we seem to be standing still in development, especially in other sports such as boxing, weight lifting, swimming, team sports and even football.
“That is where the problem lies”, said Dr Anugweje.  “It is not that we have not been competing in those sports, it is not that we’re retrogressing, it may well be that we are standing still while other countries are moving ahead.
The point is that we don’t have the framework to develop sports in the country further than where it is .  We don’t have the right policies.  But whenever you ask the sports administrators what their challenges are, they’ll never tell you about policies, they’ll never tell you about framework, they’ll tell you about funding.  If you sink all the money in the world into sports and you don’t have a clear-cut policy or framework, you’ll never succeed”.
He lamented that sports journalists, who are supposed to be pushing for developmental policies are stuck in some clichés, ‘Oh, we’ll get back to the drawing board”, Oh, we’ll return sports to the schools’.
Where is the drawing board, why can’t we get done with the drawing board? And where are the schools?, he asked rhetorically.
“School sports may have worked for us in the past, but they cannot work anymore, he said. “There are, for instance, 35 sports in this country in the National Sports Festival, are you telling me that you are going to employ 35 Coaches/Games Masters in the primary schools, or the secondary schools, it doesn’t work anymore.
‘Rather, what works now are special schools dedicated to sports, what we call sport schools and they call them academies in Europe and America.
‘So, if you have properly manned academies, not the ones people want to use and confuse others here, but properly manned academies,  you can begin to make progress. An effective academy is run without compromising the progress education of such chaps. By the ages of five to seven most footballers are already in the books of clubs.
Somebody like David Beckham was in the books of Manchester United at the age of seven, Byan Giggs at 10, and Paul Scholes at nine, so that twice a week you go and get instructions/training at the highest level.
“If, for instance, former Sharks FC Coach, Mr Monday Sinclair decides to set up a football academy, he can take some of his former players to act as coaches and demonstrators and he’ll run an efficient academy.
If he wants a midfielder and feels that his former player, Rowland Orufe performed very well in that area, he could bring him in to manage that department.  He could be working with only three or four players in that department.
On why sports academies in Nigeria do not do well, Dr Anugweje retorted, “There is no academy in Nigeria”.  But when reminded that there are some organizations that go by that name, he said; ‘yes, if I call myself a king, does it make me a king?  You hear about Arsenal Academy, Manchester United Academy, PSG, Real Madrid academies, you never hear about Itugo Samchez academy or SOI Campbell academy, that’s what I am talking about. No academy will ever succeed in any sport unless it is housed under a bigger umbrella such a club, that’s what I am saying.  In football, you don’t just take a child and teach him only how to head or trap a ball, or the goalkeeper coach teach him how to dive.  No, you must also inculcate decision making, so you need somebody who has played at a very high level in that position to rearrange the thinking of that player.  What you find in Nigeria is about 30, 40 or more children under the tutelage of one or two persons .
Responding to a question on why Nigeria has failed to build on winning the Under-17 World Cup, a record four times, he said, “We have won the U-17  World Cup so many times now that we shouldn’t rejoice when we win it again, we should be looking up to higher things”. The reason why we have not taken our U-17 success to the senior team could be (1) That our players do not develop the way we expect they ought to the top level.  Then, you ask, why don’t they develop? Is it that they are too old?. Is it that when they won the U-17, they played against younger players?
Remember that each time we had won the U-17 competition our opponents usually complain that they were playing against men and not boys, it cannot be a coincidence, we must look into it.
Regrettably, the countries that often do well at the world cup proper are those that hardly excel at the U-17 level.  They see age group competition as developmental, they are not desperate to win”.
“Our Eaglets may have been playing against youngsters who were still growing, that’s why those we beat then progress to their national teams and remain consistent.
‘You see, the thing about age in sports is that between the ages of 20 and 23, every human being would have reached the end of growth, so there is no physical difference anymore.  That is why no matter how we tried, we hardly won the U-20 World Cup, because once it gets beyond that, then nothing, all advantages are eliminated, even if you field a 40 year-old”.
He blamed the press for being part of the problem and pressure that make Nigerians see youth competitions as very big deals.
“I blame the press.  There is no reason for the press to report an Under -17 match. Go to any Newspaper in England and America, you’ll never see any report more than a tiny writing on the bottom page of a newspaper mentioning  just the score of an U-17 match. But here, when they are called to camp, the press follow them around, and everybody thinks it is an important competition. It is elevated to something very big.
‘The European countries we beat assemble themselves two-three weeks to competition because they’re not going with the mind set to win, it is a developmental process.  When per chance they win and return to their country, no fanfare.  The boys from Switzerland that won the U-17 in 2009 in Abuja, were given only wrist watches and handshakes with their president. Today, where are they? They form the bulk of the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.
‘Where are our own boys? Where is Stanley Okoro and the rest of them?  The Spain team going to the 2014 World Cup has players from the World Youth Championship, WYC, Nigeria ’99, the only Nigerian player they may recognise is Joseph Yobo. My friend John Aranka, who was in the Flying Eagles  of 1999, I saw him the other day, if you are told that he played with Iker Casillaso, Andrew Iniesta, Ashley Cole etc, you’ll not agree, will you”? he asked.
The Doctor also discussed swimming and why Nigeria has not been getting it right.  According to him, there is no racial influence in swimming and the belief that blacks are not suited for the sport is misleading.
“They talk about physique, that the Europeans and Americans are best suited to swimming, they talk about buoyancy, that the whites have higher percentage of red muscles than blacks and all that.  But the point about swimming is that there are evolutions to get the perfect body shape, anthropometry for every sport.
‘For swimming the required shape is a tall spindly person  with broad arms, long legs and big feet big feet are very important because those feet act like a paddle for the swimmer, that is the general concept. Then secondly, you don’t become a good competitive swimmer because you come from a riverine area, that is a big misconception.
‘Michael Phelps of USA does not come from a riverine area and most top swimmers in the world are not from such areas.  The point is, how early are you exposed to water.  If a growing boy with the description I have given lives next door to a swimming pool, he becomes a swimming champion.
‘Nobody learns swimming in the river or  ocean but we were doing that here because we never had swimming pools, so, the earlier swimmers came from where the children were exposed to water.  But, the typical Ijawman is endomorphic (rounded shape, with grace and elegance like a king) and a typical swimmer has the physique of General Muhammadu Buhari, broad shoulder, tall, long arm and legs, that is the concept.
‘So, if the Blacks in America have the same mindset and time as the Whites and take their little kids to the pool, they may turn out to be good swimmers, it has nothing to do with black or white”.
Dr Anugweje further debunked the cliché, ‘comparative advantage in sports, saying that nothing prevents one from venturing into any sport provided you have the coaching and you can afford the facility. “Who says that if you go to Hausa land, you cannot get children who can partake in  Equestrian sport, the Royal children in England used to represent England  in equestrian sport because they are exposed to horses early, just like the northerners, Fulanis. But here our people are not interested in sports.
‘So, there’s nothing like comparative advantage in sports, it depends on your policy, focus and commitment.  If our prisons were better organised, the little kids they send to prison or remand homes could provide us with a large pool of boxers in this country. For every sport, you need to have the innate talent before you can develop it, and the talent for boxing is just very simple, the ability to inflict pain on somebody and the ability to receive and bear pain.  Check the history of American Sports.
Particularly, boxing, virtually all their eminent boxers came from the prisons or ended there, the Sony Listons, Mike Tysons etc. They go in and out of prison because they are naturally bullies and can bully opponents into submission”.
“Look at South Africa during the Apartheid era, the blacks there focused mainly on boxing and most black world boxing champions you had in Africa came from South Africa.  A small community in Accra, Ghana called Bukuon has had more than 10 World Boxing Champions because it is a rough neighbourhood. There used to be a rickety ring in the centre of the settlement and whenever children were fighting they were given gloves and pushed into the ring, so through the fights, they develop.
‘Now, the Kenyans are coming, they are entering into new areas in athletics apart from the long distance races. They  are now doing the 400 and 200 metres because they have discovered that their Luwo tribe are like us, with thick white muscles, while leaving the Masais to concentrate on long distance.  So, when you find out such people, you channel them into the sports they are suited for”.
He called on the authorities in Rivers State to pay special attention to the youth and people of Okrika because of their inherent sports talent.
“I have always told people in this State (Rivers) that they are wasting time not focusing on Okrika. There must be a large gene pool in Okrika because it is not by coincidence that the Owubokiris, Amiesimakas, Dakas. Atorudibos, Iworimas, Kios, Dikibos, Inyengiyikabos etc came from that area. In 1999, when I won gold medal for University of Port Harcourt in the WAUG in Benin Republic over 60 per cent of my teams starting line up were Okrika boys, ThankGod Fibika, the Okiri brothers, etc and I didn’t care. ‘So, there must be something there, either genetically or in their diet, we must go there to find out, there is nothing like comparative advantage, it is what you put in that you’ll get out”.
Reacting on what should be done to unearth and recreate the Chidi Imos, Innocent Egbunikes, Mary Onyalis. Falilat Ogunkoyas et al of yore, Dr Anugweje said, “There’s nothing we can do, when those people were performing at their level, the rest of the world was also grooming their own athletes in the same way. Now, they have changed and we are still doing things the same old way. We have to embrace the modern ways, adopt and execute our policies and the talents would come through.
‘What we are saying is, what are the sports associations, coaches doing? Here, for instance, you’ll hear that Super Eagles Coach, Stepten Keshi should go and look for talents, and I ask, which talents?
‘It is the responsibility of State Sports Associations to call national coaches and say, look, in this area under my jurisdiction, there’s a chap you should have a look at. I’m sure you’ve heard of a certain Arsene Wenger calling England Coach, Roy Hodgson that Jack Wilshere was ready for the World Cup. If we bring it down here, that is what it ought to be. You groom somebody and then call the authorities’ attention to the talent”.
On the continued relevance of the National Sports Festival, NSF, Dr Anugweje said that the concept of the NSF is good but the execution has been faulty.
“In 1995, I made a proposal about National Championship”, he said. “What I proposed was to run manageable competitions that would be very productive, for instance, you have 30 sports, you take 10 or five events to Lagos, another 10 or five to Enugu, another set to Port Harcourt and so on and they compete under a controlled atmosphere. At the end of it all, you can add all the medals from the different venues and announce the state that has won, if you must.
In that way, the states that hosted the different events would have used the opportunity to develop their facilities and the standard of competition would be very high.
‘The NSF as it is currently, is like madness, so many people at a place at the same time, so many problems, issues, it is like a jamboree. Most people go there to eat, drink and merry. The policy of competing at the festival is good but the execution is poor, also, the criteria are not very clear. You have states parading athletes they did not groom, leading to the highest bidder having the upper hand, that does not augur well for proper development.
‘In fact, the only state developing sports now in Nigeria is Cross River. They are doing good things at the grassroots level and have won the school sports competitions in recent times by a mile. They also won the recent National Youth Games by a mile. All the little boys, who are bullies are now boxers in the state. They have a Cuban coach and Cuba is the best in amateur boxing in the world, their boxers fought in all the finals in the last schools sports competition.
So, you see how the people are moving, that is the way to go”.

Dr Anugweje explaining a point during the interview. Photo: Chris Monyanaga

Dr Anugweje explaining a point during the interview. Photo: Chris Monyanaga

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… As Coach Expresses Optimism To Qualify For 2026 W’Cup

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Newly appointed Super Eagles coach Finidi George has set his sights firmly on securing qualification for the 2026 World Cup, demanding unwavering commitment from his top players as the team aims to get their faltering qualifying campaign back on track.
Unveiled to the media in Abuja on Monday, Finidi, who succeeded the outgoing Portuguese coach Jose Peseiro, wasted no time in laying out his immediate priorities, two crucial 2026 World Cup qualifiers against South Africa and Benin early next month.
“Nigeria comes first, that’s what I expect from every player I invite. You have to be playing in your club, and you must have the commitment,” Finidi told reporters on Monday.
Recognising the importance of a strong start, the former Ajax winger emphasised the significance of the upcoming clash against South Africa.
“The first targets are to qualify for the World Cup and AFCON (Africa Cup of Nations), and a win over South Africa will set the tone.”
Nigeria currently finds itself in third place in their qualifying group, with just two points from as many games, while South Africa sits second with three points.
Finidi, who has signed a year’s contract with an option for an additional year, acknowledged the immense pressure that comes with leading the national team of a country with over 200 million people.
However, he exuded confidence in his ability to withstand the scrutiny, stating, “I have a tough skin.”
While his salary remains undisclosed, the 53-year-old coach expressed a willingness to prioritise performance over immediate financial rewards.
“The salary is good enough for me, it’s not as much as that of (Jose) Peseiro.
“Money is good, but if you add value to what you do, the money will come. Then they can come and ask ‘Coach, how much do you want?” Finidi said.

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I’m Not Under Pressure, I’ve Tough Skin – Finidi

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New Super Eagles Coach, Finidi George, has underlined that the word pressure is not in his dictionary and appealed for support from key stakeholders including the media.
Speaking after his unveiling yesterday in Abuja, the former Enyimba of Aba coach said; “In life you cannot be afraid. As you see me here, I am a quiet person but I’m not afraid of anything. The worst you can get in football is not getting the result, the best you can get is winning all the time, and I will try my best to make sure that the team functions properly and we start winning games.”
On whether is under pressure to justify his appointment, the coach stressed; “Pressure, I don’t think I have it. I have that tough skin and I want to plead you guys, the media we need your support.
“What is in the contract is boldly written, what the NFF wants and Nigeria in general, but for me personally my first target is to make sure we are in line to qualify for the World Cup. AFCON qualifiers definitely will be coming up soon, but the major step for me is these two games that we have.
“If we can win against South Africa and Benin, we will set the tone.”
During the unveiling ceremony, the NFF confirmed that ex-Super Eagles striker; Daniel Amokachi and Abiden Baruwa will be the assistant coach and goalkeeper coach respectively.
The first assignment for Finidi, who won the Champions League with Ajax in 1995, is to qualify for the 2026 World Cup.

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Amusan Becomes World’s Fastest Woman, Sets New Track Record

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Nigerian sprint icon Tobi Amusan has become the world’s fastest woman in the women’s 100m hurdles after running a world-leading 12.40 seconds.
In a thrilling race, the world record holder secured the victory, leaving behind Danielle Williams, the world champion, who clocked her best time of the season at 12.46 seconds. Following closely was American Christina Clemons, claiming the third spot with a time of 12.54 seconds.
This triumph means the Nigerian athlete has now claimed the top spot globally, surpassing American Tonea Marshall’s previous record of 12.42 seconds set in late April.
Tobi Amusan’s impressive win arrives just two months before the Paris 2024 Olympics, setting the stage for an exciting competition ahead.
John Enoh, the minister of sports development, on his X handle congratulated Amusan over the feat.
Take your flowers Tobi Amusan, you stormed to an emphatic win in the women’s 100m hurdles at the Jamaica Athletics Invitational, clocking a time of 12.40s (0.9), a World Lead time!
You defeated World Champion Danielle Williams, who came 2nd in 12.46s, while Christina Clemons.
“Take your flowers Tobi Amusan, you stormed to an emphatic win in the women’s 100m hurdles at the Jamaica Athletics Invitational, clocking a time of 12.40s (0.9), a World Lead time! You defeated World Champion Danielle Williams, who came 2nd in 12.46s, while Christina Clemons was 3rd in 12.54s,” he wrote.
“Tobi, you keep making our country proud. Paris Olympics is around the corner, your performance gives us hope just like others, that Nigeria is set to break a jinx. Keep soaring, we are proud of you.”

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