Sunday 30 September 2012

Nigerian sports since independence: 52 years of underdevelopment, undermanagement


Abuja National Stadium pitch before sports minister got it renovated some days ago
National Stadium Lagos' pitch today

Its stands are also falling apart
Dilapidated team benches at the National Stadium, Lagos. Photo by tonerophotoagency.blogspot.com 


Today, Monday, October 1, Nigerians celebrate 52 years of independence. But for obvious reasons, celebrations are not as loud as usual on the sports scene because people are beginning to realize that all is no longer at ease with the country as far as that industry is concerned. A cursory look at contemporary happenings in Nigerian sports clearly points this out.
To start with, the Super Eagles on Sunday began camping for the October 13 qualifying match against the Lone Star of Liberia. The country is battling (quite uncharasteric of its former self) to pick a ticket to the 2013 edition of the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON). Although coach of the team, Stephen Keshi and the top echelon of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) keep assuring otherwise, there is great fear among the citizenry that the Eagles might lose the ticket to Lone Star, a relatively unknown soccer team on the continent.
Also, the Nigeria Premier League has been put on hold by the sports ministry because of the numerous problems facing the one-time most popular aspect of the country’s sports scene. Presently, the league is faced with several antagonistic factions over issues ranging from poor management of league football to misappropriation of finances and misinterpretation of rules and principles. The solutions to the problems seem too far to seek.
Furthermore, the country’s contingent to the 2012 Olympics in London returned empty-handed to the country after billions of naira went into its preparations and remuneration. So much hope rested on the contingent that it was hard for many Nigerians, including the President, Goodluck Jonathan to believe it had failed to pick even a medal. A development that the country believed was long behind it after amassing years of experience in participating in the global multisport event. The country was eventually so grateful that it handed national honours to Paralympians that suffered, battling hard to drag the country’s name out of the mud.
In other less popular aspects of the country’s sports industry such as golf, the situation is worse. Professional golfers in Nigeria live off the good grace of club members at golf clubs due to poor management of the golf industry. Although several attempts are being to set right this aspect of Nigerian sports, the perfect recipe is yet to be found. Professional Nigerian golfers hardly play on good tours like their South African counterparts that are reckoned with globally. The same is the story with basketball and many other sports.
Additionally, the country missed out on the last Nations Cup cohosted by Guinea and Gabon, lost an Olympic spots for the men’s relay teams in Port Novo, Benin and has continued to fall behind in producing necessary incentives for growth of sports in the country.
Such is the case with the country’s sports now that outsiders do not come to see how much it has developed over a period of time, but how far it has fallen apart. A good example is the recent visit of the international news network (CNN) to Nigeria to see how much the golf industry has depreciated.
On the level of maintenance, the country has ranked really low. Many important facilities have been left to rot just like several other social amenities across the country. The Abuja National Stadium was rated one of the best ever built in Africa just some years back. Until just some days, it fell to the spot of being a blot on the Abuja horizon as its facilities fell apart.
A National Assembly team that visited the natural pitch of the once glorious edifice admitted that it was unfit to graze cows not to talk of playing good football. The stadium that cost billions of naira to build was reduced to such a state in less than ten years due to mismanagement and lack of maintenance. And it is not the only one. The National Stadium in Lagos was not differently handled. Today, the once glorious edifice that hosted the All Africa Games in 1973 and the Nations Cup in 1980, stands rotting away in Surulere. Several other facilities attached to the stadium are not receiving better treatment. The Olympic-style swimming pool is unfit for use because filled with green algae with several parts of it rutted.
The indoor facilities like the gym and basketball court, lack necessary equipment as they have been stripped to bare essentials over the years. The National Institute for Sports (NIS) in the stadium’s premises is no better. The hostels are falling apart, the classrooms too. The story is the same at other sporting facilities across the country.
The situation has become so unacceptable that even the national football team that was once the pride of the country is affected. Coach Keshi recently complained that the team did not have a standing home ground like the many other sporting countries of the world. Even Liberia’s Lone Star has the Samuel Kanyon Doe (SKD) Stadium.
This culture of letting facilities and systems fall apart has been the bane of the development of the country’s sport industry since 1960. It has now come to the point that Nigeria now relies on facilities outside the country to train its athletes. Nigerian players have to play abroad to earn a shirt in the national team, the athletes have to be US or UK-based to earn attention from national coaches and so much more.
The saddest part of it all is that Nigerians are not catching on fast with the change times. People still expect the various sports teams to deliver as outstandingly as those that pay close attention to what Nigeria does not. A clear example is seen in Nigeria football legend, Segun Odegbami’s writing off of the Lone Star before the first leg of the AFCON 2013 qualifying match in Monrovia. The 2-2 draw that resulted has since changed the mathematical one’s mind. Also, Nigerians, including the president unwittingly expected Team Nigeria to return with carriage-loads of medals from the Olympics in London when the team lacked the perfect ingredient to get the job done.
In all, this year, 2012 has been a eye-opener for Nigerians that are now beginning to realize how far the country has fallen below the required standards for a good show. And it all began with little mismanagements here and there and lack of maintenance and developmental culture. Indeed, remembering the great heights the country’s athletes reached in various sports between 1960 and 1990s and the fall from grace since then makes one realize that the problem had been there all along since 1960.

Saturday 29 September 2012

Liberia FA advance team arrives Calabar October 2


Geraldine Doe-Sheriff

The advance team of the Liberia Football Association (LFA) will arrive early next week, between October 1 and 2, we can authoritatively confirm.
The team, we gathered is made up of a three-man delegation that will be led by Liberian senator and deputy chairperson of the Lone Star Mobilization Committee, Geraldine Doe-Sheriff.
The former Liberian female football wonder popularly known as “Lady Zico” in her days was designated by the Lone Star Mobilization Committee as the one to undertake the task of leading the team local sources from the West African country revealed this weekend.
The LFA has however refused to give the names of the other two members of the team that should arrive in Nigeria latest on October 3 for what it termed “safety reasons.”
The job of the advance team, our correspondent gathered, includes checking and booking a suitable and conducive hotel for the Lone Star and providing necessary advice for the team’s acclimatization, as well as the food and water amongst others.
Local media in the West African country reported that Doe-Sheriff and her colleagues have raised around US$270,000 (about N40.5m) for Lone Star’s camping and the advance team’s mission.
Meanwhile, Lone Stars are expected to touch down in Accra, Ghana today with a 24-man delegation that comprises 12 local and four foreign-based (Indonesia) players and eight technical and support staff.
Henry Flomo, LFA spokesperson claimed the choice of camping in Ghana is to help the team better prepare for the Super Eagles in Calabar.
“Despite local critics about the training camp outside Liberia, it will also help the team with full concentration on the match that Liberia needs to win to overturn the first leg 2-2 tie in Monrovia on September 8,”he said.
The delegation will be joined by other foreign players during the 11-day camping before returning to Liberia and then making it to Calabar along with scores of supporters on a 100-seater chartered plane.

Flamingoes defeats Colombia 3-0 to book quarterfinal slot


Nigeria’s Jiroro Idike (on the ground) tackles Colombian captain Dayana Castillo as goal scorer Halimatu Ayinde (in Jersey no. 14) looks on. Photo by: FIFA.com

National U17 team, Flamingoes on Saturday thrashed its Colombian counterpart, 3-0 to book a quarterfinal slot at the ongoing FIFA Women’s World Cup in Azerbaijan.
The Nigerian girls had to battle the hard fighting Colombian ladies hard to get the three goals in the match played in Baku, capital of Azerbaijan.
Halimatu Ayinde was the Nigerian squad’s talisman this time round. She scored the first two goals for the Flamingoes before an own goal from Colombian defender, Diana Duarte sealed the Southern American team’s fate and pushed the Nigerian side through to the next round.
The first goal came in the 32nd minute while the remaining goals came in the second half.
The Nigerian girls scored a total of 15 goals in the group stage and conceded only one goal to finish with 7 points at the top of Group A ahead of Canada, Colombia and hosts Azerbaijan.  
But the day was not bright for debutants Gambia that fell 10 – 2 to France. The West African team lost its first match 11 – 0 to Korea DPR and the next one 6 -0 to USA.
Flamingoes will face Gambia’s conquerors, France in the quarterfinals of the championship slated for Thursday, October 4.

Thursday 27 September 2012

Nigerian golfers flop on MENA Golf Tour in Dubai



Zane Scotland of England receives the Dubai Creek and Yacht Club Open trophy after winning it on Wednesday


Nigerian golfers taking part in the ongoing MENA Golf Tour in Dubai, the commercial city of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) are not having the best of times.
The quartet of Samuel Agbeyegbe, Obi Emeka, Oparaku Madufor and Francis Isuku played poorly in the four rounds of the $50,000 prize money Dubai Creek and Yacht Club Open, the first tourney in a series of six tourneys that make up the Tour.
Oparaku scored a poor 13 over par 155 after the first two rounds. He scored a 40 on the front nine and 39 on the back nine in the first round to finish with 8 over par 79 but got better on Day 2 with a 3 over par 38 on the front and back nines respectively.
But his performance was better than that of Agbeyegbe that scored a 16 over par 158 after the first two rounds. Agbeyegbe began stoutly on Day 1 with a 1 over par 36 on the first nine but slumped on the back nine, finishing with a poor 5 over par 40. The second day was not any better for him as he finished with a 39 on the front nine and an even more worrisome 43 on the back nine.
Francis Isuku had a 17 over par 159 after the first two rounds. He started with a poor 5 over par 40 on the first nine but ended the first day with a much improved 1 over par 37 on the back nine. Round two was also poor for him as he carded a 7 over par 42 on the front nine and 4 over par 40 on the back nine to end the day with a total of 11 over par 82.
Obi Emeka amassed a total of 21 over par 163 after two rounds that comprised of a shocking 11 over par 47 on the back nine on Day 1 after a passable 2 over par 37 on the front nine. Round two was much better with Emeka carding 4 over par 39 on the front nine and 4 over par 40 on the back nine to finish with 8 over par 79.
Zane Scotland of England eventually won the event after holding off a late charge from Wales’ Stephen Dodd. Scotland, who led by three shots overnight, closed with a 2 under par 69 to go eight under for the tournament to complete a wire-to-wire victory on Wednesday.
Dodd, a three-time winner on the European Tour, finished second on 6 under after a final round 69.
Pakistan’s Mohammed Munir finished third on 5 under par.
A strong field of 120 players that included 36 amateurs vied for honours in the Open, which is the opening event of the six-stop tour that boasts a combined prize fund of $325,000.
Still to go for the Nigerian quartet are the Abu Dhabi GOLF CITIZEN Open, American Express Dirab Saudi Championship, Ras Al Khaimah Classic, Shaikh Maktoum Dubai Open and the MENA Tour Championship.