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MY SIDE OF SPORT: Age grade football in Nigeria a real fraud

MY SIDE OF SPORT: Age grade football in Nigeria a real fraud

Now that we are
about to play in or should I say compete in an age-grade – U-20 –
championship again, there is a strong need to address pertinent issues
concerning a festering sore in our football, age-cheats and the
age-bending tactics. There is always the lazy and jaundiced argument
that we are not the only nation that cheats. The point is cheating is a
misdemeanour and howsoever or wherever it manifests, it’s a crime.
Granddads’ masquerading as youth is fraudulent.

Perhaps it would help here to re-state the main objectives of age-grade competitions in the first place.

In 1974, Brazilian
lawyer and businessman, Jao Havelange was elected President of World
Football Governing body, FIFA at the FIFA Congress in Germany where the
World Cup was held. Africa’s champion and lone entry at the Mundial
suffered heavy and embarrassing defeats in all the matches they played
at the opening round.

Havelange’s new
Executive Board sought to find reason(s) for the heavy defeat suffered
by the African Champions at the 1974 World Cup. Amongst other findings,
it was revealed that the African Champion suffered from inferiority
complex. Such psychoanalysis propelled the thought and eventual resolve
that lesser platforms be created to afford African and third World
countries opportunity to compete with the rest of the world before
getting to the World Cup proper. It was also resolved that the
championships so recommended, U-16 (later U-17) and U-20 be hosted by
third world and developing countries.

That is why the
maiden edition of the U-20 World Cup was held in Tunisia in 1977. In
1979, Japan hosted with Argentina winning, throwing up an all-time
great, Diego Armando Maradonna. Since then Nigeria has participated and
hosted without really recording outstanding players or players who
lasted ten years after participating in either U-17 or U-20
competitions.

Nigeria failed to
go to the Tokyo in 1979 even with talent like Sylvanus Okpala, Henry
Nwosu, Adedeji Obe, Lucky Imafidon, Franklin Howard, Humphrey Edobor,
Edema Benson etc.

Note that Edobor
and Edema played in U-20 from 1978 to 1983, in the team that played in
Mexico! In the 1983 team, Samson Siasia and Andrew Uwe played again in
U-20 in 1985 Russia edition. That is how we have been doing it even
when the Mexico ‘83 team had talent like Wilfred Agbonavbare, Yisa
Shofoluwe, Amaechi Oti, Tarila Okorowanta, Deinde Akinlatan, Yemi
Aderanijo, Alphonsus Akahan, Paul Okoku, Chibuzor Ehilegbu, the
Olukanmi brothers, Femi and Segun, Dahiru Sadi, Christopher Anigala,
Ali Jeje (Captain), Tajudeen Disu, Edema Benson, Humphrey Edobor
(again), Wahab Adesina, Patrick Udo etc. The team to Russia ‘85 was
loaded to hilt with Aloy Agu (Keeper) Mark Odu, Andrew Uwe (Captain),
Osaro Obobaifo, Waidi Akanni, Ndubisi Okosieme, Titus Mbah, Niyi
Adeleye, Wasiu Ipaye, Godwin Eke, Christian Obi, Uche Ikeogu, Augustine
Igbinabaro, Mark Anunobi, Michael Dominic, Monday Odiaka, Kingsley Onye
(Mature), Samson Siasia (again).

Never mind that
bronze boot winner in that competition, Monday Odiaka did not claim an
Eagles shirt, he could not hold a first team shirt at his club, ACB FC
of Lagos in the 1986-87 season.

Missing the point

Monday Odiaka and
his types represent premature retirees and the negative impact or lack
of growth of our youth players. To be honest, apart from the 1983 U-20,
who Adegboye Onigbinde had the balls to blood, and who made the nucleus
of the Eagles for the African Cup of Nations in Cote d’Ivoire ‘84, the
percentage of graduation to the senior national team has dropped
sharply. The team had players such as Yisa Shofoluwe, Paul Okoku,
Chibuzor Ehilegbu, Femi Olukanmi, to join other relatively young and
little tested Peter Rufai, Patrick Okala, Kingsley Paul, Charles
Yancho, Rashidi Yekini, James Etokebe, Clement Temile and tested horses
Muda Lawal, Stephen Keshi, Bala Ali, Humphrey Edobor.

The decline is
such that out of the very talented and on the face of it a young
looking squad to Japan ‘93, Celestine Babayaro and Nwankwo Kanu are the
only real benefits of that edition. In Wilson Oruma and Mobi Oparaku,
we have two other players who looked good enough but only had a handful
of caps between them. The drop became more apparent in subsequent years
when football administrators lost the essence and spirit of age-limited
competitions. Pressure to win and justify their stay on the job forced
not so ready Nigerian Coaches to recruit grandfathers from Pro-League
Clubs for even the U-17 team.

Nigeria’ 1996
Olympic Squad: Emmanuel Babayaro, Celestine Babayaro, Taribo West,
Nwankwo Kanu, Uche Okechukwu, Emmanuel Amuneke, Tijani Babangida,
Wilson Oruma, Teslim Fatusi, Jay-Jay Okocha, Victor Ikpeba, Abiodun
Obafemi, Garba Lawal, Daniel Amokachi, Sunday Oliseh, Kingsley Obiekwu,
Mobi Oparaku and Dosu Joseph, all full internationals apart from Mobi,
Dosu, Obiekwu, Emmanuel Babayaro and Obafemi before the Olympics on
paper had an average age of 23 years. Ten years later, only Wilson
Oruma, Jay-Jay Okocha and Nwankwo Kanu could still play big-time
football. U-23 players indeed.

Of Samson Siasia’s
famed Holland’ 2005 just Taiye Taiwo, John Obi Mikel, Sani Kaita
(loaned to just about every team in Russia), Chinedu Ogbuke Obasi,
forever injured, Solomon Okoronwo, Dele Adeleye, Olubayo Adefemi, John
Owoeri, Onyekachi Apam have graduated to the Super Eagles even when
there are not many good players around. So what happened to team
Captain Isaac Promise, Kennedy Chinwo, Monday James, Yinka Adedeji,
Daddy Bazuaye, Daniel Akpeyi, Soga Sambo, Kola Anubi, Kola Ige, Ambrose
Vanzekin?

Then scan through
the U-17 of 2007 if you will recognise any top flight player in it
still plying his trade at home or abroad: Laide Okanlawon, Ganiyu
Oseni, Usman Amodu, Azeez Balogun, Kingsley Udoh, King Osanga, Kabiru
Akinsola, Rabiu Ibrahim, Matthew Edile, Oladele Ajiboye (Aji boy!),
Yakubu Alfa, Lukeman Abdulkarim, Sherif Isa, Mustapha Ibrahim, Uremu
Egbeta, Ademola Rafael, Saheed Fabiyi, Lukman Haruna, Uche Okafor and
Macaulay Christantus, hailed as the new Jay-Jay Okocha.

As we now know, he is the new Phillip Osondu.

You all know that
story, no need to bother readers with it. Like his Ghanian equivalent,
Nii Odartey Lambtey, Phillip Osondu never grew. But how could he?
Osondu, known as Zanza played in the football League for Falcons of Aba
in the 1979 – ‘80 season and played U-17 for Nigeria in 1987. Such is
the level of fraud in age-grade football in Nigeria.

Adokiye Amiesimaka
aka Chief Justice, ex-Eagle and Cup of Nations 1980 winner screamed
loud before the U-17 championship in 2009 that the players we were
parading are overage particularly the team’s captain and that it’s a
disservice to the country, opinions were divided as to the propriety of
his action. I supported him at the time and still support his position.
Now let’s save that agony and national embarrassment and do it right
for now. Choose real U-20 please.

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Save our heroes

Save our heroes

It is not of him
that wishes, or of him who is running and wants to wins, but of God,
who bestows his mercy on whomsoever he wishes. The news of the death of
Gideon Njoku came to me as a very disheartening shock – to put it very
mildly.

On the 1st of
October, 2010, after sharing the Save Nigerian Sports Initiative
(SANSI) and the W.W.W(we will win) FIFA 2018 World Cup visions with
some stakeholders, Njoku walked up to me and said inter-alia: “sir, I
want to be part of what you people are doing.” I felt so encouraged to
hear such a statement from an ex-international football player and
great coach, who has contributed tremendously to football development
in Nigeria. We agreed to meet in my office, the following week. And he
came.

My office is on the
4th floor of a building. The elevator does not function and I pray it
does not because I derive some degree of exercise climbing the stairs
to my office and I enjoy doing so.

So, Njoku had to
climb the stairs cases, in order to get to my office and that was not
funny at all. By the time he walked into my office, he was struggling
to breathe properly, and as I often tell all those who visit me, I said
him to him, “Please catch your breath sir”.

This took about two
or three minutes. Fred – my secretary, and Kingsley – one of my
assistants, remarked after my very fruitful meeting with Njoku, that
they were scared by the way he was breathing while with us in the
office.

I noticed it too,
because I remember calling his attention to his weight vis-à-vis the
way he was breathing, during our discussion. To my surprise, he agreed
and told me he had not been exercising well for about the past three
years. He said much more and left. His second visit to my office, was
when he brought a meticulously crafted proposal he put together for the
training of football coaches working with us. I wish I had the
opportunity to publish the proposal he wrote, so that Nigerians would
appreciate what they have lost. There is no doubting the fact that we
have lost a committed, sincere and experienced grass roots football
development technocrat.

Last moments

In December 2010,
Njoku was one of the guests of the General Overseer of the Redeemed
Christian Church of God, Pastor Enoch Adeboye, at the special
prayer/thanksgiving service, for the revival of Nigerian sports.

During the
reception that took place after the service, he told sports writers and
others present that he was as good as being jobless. We heard him but
maybe a few hearkened and were sensitive to what he said. He left the
venue in Segun Odegbami’s vehicle. A few days after this last meeting,
he sent a text message to me, informing me of the death of his mother.
I sent my condolence to him in response. I called him after about a
week and he told me he was already in the village for the burial of his
mother and would be back in Lagos after the Christmas holidays. I
wished well and was looking forward to our next meeting.

On Tuesday January
11, 2010 around 7pm, I called his mobile telephone number and a
different voice answered me. It was his son. He told me the Great Njoku
was no more! I called Segun Odegbami who confirmed it and I wept once
more for Nigerian football. Well, weeping may last all night, but, it
is certain however, that joy will come in the morning. This is our
consolation.

In a related
article titled “More coaches to suffer stroke” written by Everest
Onyewuchi, on Tuesday 4th February, 2003 and published in one of
Nigeria’s dailies, Paul Onyeudo, of the Sports Medicine department in
the National Sports Commission (NSC), predicted that more coaches will
suffer stroke based on the health situation of Peter Fregene, a former
Green Eagles and Stationery Stores goalkeeper. One of the best this
nation ever had.

Making hay

Prior to Fregene’s
case, another ex-international and former coach of Udoji United
football team, Sam Opone, had died in 2001 as a result of stroke.
Another ex-international and former coach of Stationery Stores and
Union Bank football team, Austin Ofuokwu, had also been confined to the
wheel chair, due to stroke.

This last decade has ‘swallowed’ some of Nigeria’s legends. God willing, maybe some of them could have been avoided.

Yes, maybe. I believe that it is very essential for us to address some vital issues, as we try to console ourselves.

While I agree that
there is absolutely nothing we can do to revive our ‘lost’ heroes, we
owe ourselves the responsibility to protect those who are still alive,
as a means of assuring millions of young Nigerians, that the future is
bright for them.

To begin with, all of us in sports, whether athlete, journalist, agent, manager, trainer, coach, scientist,

administrator –
whether bureaucrat or technocrat, must learn to appreciate the fact
that it is our responsibility to ‘make hay while the sun is still
shining’, and by so doing, we ‘prepare for the rainy day’. This is not
all about having a viable pension or retirement scheme. It is not about
how many millions we have in our bank accounts or shares we have
bought. It is not also about the number of landed property we have
acquired, over the years, it has to do with taking very good care of
our bodies. Don’t be deceived please, no matter how rich you are, if
your body is not in good condition, it is not likely that you will live
to enjoy your wealth. We will deal with this issue later, by the grace
of God.

While I sincerely appreciate the call on the government to do
something as regards our legends, I wonder which arm of the government
is being referred to. Is it the local, state or federal government? I
laugh and ask myself if they know that this great nation has lost a
hero. By the way, who is going to be responsible for his burial? We
wait and see.

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Full house in Eagles training camp

Full house in Eagles training camp

The
Samson Siasia-led Super Eagles technical crew on Tuesday had the full
complement of invited home based players to work with as the team
continued its preparations ahead of next month’s invitational
tournament in the United States of America.

Unlike Monday’s
training session, which came up in the evening, the team on Tuesday
trained twice – once in the morning and the other in the evening – at
the practice pitch of the National Stadium in Abuja.

Also, unlike Monday’s session, which had only 14 players in attendance, Tuesday’s training had 26 players in attendance.

However, only 25 of
the players worked with Siasia and his assistants as Valentine Nwabili
was nursing an injury. The injury is, however, mild and the fullback,
who already has a couple of caps with the national team, is expected to
resume full training with the team later today.

Siasia gets car

Meanwhile, the
Nigeria Football Federation on Tuesday evening presented Siasia with
his official car, a 2010 model of the Ford Taurus. The NFF also
provided the Super Eagles coach with a chauffeur.

The short ceremony,
which took place at the Glass House secretariat of the NFF, was
presided over by NFF president, Aminu Maigari, and in attendance were
other board members of the NFF including 1st vice president, Mike Umeh;
technical committee boss, Chris Green; Shehu Adamu, Deji Tinubu, as
well as referees committee boss, Muazu Suleyman.

Speaking at the
handing over, Maigari noted that the NFF has now fulfilled its pledge
to give Siasia the same first-class treatment that had been accorded
expatriate coaches of the Super Eagles in the past.

An elated Siasia
beamed widely as he stepped into the state-of-the-art machine and was
driven by Maigari, before he thanked the NFF for the gesture.

“Honestly, I am overjoyed. I thank the NFF for this car and I
promise that we will earn results on the field that will make everyone,
every Nigerian, happy,” said Siasia.

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Globacom withdraws suit against Premier League

Globacom withdraws suit against Premier League

Telecommunications
outfit, Globacom, has withdrawn the suit it instituted against the
Nigeria Premier League (NPL) challenging the propriety of awarding of
the country’s Premier League title rights to rival telecommunication
firm, MTN.

Globacom,
represented by its lawyers, on Tuesday filed a notice of discontinuance
before presiding judge, Mohammed Liman at the Federal High Court in
Lagos.

The notice of
discontinuance was brought in pursuant to Order 50 Rule 2(1) of the
Federal High Court Civil Procedure Rules, 2009.

Globacom had
through its lawyer, Abiodun Adesanya, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria,
filed the suit challenging the award of the league sponsorship right to
MTN, claiming that the NPL ignored the tenets of due process in the
entire process.

The
telecommunications company, which had previously sponsored the Nigerian
top flight for four years before pulling out last year, said it was
shocked to hear that MTN had won the title sponsorship right, even when
it (MTN) did not participate in the bid process.

However, the league body said MTN was represented by Total Promotions all through the bidding process.

Speaking on the latest development, a senior official of Globacom who did not want to be name said:

“We did this in the interest of Nigerian football. The longer we
stayed in court the further the league would continue to suffer and
that was not what we set out to do from the outset.” He said his
company will seek other dispute resolution mechanisms while also
looking for other avenues to contribute to the development of football
in Nigeria.

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Clubs warned over fans’ behaviour

Clubs warned over fans’ behaviour

Tough
times await clubs who fail to prevent their fans from intimidating or
harassing match officials at football venues hosting matches of the
Nigeria Premier League (NPL).

This was revealed
by the league body on Tuesday following recent acts of intimidation
aimed at match officials in match venues, the most recent of which took
place last weekend at Ijebu Ode’s Gateway International Stadium
involving Sunshine Stars and Heartland.

In the course of
the game, which ended 2-1 in favour of Sunshine Stars, sections of the
home crowd threatened to harm the centre referee Friday Awogo and his
assistants, as well as journalists at the match venue.

No comment

There hasn’t been
any official statement from the NPL regarding the incident in Ijebu Ode
but the league body has warned clubs to do all within their power
prevent the harassment and intimidation of match officials and players
before, during and after matches.

“The league board reminds all Premier League clubs of the provisions of articles 3.7, 4.3,

5.7 of the
2010/2011 Rules and Regulations,” said Tunji Babalola, the acting
Executive Secretary of the NPL, in a statement made available to NEXT
where he further emphasize that henceforth, provisions of the articles
shall be fully enforced on all erring clubs.

Sections of Article
3.7, amongst other things, states that: “Intimidation and harassment of
match officials by club fans or club officials before, during, or after
pre-match meetings is strictly prohibited and attracts a fine of
N5,000,000 payable before the club’s next home match.

Article 4.3 and 5.7
deals mainly with disruption of matches by fans, club officials or
players and, besides a possible year-long ban of those responsible for
the disruption, attracts a maximum fine of N10,000,000.

NPL approves venues for Heartland, three others.

Meanwhile, the
league body in its effort to continuously play Premier League matches
on television friendly pitches and to avoid setbacks, has approved
alternative home grounds for four clubs.

The affected clubs are Heartland, Niger Tornadoes, Plateau United and JUTH.

Heartland will now
play its subsequent home matches at the E.J. Esuene Stadium, Calabar
while Kaduna Township Stadium will be the new home ground of JUTH and
Niger Tornadoes. Plateau United, meanwhile, will play its home matches
at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium, Enugu.

According to a statement from the NPL, Heartland and Niger
Tornadoes, were relocated due to the poor state of their playing pitch,
while the duo of Plateau United and JUTH were moved out of Jos
following the recent unrest in the Plateau State capital.

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Nigeria names team for Accra championship

Nigeria names team for Accra championship

The
final list of players to represent Nigeria at the 13th International
Tennis Federation ITF/CAT West and Central Africa 14 & 16 Junior
Championship qualifiers has been revealed.

Coach of the team,
Mohammed Ubale, revealed the players on phone from Ado-Ekiti, where the
team is camped. Ubale said that they had a round-robin tournament
between the players to sift the best of the players. Their current
status and fitness was also taken into consideration before four
players were decamped.

Umoru Balami will
lead the team to Ghana and he said the key to winning in Ghana is hard
work. Balami, who has been praised by Dermot Sweeney of the ITF Centre
in South Africa, said:

“I work hard and
try to do all that the coaches ask of me to do and I believe that is
why I have been improving in my game. I know that practising is the way
to get better and I always make sure that I focus on training. My aim
is to win the Ghana tournament though I know it will be hard but I
believe I have prepared adequately to win my event.”

Another member of the Accra-bound team, Sarah Adegoke, is seeded number one in the 14 and under category for girls.

Adegoke is also a SS2 student at the St. Louis Secondary School, Ibadan and has been coached by her father,

Dapo, all her life. The elder Adegoke is with his daughter in Ado-Ekiti, as she prepares to represent Nigeria in Ghana.

“My aim is to win in Ghana. I am training harder than before and I know that if I am not lazy then I can win,” she said.

Her father who
coaches her full-time will not be following her to Ghana but Adegoke
said that would not dampen her determination to excel.

“Daddy won’t be
coming to Ghana but Coach Ubale is like a father to me. I have been
training under him also since I came into the national camp last year,
so I will not miss my daddy too much.”

Adegoke has on account of her consistency and improvement been invited for a one-month trial at the ITF Centre in Pretoria.

The other players
that make up the team are Joseph Imeh, Emmanuel Idoko and Mohammed
Mohammed, for the boys and Zainab Oladimeji, Miracle Sunday and Ramota
Adeyemi for the girls.

The ITF/CAT West
and Central Africa 14 & 16 Junior Championship qualifiers being
hosted by Ghana and will be held at the National Sports College,
Winneba from January 24-30, 2011.

While the first
match is scheduled begin by 9:30am on January 24, the match fixtures
will be sorted after the draw on Sunday, January 23 after the arrival
of the 13 participating countries.

The 13 countries
participating include: Benin Republic, Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire,
Democratic Republic of Congo (RD Congo), Gabon, Ghana, Guinea Bissau,
Liberia, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Togo.

The championship will also serve as the qualifiers to the Africa Junior Championships to be hosted by Egypt in April 2011.

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Players, fans shun tourney

Players, fans shun tourney

This
year’s edition of the All Stars Women Football Championship has been
described as disappointing by observers because of the low turnout
being witnessed.

The championship,
which has been organised by the Amalgamation of Nigerian Women Football
Club Coaches for 11 years, experienced a low turnout for both players
and spectators alike.

According to Joy
Etim, coach and proprietor of Puma FC, “The turnout this year has been
very poor. It is the lowest we have ever experienced. Not only is there
a decline in the number of fans around, the girls are also not here.

Before, after we
have played all the preliminaries, we get enough girls to make 20
teams, now let us hope we get about five teams”.

Conflict in schedule

The absence of the
women who are competing has been attributed to conflict in schedule. “I
think many of the girls went for trials to be able to play in the
League and got stuck at the respective places when the NFF (Nigerian
Football Federation) decided to postpone the start of the league. You
know most of these women are struggling and who knows what sacrifices
they made to get to the trials”, says Okunwa Ogunbor, former Super
Falcons and National Institute for Sports (NIS) trained coach.

Not deterred

Etim has however vowed that such setbacks will not discourage them from organising the championship.

“This is happening
for the first time and we hope that we would not face the same thing
next year. Last year, a girl even came from the UK to play. If I had
invited her this year and she came to meet such a poor arrangement
would she be happy?

This has been going
on for 11 years, it was started by us (women coaches) and we will do
everything in our capacity to see it remains because this is our way of
giving back”.

One way the championship can be moved forward is for sponsorship to improve.

“Some of us coaches
went to some of these corporate organisations for help, but they have
been turning up this way and that, we are not sure of what is going on.
Whatever it is they want us to do, they should just tell us and we
would do it,” Etim explains further. She went ahead to appreciate the
concern of the Lagos State Sports Council (LSSC).

This year’s edition
of the championship is supported by the LSSC. Chairman of the council,
Agboola Dabiri, has promised that the women would be kitted by the
council from the quarter-final stage. “Women football has not enjoyed
the support it deserves despite the honour it has brought to the
country. It is important that corporate bodies support them”.

Finals of the tournament, scheduled for January 22nd is expected to
have Abimbola Fashola, the wife of the Lagos State governor, in
attendance.

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Football academy begins new season

Football academy begins new season

Earlystart Football
Academy, a youth and Community development initiative of football
Commentator, Godwin Dudu-Orumen has opened its new season for January
at the main-bowl of the National Stadium Surulere, using Gate E
opposite the Stadium’s Medical Centre.

The Academy which is open to children age 5-16, boys and girls has
professional youth football Coaches under whose watchful eyes the kids
will be training The academy said amongst other things it will be
offering training in physical conditioning, aerobics, football skills,
interactive sessions with adults and distinguished personalities in the
society. Time for the training daily is 8:30am – 12pm.

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Maigari to meet FIFA boss in Zurich

Maigari to meet FIFA boss in Zurich

Startled by the revelation by a FIFA official, Sampon Kablan,
that Nigerian football administrators have misused development opportunities
provided by the world football governing body, Aminu Maigari, the President of
the Nigeria Football Federation and its Acting General Secretary, Musa Amadu
are expected to meet FIFA President, Sepp Blatter and General Secretary, Jerome
Valcke.

The meeting is expected to take place at the FIFA hospital in a
fortnight in Zurich, Switzerland.

Kablan is one of the FIFA officials currently in Nigeria on the
Women’s World cup tour.

According to a statement from the NFF signed by Ademola Olajire,
its Media Officer, both men will hold extensive talks on Thursday, February 3
with the FIFA chieftains on the possibility of more FIFA goal projects for
Nigeria.

Nigeria short-changing
self

Kablan, the FIFA Development Officer for West Africa, told
members of NFF executive Committee in Abuja on Tuesday that Nigeria can benefit
far more than it is currently enjoying.

“I am happy to see the peace and understanding that exists
between the Ministry of Sports and the NFF. It is a good thing, and this will
propel development programmes.

“All I need from you is permission and support to show positive
aggression to secure more FIFA development programmes. You are behind schedule
and should be benefitting more.

“Some countries like Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire are on their fourth
development projects, while Cape Verde is on the fifth. Nigeria, a great
football nation by all means, has only been able to get one, the Technical Centre,
and one artificial turf through the ‘Win-In-Africa-For-Africa’ programme that
was launched as a result of the first FIFA World Cup in Africa,” Kablan said.

At a separate meeting with the Sports Minister, Taoheed Adedoja and the NFF
Executive Committee, Kablan also suggested that FIFA should take the lead in
the construction of a befitting, ultra-modern secretariat for the football
federation.

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Sunshine Stars sanctioned for fans behaviour

Sunshine Stars sanctioned for fans behaviour

Unwavering in its campaign to curb violent conducts in the local
league, the Nigerian Premier League (NPL) has ordered Sunshine Stars FC of
Akure to play its next two home matches behind closed doors with effect from
week 13.

This was revealed in a statement by Tunji Babalola, the acting
Executive Secretary in reaction to the violent conduct by Sunshine fans against
Heartland FC.

“Sunshine Stars FC supporters were harassing the away team in
their game against Heartland FC over the weekend thereby violating the rules
and regulations of the NPL,” the statement said.

“The Supporters of Sunshine Stars FC are hereby warned to desist
from such attitude or NPL will be obliged to invoke stiffer sanction on the
erring club(s)”.

Supporters of 3SC were equally issued a warning by the NPL.

Ahmed Kadiri of Enyimba International FC was also handed a one
(1) match ban for unruly behaviour in their match against Warri Wolves FC.

In addition to missing their next away match against Kaduna
United FC, Ahmed will pay a fine of N100, 000.

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