Archive for Sports

Magical McDowell wins Ryder Cup for Europe

Magical McDowell wins Ryder Cup for Europe

Europe, led early on by Ian Poulter and Luke Donald, regained the Ryder Cup after fending off a brilliant fight-back by the United States in Monday’s last-day singles.
Northern Ireland’s Graeme McDowell earned the winning point, beating Hunter Mahan 3&1 in the final match to give the home team victory by 14-1/2 points to 13-1/2.
Poulter crushed Matt Kuchar 5&4 and Donald beat Jim Furyk one-up before the Americans clawed their way back, rookie Rickie Fowler stealing a valuable half after brilliantly birdying the last four holes against Italian Edoardo Molinari.
With the overall score level at 13-1/2 13-1/2, McDowell sank a curling birdie putt from 12 feet on the 16th green to go two up on Mahan before securing the win with a conceded par at the 17th.
Crowds of just over 35,000 at a sun-splashed Celtic Manor were treated to one of the most riveting last days at a Ryder Cup in recent memory as Europe won the trophy for the fourth time in five editions.
Tough opponent
The home team had led by three points going into the event’s first-ever Monday finish but the Americans cut the deficit to just one when Dustin Johnson and Steve Stricker claimed the first two points.
Johnson routed Martin Kaymer 6&4 before world number four Stricker beat second-ranked Lee Westwood 2&1 seconds later to give the U.S. hope of retaining the trophy they won in 2008.
Poulter, who screamed in delight after draining a 25-footer to birdie the third, then notched Europe’s first point of the day by rolling in a six-foot birdie putt on the 14th green.
“It was always going to be a tough game against Kuch,” said a beaming Poulter who had chipped in from off the green to eagle the 11th.
“He’d won all his matches so far so I knew I had to come out and play real strong today.”
Donald, playing in the third match, was three up on Furyk after 13 holes but had to hold off a late surge by the American before sealing the win with a two-putt par at the last.
“I knew Jim was going to be a really tough opponent,” said Donald. “He’s a very similar player to me, he grinds it out.
“He put some pressure on me at the end but I was glad to get a point.”
Pony-tailed Spaniard, Miguel Angel Jimenez, never trailed in his match against U.S. rookie Bubba Watson before winning 4&3 to give Europe a commanding 13-9 lead.

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Cowrie, Edo steal the show at Independence tourney

Cowrie, Edo steal the show at Independence tourney

Cowrie Rugby Football Club of Lagos and
the Edo State women’s rugby side last weekend emerged respective
winners of the men’s and women’s categories of the Independence Rugby
Seven’s tournament.

The two-day
tournament, which got underway at the main bowl of the National
Stadium, Lagos, on October 1 – Nigeria’s Independence Day, saw Cowrie
defeating Police RFC 12-0 in the men’s final while Edo defeated
archrivals Delta state 12-5in the women’s final.

Frank Adedeji and
Dipo Olawale each scored a try for Cowrie, along with a conversion by
Azeez Ladipo, to secure a comfortable 12-0 win over the Police side,
while Tessy Benjamin, Edith Ekechi and team captain Bimpe Johnson were
the heroes of the Edo state team in their win over Delta state.

Benjamin and Ekechi
each scored a try while Johnson got a conversion with Chioma Agu
scoring a consolation for the Delta state team in the final.

Gifts galore

At the end of the
tournament, which was organised by the Friends of Rugby, winners in the
men’s and women’s categories went home with a cash gift of N250,000,
and N150, 000 respectively, along with trophies. They also got a bottle
of champagne and Irish cream to go along with their trophies and cash
rewards.

The losing
finalists were not left out. The Police team got N100,000 for their
efforts while the Delta state side grabbed N75,000. They each got a
bottle of champagne as well.

The only foreign
team to participate in the tourney, Ghana’s Accra Sharks RFC, and Addax
were adjudged the most disciplined sides in the men’s and women’s
categories and got N25,000 respectively for their efforts,

while the most valuable players in the men’s and women’s categories got the sum of N30,000 each.

“We are grateful to
God Almighty for a most successful rugby tournament that has ever been
witnessed in the history of the game in Nigeria,” said the tournament’s
coordinator, Ntiense Williams, at the end of the event.

The tournament, is
now in its third year, and it had 27 teams in attendance, including six
women teams whose representatives, at the end of Saturday’s finals,
collectively bestowed on the Friends of Rugby chairman, Kelechi Mbagwu,
the title ‘Pillar of Rugby’; in appreciation of his contribution
towards the development of rugby in Nigeria.

“I am used to
giving out to people, but you guys have surprised me today by honouring
me,” said a surprised Mbagwu. “From the bottom of my heart, I am
humbled and I very much appreciate your kind gesture.

“I promise to do everything within my
powers to ensure that the ban on the Nigeria Rugby Football Federation
by the International Rugby Board is lifted in the earliest possible
time for meaningful progress to be recorded for Nigerian Rugby,” said
Mbagwu. The International Rugby Board had placed Nigeria on indefinite
suspension in October 2009.

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‘Cabal, not Bio responsible for FIFA ban’

‘Cabal, not Bio responsible for FIFA ban’

The
ban placed on Nigeria by world football governing body, FIFA on Monday
for government interference in football has continue to generate
reaction from the sports fraternity in the country.

Yesterday in Lagos, a group of concerned former sportsmen, which included Olympians Mary Onyali-Omagbemi,

Yusuf Alli, Falilat
Ogunkoya and Henry Amike, and journalists under the umbrella of
‘Stakeholders in Nigerian Sports’ met to review the ban and decided
that contrary to the belief of FIFA that the minister of sports,
Ibrahim Bio is not responsible for the present crisis but a particular
cabal within Nigerian sports which places its interest above the
national interest.

The group, which
expressed confidence in the manner the NSC, had handled the crisis in
Nigerian football also advised parties with cases in the courts to
withdraw them and take them to the Court of Arbitration (CAS) in
Switzerland.

Speaking at the occasion, Henry Amike, an Olympian and one of Nigeria’s most accomplished hurdlers, said:

“If we have an Amos
Adamu, a FIFA member and we have a problem like this, then why is he
there? Can that happen in Trinidad and Tobago? I think we have to say
the truth and let us die if we have to die. As far as I am concerned,
it is not the National Sports Commission (NSC) that it is the problem.
The National Sports, the minister, the DG are not the problem.

“We all know the
problem and the problem did not start now. If they are not there,
nothing can work. Let us face facts; let us know the truth and say it.
We should allow FIFA to come to Nigeria and decide for us when it comes
to issues of local interest.

Dirty Linen

Amike said the
reason FIFA is intervening is because the sporting community in Nigeria
decided to wash its dirty linen in public, prompting FIFA to come in to
‘assist’ it. He was the only way sports could grow in Nigeria is if
member of the sports fraternity dealt plainly with each other:

“ If we can agree
together inside and tell ourselves the truth, this issue of sports
problems once and for all, the issue of sports problems would be solved
and sports can grow. Onyali and Fali (Falilat Ogunkoya) were talking
about grassroots development. It cannot work. If those people are still
there they will not put the right people there and if the right people
are not there as managers then the right thing cannot be done,” he said.

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Chukwu hopes for quick end to FIFA ban

Chukwu hopes for quick end to FIFA ban

Former
captain and handler of the Nigerian national team, Christian Chukwu,
hopes that Nigeria’s suspension by football’s world governing body,
FIFA will be lifted as soon as possible.

The Super Eagles
are billed to take on their Guinean counterparts on Sunday in a 2012
Africa Cup of Nations qualifier in Conakry but the game remains
doubtful after FIFA, on Monday, suspended Nigeria from international
football because of government interference.

If the suspension
is not lifted before Sunday’s match day, and if the game is not
postponed by the sport’s governing body, then it means the Super Eagles
will need to play catch-up with the Guineans in the race for Group B’s
sole automatic ticket to the 2012 Africa Cup of Nations to be co-hosted
by Equatorial Guinea and Gabon.

As things currently
stand in Group B, the Super Eagles lie in second place behind the
Guineans on goals difference after they only managed to secure a 2-0
win over Madagascar in their opening match, on a weekend that saw the
Guineans walloping the group’s other team Ethiopia 4-1 in Addis Ababa.

Quick solution

No wonder Chukwu is calling for a quick resolution of the ‘crisis’.

“It really is
unfortunate the crisis we have placed ourselves in with our own hands,”
Chukwu told NEXT. “Some of us had expressed our reservations over the
way the authorities handled the election matter but some people were at
the same time saying that FIFA didn’t have the right to interfere in
the matter.

“But now it is
clear that FIFA have every right to delve into the matter. All we can
hope for, is the whole matter to be resolved as soon as possible before
the match against Guinea.

“No one has said
that the match has been postponed so if the match officials go there
(to Conakry) and we are not present on Sunday then it means a walk over
will take place,” said Chukwu, before adding: “It’s as simple as that.”
Chukwu, who captained Nigeria to Nations Cup glory in 1980 and who
served as one of Clemens Westerhof’s assistants in the victorious
Tunisia ‘94 side before coaching the Super Eagles to a third-place
finish at the 2004 tournament, also in Tunisia, also called on the
authorities to recognise the legitimacy of the last NFF elections.

This is irrespective of the fact that he was one of those who lost out in their quest to get into the NFF’s board.

“I know I lost in
the elections but I’m not happy with the suspension,” he said. “FIFA
has pointed it clear that they will not tolerate any form of
interference from government so the only way to resolve this issue is
to bring back those who in the opinion of FIFA should be in the NFF.”

Yobo weighs in
Chukwu isn’t alone in calling for a quick resolution to the crisis as
the current captain of the Super Eagles Joseph Yobo has also made a
passionate plea to the country’s sports authorities to ensure that the
ban is swiftly reversed.

“This is absolutely devastating for the fans, players and the entire country.” Said Yobo in a report on the BBC website.

“The players are in
shock just like the millions of passionate football fans here and we
can only hope they resolve this crisis for the progress of the country.

“Importantly football is a powerful force in the country; it unites
the country so we shouldn’t let it separate us as a strong nation.”

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Time running out for Arsenal’s Wenger

Time running out for Arsenal’s Wenger

Arsenal have not
won a trophy in five years and judging from their performances in the
early part of this season, that drought will most probably last another
year. If it does then Arsene Wenger’s time at the Emirates Stadium
could come to an end.

I know it is too
early to make predictions, but I am pretty confident that with this
group of players, the Gunners won’t be celebrating any silverware by
May, 2011.

What baffles me is
that Wenger has had several seasons to invest in his squad, but has
decided against it. The French manager continues to insist on relying
on young players who have won little or nothing in their careers.

It’s easy to start from the back when we try to break this down.

No keeper to call upon

Since Jens Lehmann
left, Arsenal have been without a top-class goalkeeper – a ‘keeper that
can come up with big saves to preserve victories and avoid silly
mistakes that cost points.

That keeper is not
Manuel Almunia. We all know that and so does Wenger, so why has he not
gone out and invested in a new goalie? He courted Mark Schwarzer this
summer, but that wouldn’t be an intelligent choice looking at the
future of the club. So why not go for someone like Fiorentina’s
Sebastien Frey, Genoa’s Eduardo or Maarten Stekelenburg of Ajax?

Their defence is
also missing a world-class player. Every big club around Europe has an
experienced leader at the back, while Arsenal have no-one who fits the
bill. Even when William Gallas was there, he was not the team player
and the reference point that a young team needed. This summer Wenger
brought in Laurent Koscielny and Sebastien Squillaci, both good players
but neither will make or break their season.

Need for a midfield enforcer

Midfield is an area
of the pitch where Arsenal are renowned for having some of the most
talented players in the English Premier League. This is the engine room
where many say the best football in England is created. I agree the
Gunners have many skilful players and Cesc Fabregas is a fantastic
footballer. But there has been a key piece missing in the center of the
park since Patrick Vieira, a defensive midfielder par excellence, left
the club.

In order for Cesc
to blossom he needs someone to cover his tracks. At Barcelona, Xavi has
Sergio Busquets. At Inter Milan, Wesley Sneijder has Esteban Cambiasso.
But who does Fabregas have? Alex Song. A talented young player for sure
but he lacks the character and strength to do the job against the top
teams on the continent.

Up front, it’s a
similar story: a lot of style but not much substance. Robin van Persie
is a top player but he’s not a pure striker who will get 20 goals per
season. Andrei Arshavin blows hot and cold and you never know if you
are going to get an inspiring or frustrating performance from the
Russian international.

Marouane Chamakh
was signed this season and he has added some much needed muscle but is
still not the reliable forward player this team needs at the highest
level.

So what has to be done? Wenger must realise he may have to start
from scratch after this season ends. He may have to sell his fringe
players and bring in two or three established internationals that can
gel with the talented youngsters in the squad and create a winning
side. If he doesn’t do it fast, the Frenchman may be heading for the
exit door when the board realises the trophy drought has gone on for
too long.

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Ayomike claims 2010 Nigeria Cup

Ayomike claims 2010 Nigeria Cup

Flamboyant amateur
player, Tim Ayomike, added his name to the Nigeria Cup honour list
after emerging winner of the Nigeria Cup 2010 Golf Competition.

The competition was a special package for the golden jubilee celebration of Nigeria’s Independence.

The single
handicapper defeated arch rival Chi Ekeocha, another single
handicapper, at the end of the 18-hole one-day tourney competed for by
golf playing members of Ikoyi Club 1938.

Ayomike, who had
come close to, winning past tournaments, took home the 50th anniversary
tournament in style – with a 2 over par 73 to beat Ekeocha on a count
back.

Speaking at the prize presentation which came up on Saturday night at the Civic Centre, Lagos, Ayomike said he was delighted.

“I think this is
one game that every member of the club, at least the golf playing ones,
wanted to win because it is special,” he said. “We are marking the
country’s 50th anniversary in a big way and whoever wins would be
celebrated.

“The competition
was really tough but like I always do, I just went out there to enjoy
myself and I guess it is a great honour to come out a winner.”

Satisfaction

On his part,
chairman of the tourney’s organising committee, Frank Gboneme,
expressed satisfaction with the organisation and turnout of
participants at the National Day Competition.

“I am more than
satisfied with the way the tournament went,” he said. “We have had one
week of pure fun. The caddies and kids turned out well and what made me
happy most is the fact that for one week there was no rain and all the
players came out to play and enjoyed themselves.

“It is a great
feeling and I can tell you that we have made positive impact in the
society that we are in.” In the gross category, Remi Olukoya took home
the winner prize with score of 79.

The Nigeria Cup
2010 tournament included a host of mini tournaments such as the
children’s and caddies’ events. A separate tournament for professional
players also came up and was won by Ghanaian player Emos Korblah.

The tournament was sponsored by notable brands, which included UBA, Diamond Bank, Oando Petroleum and Nigeria Breweries Limited.

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Black cloud hangs over ailing Liverpool

Black cloud hangs over ailing Liverpool

Liverpool were on
Monday getting used to the nasty taste of the words “relegation fight”
after the 18-times English champions made their worst start to a season
in more than half a century.

Add in the bitter
off-field controversy over the club’s ownership, out-of-sorts key
players and mounting fan protests and it is clear the once mighty club
have some dark days ahead.

“Things are looking
really, really bleak. It has been said that if you are in the bottom
three, you are in a relegation fight, and I would have to go along with
that,” manager Roy Hodgson said after Sunday’s 2-1 home loss to
promoted Blackpool.

The Merseyside club
have picked up six points from the first seven Premier League games to
sit 18th in the 20-team league and have also suffered an embarrassing
League Cup defeat by League Two (fourth division) Northampton Town.

Hodgson, who took
over from Rafa Benitez in July, shouldered the blame for the Blackpool
defeat by saying “I’m the one responsible because I’m the team manager”
but many fans believe the blame lies with the club’s owners.

Some 7,000
supporters marched to Anfield on Sunday waving banners and chanting in
the latest of many protests against American owners Tom Hicks and
George Gillett, who put the debt-laden club up for sale in April.

“The problems on
the field now are a consequence of what Tom Hicks and George Gillett
have been doing for a number of years now,” James McKenna, a
representative of the Spirit of Shankly supporters group, told Reuters.

“Yes, Tom Hicks and
George Gillett weren’t playing on the pitch yesterday and yes they
didn’t pick the team but they have continually spent Liverpool’s money.

“We could have
spent the extra revenue and income to go towards paying for new star
players and instead the revenue and income that we’ve generated has
gone towards paying off the debt that they burdened the club with.

“We will be
planning further demonstrations for as long as the situation goes on,”
he added. “The situation at Liverpool is one of the darkest in its
history.” Five-time European champions Liverpool owe their major
creditors Royal Bank of Scotland 237 million pounds and servicing that
debt has left little money in the transfer pot.

Terrible outlook

The lack of new
players has meant the responsibility to perform has fallen to a group
of players who were at the heart of a team challenging for the title
only a couple of years ago.

While England
midfielder Steven Gerrard is dependable as ever, Spain striker Fernando
Torres is enduring a terrible season where both his confidence and
scoring touch have vanished and on Sunday his fitness gave up the ghost
too as he limped off early with a groin injury.

The players were
booed off at halftime when they were two goals down against Blackpool
and former Liverpool captain Alan Hansen, writing in the Daily
Telegraph, understood why.

“They were wearing
red shirts at Anfield and produced a totally unacceptable performance
in a defeat that left Liverpool in the relegation zone. It was an
embarrassment,” he wrote.

“Forget about the history and tradition of the club. Pride also
comes into it, but if the pride isn’t there among the players, then
there is not a lot of hope for the club.” Liverpool’s next league game
on October 17 offers a good chance to redeem some pride, locally at
least, when they play the Merseyside derby at Everton, whose season has
been going little better than their neighbours.

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Delhi Games at last

Delhi Games at last

Despite the negative publicity it received over the past few months, the 19th Commonwealth Games will actually take place in New Delhi, India.

Seven years ago, the sprawling city of over 18 million inhabitants was awarded the hosting rights to what started out 80 years ago in Hamilton, Canada as the British Empire Games.

But rather than showcasing the rich cultural heritage of the second most populated country in the world, the Commonwealth Games has only extensively highlighted a country bedevilled by corruption, in which there is a huge gulf between the poor and the rich.

Besides the corruption and poverty – according to the United Nations, by 2005, 42 per cent of its 1.2 billion inhabitants lived below the World Bank’s international poverty line of $1.25 a day, there’s also the case of missed construction deadlines as well as the threat of a attacks from terror groups.

In the past few weeks, reports of dubious construction certificates were proven when a footbridge at the main stadium collapsed injuring many workers.

Corrupt Games

Just last Wednesday, a Supreme Court justice in Delhi said corruption was rampant in the Commonwealth Games and that the event will turn into a source of self-enrichment for many involved in organising the Games.

A report in the Times of India newspaper even went as far as reporting that Suresh Kalmadi, the organising committee’s chairman, was “an inept organiser” who has filled his committee with his buddies, 19 of whom have employed family members.

Most employees within the organising committee were not properly qualified for their positions but were “selected on the basis of being wives, children, nephews and relations of persons who run Indian sport,” the newspaper reported.

Not prepared to sit back and take all the blame, Kalmadi accused the Commonwealth Games Federation chief executive Mike Hooper of doing nothing in his four years as a temporary Delhi resident.

Hooper, a New Zealander, has reportedly been living the high life at the expense of the Indian government over the past four years but was recently accused of insulting Indians by saying Delhi’s “population hazard” hampered the organisation of the Games.

Terror groups

An even bigger threat to the Games than the feud between the two, even bigger than the unhygienic conditions inside the unfinished athletes village or the venomous cobras that have been found at the athletes village, is the ever looming threat of attacks from terror groups.

The Times of India reported that last week, a Pakistani journalist known for his links to the Pakistan intelligence complex met an Indian diplomat in Islamabad to say that he had spoken to Ilyas Kashmiri, leader of Al Qaida’s Pakistan-based 313 Brigade. According to the journalist, Kashmiri threatened an attack in India during the Games.

Indian and other foreign security agencies went into overdrive to assess the threat. But officials argued that there was none of the signs that were evident in the run-up to the 2008 Mumbai attacks, which lasted for four days between November 26-29, killing at least 173 people and wounding at least 308.

On Thursday, the government officially warned Delhi Police and other security agencies, as well as security officials of each participating team, about this new “information”, which led to a stern warning from the Indian home secretary Gopal Pillai to the Pakistani high commissioner Shahid Malik that any terror attack in India during the Commonwealth Games traced back to Pakistan will essentially be treated as a hostile act.

Malik was reminded of a threat by Kashmiri earlier this year that athletes coming for the Commonwealth Games would be targeted by his terror group. Kashmiri had also threatened to attack the country’s top cricket league – the Indian Premier League – and the World Cup hockey tournament in Delhi but no attacke took place.

Nevertheless, the Pakistani government are also not taking the report lightly. The Daily Times of Pakistan reported on Thursday that Pakistan’s Interior Ministry, along with various security establishments, are in a “state of panic” regarding the threat, which might jeopardise the already strained relations between both countries.

Even if the terror threat is not “credible”, Indian agencies believe this could be another tactic to spread fear.

Hopefully, the more than 100,000 security officials, including elite commandos, provided by the Indian government for the Games should be able prevent any attack during the event.

Withdrawals take shine off Games

Many also hope that once the Games start, the negativity surrounding it will become a thing of the past and that the focus will be on the athletes. But there are doubts regarding such a possibility as many of the best athletes in the Commonwealth will not participate.

They include the world’s fastest man, Usain Bolt and his predecessor, Asafa Powell, as well as five high profile Kenyan athletes – Olympic 1,500m champion, Asbel Kiprop; world 800m record holder, David Rudisha; world 10,000m champion, Linet Masai; former World marathon champion, Luke Kibet; and Commonwealth Games 800m champion, Janeth Jepkosgei.

Australia’s world discus champion, Dani Samuels and England’s triple jump world champion, Phillips Idowu, as well as Olympic 400m champion, Christine Ohuruogu, and most recently South Africa’s high-profile world 800m champion, Caster Semenya, have also pulled out of the Games.

Injuries, security and health reasons have been cited by many of the athletes as reasons for their withdrawal.

Their absence notwithstanding, the Games will be held, as scheduled. Probably, the only fear as the apprehensive world awaits the opening ceremony is whether spectators will be able to fill up the venues and cheer the athletes to glory as thousands of Games tickets remain unsold.

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Slumped against the ropes

Slumped against the ropes

Boxing, the noble art of self-defence, was at some point in time in Nigeria the undisputed king of sports. It had immense following among the populace and boxers, especially the successful ones among them, enjoyed cult followership from fans who just couldn’t get enough of them.

In addition, there were others who opted for the professional ranks and dominated their respective weight categories. These included the legendary duo of Hogan ‘Kid’ Bassey and Richard Ihetu, more popularly known as Dick Tiger.

Both fighters didn’t rest on their achievements within the Commonwealth. They extended their dominance beyond this radius and ended up becoming undisputed world champions, Bassey at featherweight and Tiger in both the middleweight and light heavyweight classes.

Bassey, who back in 1950 at the age of 18, and still in high school, became the youngest boxer to win the national flyweight title, achieved his world title feat back in 1957 when he defeated Cherif Hamia, a French-Algerian in Paris and went on to defend the title twice before losing it two years later to America’s David Moore, in a fight that turned out to be his last. He quit professional boxinga afterwards.

For his part, Tiger became world champion in 1962. He claimed the then vacant WBA middleweight title after defeating Gene Fullmer over 15 rounds in a bout decided in San Francisco, California.

He held on to the title until December 1963 when he lost on points to Joey Giardello but reclaimed it, along with the WBC title, two years later with a 15 round unanimous decision victory over Giardello.

He lost both titles to Emile Griffith in April 1966 and thereafter stepped up to the light heavyweight category and by May of the following year stopped Roger Rouse in the 12th round to become the WBC and WBA light heavyweight champion of the world.

The nearly men

Besides Bassey, who died in 1998, and Tiger, who died in 1971 at the age of 42 – a year after his retirement from the sport, Nigeria also produced other world champions such as the Owerri-born Herbert Maduagwu, better known as Herbie Hide, and the Lagos-born Henry Akinwande who both temporarily held the WBO equivalent of the heavyweight crown at separate times in the 90s.

In recent times, Samuel Peter has joined the growing list of Nigerians to have won a world title after he claimed the WBC world heavyweight title in 2008, and there’s also Segun Ajose who is the current Commonwealth light welterweight champion.

Success hasn’t been limited to the professional ranks alone. The country has also produced champions in the amateur cadre such as Eddie Ndukwu, a two-time Commonwealth gold medallist in the bantamweight and featherweight categories; Nojeem Maiyegun, who won Nigeria’s first Olympic medal at the 1964 Games in Tokyo; Isaac Ikhuoria, who won a bronze medal at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich; and Davidson Andeh, who became world champion at the 1978 World Boxing Championships in Belgrade.

Peter Konyegwachie also won a silver medal at the Los Angeles ‘84 Olympics, a feat that was replicated eight years later at the Barcelona Olympics by the duo of David Izorintei and Richard Ibenegu, while Duncan Dokiwari won a bronze at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta.

Disasters and near disasters

But it hasn’t been all smooth sailing as a lot of Nigerian boxers have seen their campaigns ending in disappointments as was the case with Obisia Nwankpa, who lost to WBC light welterweight champion Saoul Mamby in a title bout decided at the National Stadium, Lagos. So was the case with Joe Lasisi, who lost a shot at the WBA light heavyweight crown, along with his unbeaten record, when he suffered a 7th round knockout loss to Virgil Hill in North Dakota in May 1989.

At the moment Nigerian boxers particularly those in the amateur ranks have become cannon fodder for their opponents in international sporting competitions. Worse still, is the state of facilities were these boxers are trained. They are decrepit and so outdated that it is amazing that they have not been phased out.

And that appears to be what lies in the horizon for boxing in Nigeria unless, in the opinion of respected boxing coach Joe Mensah, certain things are put in place.

“There must be conducive atmosphere for sponsors to come in. Where it concerns government is for them to put facilities in place. But, as at today there is no facility for boxing across the country, and the administrators are comfortable with the situation,” Mensah told a local newspaper.

“We really need the Federal Government to do more for boxing to develop in the country. The sport is going down by the day. The administrators should endeavour to build boxing gymnasiums in the geo-political zones in the country. With that the sport would go places.”

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Nigeria losing track on athletics

Nigeria losing track on athletics

When Chioma Ajunwa won the Gold Medal at the Atlanta Games in 1996, much cheering greeted her victory. It was a glorious achievement for athletics in the country as it heralded the growing influence of the country’s athletes in world athletics.

However, despite the myriad of achievements recorded in the past 50 years on and off the tracks; coaches, athletes and administrators concur that athletics, which used to be a stronghold of Nigeria is fast dwindling.

“We are not where we ought to be definitely; each day we are losing our grip on those sports that we usually win. As a country we have played lip service to sports development and that is why we are where we are right now” Solomon Ogba, President of the Athletics Federation of Nigeria said recently.

Athletics is perhaps the sport that has given the country the highest number of laurels internationally at different sporting events.

At the Olympics Games, which serves as the pinnacle of sports competition worldwide, athletics accounts for 13 out of the 23 medals won so far by Nigeria; two of which are Gold medals.

Great exploits

Right from the Los Angeles Olympic Games where the quartet of Sunday Uti, Moses Ugbusien, Rotimi Peters and Innocent Egbunike took the World by storm to win the bronze medal in the 400m event , Nigeria had been making so much impact on the world map but surprisingly took off its foot off the pedal recently for inexplicable reasons .

Internationally, Nigeria was a dominant force in sprint, quarter mile, hurdles, the relays, jumps and other areas of speciality.

In the Men 100m, Olapade Adeniken and Davidson Ezinwa were up there with the best in the world. Mary Onyali also rivalled the best in the women category while Falilat Ogunkoya and Fatimah Yusuf, gave the leading ladies of her time-Marie Jose- Perec, Cathy Freeman, and Jearl Miles- Clark a run for their money in the 400m.

At a time the current technical director of the AFN; Sunday Bada was hailed as the only quarter miler in the world that could beat the invincible American, Michael Johnson; their confidence arose from Bada’s sub 44.00 relay split at the Gothenburg ‘95 IAAF World Championship.

There were also the heroics of the likes of Innocent Egbunike, Chidi Imoh and Deji Aliyu at different competitions worldwide.

For many, the 1996 Atlanta Olympics was the best for Nigeria with the country winning her first Olympic Gold medals in that competition. The history-making gold medal was in the women’s long jump event and won by Chioma Ajunwa.

Other medals won by Nigeria in the Atlanta Olympics include a bronze in the women’s 200 metres event won by Mary Onyali and the women’s 400 metres event won by Falilat Ogunkoya.

From Paris to Stuttgart, Moscow to Brussels, the roll call of athletes at any major athletics meet was incomplete without the mention of Nigerian athletes, who won laurels for themselves and country.

The downturn

Sadly, the situation has taken a nose dive as the country no longer ranks tops safe for a sprinkle of athletes that are still flying the flag high.

Several reasons have been adduced for the dwindling fortunes. While some blame the drop on the laxity of administrators, others say the athletes have been unpatriotic.

Falilat Ogunkoya, one of the greatest female athletes produced by Nigeria, said “It’s quite unfortunate to find ourselves where we are today. By now we should be ranking top in the world but instead we are still struggling to hold our own in Africa. In our own days we enjoyed scholarships to schools in the United States and Europe and that really helped us. Athletes no longer enjoy such as only few of them are privileged to have such opportunity”.

Falilat, the first Nigerian to win two medals at the same Olympics- silver and a bronze at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, also reiterated the level of commitment at her own time.

“Though we were well taken care off at that time, it doesn’t mean we were never owed money. But for someone like me, I always put my race first before money. I knew if I did well in my races the money would definitely come” she said.

So many athletes have complained of the poor welfare for them which have made some dump the country for other nations like Spain, Portugal, and Qatar.

For Abiodun, a high jump coach who discovered athletes like Doreen Amata, the former African Champion in High Jump, the blame goes to the officials who he says have been selfish over time.

“Of late the kinds of people we have at the helm of affairs are selfish people who are only interested in filling their pockets and not the improvement of athletes. If we can have genuine administrators, athletics can still pick up its pieces and move on,” Abiodun said.

As the country celebrates its Golden Jubilee, it would certainly relish amongst other achievements the two Olympic Gold medals from athletics. With concerted efforts the country is destined for greater heights.

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