The Super Eagles, The NFA And The African Nations Cup
- By Akintokunbo A Adejumo
- Published 01/24/2008
- Sports
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Akintokunbo A Adejumo
Akintokunbo Adejumo, a social and political commentator on Nigerian issues, lives and works in London, UK. He is a graduate of the University of Ibadan, Nigeria (1979) and University of Manitoba, Canada (1985). He also writes on topical issues for newspapers and internet media including Nigeriaworld, Nigeria Today Online, Washington Nigerian Times, Wise News Today, etc
View all articles by Akintokunbo A AdejumoOn
Monday 21st January, 2008,
Apart
from the heartache of seeing this loss, I take consolation in the fact that I
made some money from the bookies on the game. I placed a £10.00 on
It
was always going to happen. With a clueless, corrupt and inefficient Nigeria
Football Association, an ageing team of un-motivated players and an equally
useless, clueless and un-committed coach in
To
make it worse, after the game Mr Vogts told the World Press, that the boys did
their very best and he was sure
Mr
Vogts, despite sitting on the bench right there in Sekondi must have been
watching a different game from the rest of us, when he said the boys did their
best. That tells you the manner of coach the man is. This is a coach who
refused to live in
So
who do we blame? Who else? The visionless, clueless, corrupt Nigeria Football
Association, led by one Sani Lulu, and backed to the hilt by one Dr Amos Adamu,
National Sports Commission (NSC) Director-General.
One
thing, for as long as Dr Adamu remains at the top helm of
Chimaobi
Uchendu in the Sun Newspapers of Wednesday, September 19, 2007 wrote “Since
Adamu returned to the Nigerian sports, things have not been the same. Like a
thief in the night, he came in to re-organise the Football House by positioning
his loyalists in strategic positions, and so he organised a Kangaroo election
to throw out the Alhaji Ibrahim Galadima-led board, comprising most of the
victims in the new NFA executives” Apart from being the director
general at the NSC, Adamu occupies sensitive positions in both CAF and FIFA.
About two years ago, he was also eyeing the WAFU top job, as well as the CAF
Presidency, and this is a clear example of a man ready to do anything to have
power. Of course, he was the Chief Executive of the African Games (COJA) held
in
I
read recently that Dr Adamu said he plans to devote his time and life to God
after his retirement, whenever that is, by becoming a priest and having his own
church. Well, that is one church I don’t plan to be seen in. I don’t see myself
entering the
And
the Chairman of the NFA, Sani Lulu? He himself has never denied the fact that
he’s been playing the script of his master in the Football House. Lulu had said
that he was Adamu’s errand-boy, and that he was not ashamed to serve him in any
capacity. Sani Lulu was, before he was (s)elected NFA Chaiman, the Chairman of
the Abuja FA for many years. Tell me, what is happening in
The
NFA, Amos Adamu and Sani Lulu have been laying claims, with the aid of their
friends in sports journalism, to some successes in recent years that they are
not entitled to, such as the successes of the Super Falcons,
In his article, The Bad Eggs of the
Nigerian Football Association, (Onlinenigeria.com, 15th June 2006) Bankole Kolawole Monsuru, contends that
Nigerian “sports icons like Olusegun Odegbami, Fanni
Amu, Adokie Amaesimaka, and the likes of Chief Oladipo were not allowed to
reach the post of the NFA chairman, despite their status and achievements for
their noble country that was overlooked by the looters and not good enough
officials of the NFA, The cart was laid before the horse, and this has brought
chaos and indiscipline coupled with disgrace and bad record to Nigeria in the
International Football scene”. How
true.
The
Nigeria Footbal Association does not even have a functional website. I tried to
get the official website of the NFA, and all I got was one last updated, it
seems in 1993 when Emeka Omeruah was elected Chairman and the NFA Headquarters
was given as 146-148, Ogunlana Drive, Surulere, Lagos. The source of the
information then was from Complete Football, Nigerian Football 1960-1990 by
Segun Odegbami, and Sporting Champion, June 1992. And this was an association
launched in 1945. A shame really.
The
problem of sports development in
It
was rumoured that Dr Adamu once told a
Chairmanship contender that “(name withheld), yes, you are the right
man, but you are too honest for this game, I am sorry, but you cant be
chairman. We don’t need you now”. Incompetence will breed corruption,
because the incompetent will always try to shroud their failings in lies,
delusions, deviousness, depravity, secrecy and dirty deals. It is only in our
dear country that mediocres rule the roost in everything. Sports and especially
football have moved forward in the last ten years while ours have regressed, no
small thanks to inconsistent, ineffective and obsolete government policies,
greed, corruption, obtuse and arrogant officials, power-hungry idiots and the
likes. With countries like
But
our Football League has been reduced to no more than a Sunday football
kick-about. I do not see our fans wearing football shirts bearing the names of
our own footballers, but those of foreign stars. Nigerians
no longer want to watch their local league. All they know now are foreign stars
and teams. When I was young, I used to travel from Ibadan to Lagos just to
watch the Super Stores; Railways; ECN
(later to become NEPA, and who knows what they call it now?), and I was always at the Liberty Stadium to
watch, in those days, WNDC, later to become IICC Shooting Stars; Water
Corporation; NEPA Ibadan; Housing Corporation; NTC, etc. play such great teams
as Enugu Rangers, Mighty Jets of Jos, Bendel Insurance, Sharks of Port
Harcourt, etc. Lord, I cant bear to remember!
The
Liberty Stadium, Ibadan, (built by that visionary and icon, Obafemi Awolowo)
one of the first in West Africa, if not in Africa, is hardly used and is
rotting away, taken over by food and beer sellers. And so is the National
Stadium in
So,
the outcome of Ghana 2008 for
A
very happy ending, depending on which side you are looking at it.
Spread The Word
2 Responses to "The Super Eagles, The NFA And The African Nations Cup" 
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said this on 25 Jan 2008 1:49:34 AM EDT
Nobody is perfect in life. Although things went wrong it does not mean they did not try at all. In all my years of existence it has always been one complain or the other. If Vogt had fielded young players now and they lost , it would have been: The useless coach fielded inexperienced players, leaving the mature ones who could use experience to secure a win. I think the boys tried. Even our great 1994 world cup squad could not beat the Ivorian team save for penalty. Let us remove sentiment. watch that match again. look at what happened to the host nation Ghana yesterday against Namibia. Or is it Morrocco against Guinea. If you have ever been in the fieldd you would know how difficult it is to satisfy everybody. Players and coaches need encouragement in times like this not rebuking from different quarters.
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said this on 25 Jan 2008 6:06:44 AM EDT
You nailed it on the head, when you identified NFA members as the problem in Nigerian football, however you analysis of the game in Sekondi, against CIV was rather emotional (at least to me)
Role playing died in the super eagles with the exit of Westerhof, so players joining the team after his exit had no real clue as to what their roles in the team should be, talk less of excelling in them. The decision by the NFA to stick with local coaches made matters worse, because the coaches simply lacked the ability to design a system, delineate roles within the system and then source talents to fill those roles: these local coaches failed to realize that talents need to be nutured in their respective roles to sharpen their skills and confidence (good examples are Arsenal fc & Man U)
Nigeria started on a good note by hiring a coach who understands this issues, however the apponitment came too close to a major competition like the cup of nations, and as usual we want the team to perform to our unrealistic expectation. On that match day against CIV i saw a nigerian side that is beginning to understand the importance of role playing in a football team. but expectedly, most of the players could not excel in their new roles and their was no on-field motivator like Keshi, Oliseh et al, who knows what it takes to reach and maitain peak perfomance in a role, to egg them on.
Sadly, the senior players have not bonded emotionally with the chief coach enough to want to play their hearts out for him, (i believe this is a neccesary ingredient for achieving victory, and neither do they love their country enough to get injured for it, before you blame them, remember you also left Nigeria for the same reasons they did. It takes time and sustained effort in the right direction for a team to develop these characteristics, and this is where i think we might miss it. As a nation we lack the accompanying temperaments for sustained and concentrated effort in doing the right thing. NFA memebers have to admit their personal inadequasy and invite consultants to help them. It is only in Nigeria that civil servants run entertainment businesses, which, essentially is the heart & soul of football.
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