Showing posts with label #NIGERIANFOOTBALLDEVPT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #NIGERIANFOOTBALLDEVPT. Show all posts

Thursday, December 14, 2023

REAPING THE BENEFITS FROM NIGERIA’S FEAT AT THE 2023 CAF AWARDS

 

The Nigerian trio of Victor Osimhen, Asisat Oshoala, and Chiamaka Nnadozie, attained legendary status, with their individual honors at the CAF Awards.  Also, the female football team won the Team of the Year title. Victor Osimhen, won the African Footballer of the Year (Male), Oshoala, won the female version, and Chiamaka Nnadozie, won the Best African Female Goalkeeper of the Year. It was a culmination of the great season they had last season, extending upto the current period. Osimhen helped his team, Napoli FC win the Italian Scudetto, for the first time after 30 years and was the highest scorer in last season’s Scudetto. Oshoala helped her team, Barcelona FC win the female UEFA Champions League and took Nigeria to great heights in the last Female World Cup Competition. Chiamaka Nnadozie has grown steadily to become amongst the best female goalkeepers in the World and this was solidified by her feat in the last Female World Cup and the performances of her club, Paris FC, in last year’s UEFA Champions League.

Sunday, October 22, 2023

NIGERIAN FOOTBALL DEVELOPMENT AND THE BENEFITS OF DELIBERATE PLANNING!

 




‘’Firstly, development would be said to have been achieved whenever an appreciable growth level is noticed by means either homegrown or derived. Simply put, whenever any goods or service can positively derive recognition and acceptance within the local and/or international market without simultaneously leading to the decay in the originating (local) market, one could assert that development has been achieved.’’

About fifty years ago, the Nigerian Green Eagles began to make some positive impression within the African region; the same outcome was witnessed by the biggest local clubs of that era, namely Rangers International Football Club of Enugu and IICC Shooting Stars of Ibadan. The latter won the African Cup winners cup competition in 1976 and the former did the same in 1977. Nigeria took bronze at the 1978 ANC 1978 and won the title for the first time in 1980 when it was hosted by Nigeria.

These achievements were a result of deliberate and critical planning which started from Gen Yakubu Gowon’s regime and continued thereafter. As part of the post-war 3RS programme, the Federal Government developed stadiums, and recreational centers and entered into sports bilateral relations with various countries. Notable among the coaches that came through this relationship, were Jelisavic Tiko, from (the then) Yugoslavia, and Heinz Marozke, from then-Western Germany. With his team, several coaching clinics and trainings were held to develop local coaches and discover our hidden talents.



The legacies of these expatriate trainers were already crumbling by the mid-1980s and it was in that chaos the fate of Stephen Okechukwu Keshi, 1962-2013, brought Nigeria to the world stage. From his controversial movement to Stade D’Abidjan in 1985, he found himself in Belgium the next year and his qualities attracted several scouts to Nigeria. Belgian scout Willy Pluym, in his interview with Mumuni Alao, of Complete Football, said thus;

‘’Keshi has shown such tremendous football qualities that today he is one of the greatest and most popular footballers in Belgium. His arrival and impact caught everyone unawares and football managers reasoned that if such a quality player came from Nigeria, then there must be more like him untapped. This has been found true and that is why Nigerian Players are now hot cake in Belgium’’.

Mumuni Alao, ‘Belgium Exodus,’ Complete Football, November 1988, P10.

Keshi was not Nigeria’s first football export; Teslimi Balogun had ventured into the English League (Peterborough FC), in the early 1950s, same for Damian Ogunsuyi (Egypt), Okey Isima(Brazil and later Portugal), Richard Owobokiri(Brazil and later Portugal), in the 1980s, to mention a few. However, their foray never attracted as much attention as Nigerian Football
 

NFD: THE CLEMENCE WESTERHOF YEARS

Clemence Westerhof and his team perfectly managed the consequences of Willy Plyum’s discovery and began to indirectly mold Nigerian football to favor his job. He pursued a policy that ensured that local players with proven talent were helped to get global exposure by helping them get a club in Europe. Thus emerged, players such as Uche Okechukwu, Daniel Amokachie, Finidi George, Aloy Agu, Ben Iroha, Chidi Nwanu, Victor Ikpeba, et al. who were purely homegrown and grew to become the spine of the Nigerian Super Eagles!

THE INAUGURATION OF PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL REGULATIONS 

By 1990, the Nigerian Professional Football League, commenced, and critical aspects of its operations, were spelled out. The expectation was that the Nigerian Football industry would be run and managed as a business concern. This is to enable it to grow to easily attract corporate sponsorship, whilst the government divests its interests. Corporate sponsorship existed before the promulgation of the NPFL statutes but sponsors could not do much apart from advertising its services the industry had no legal operational backing as a business enterprise.

THE PREVAILING OUTCOMES OF NIGERIA’s FOOTBALL DEVELOPMENT

With the NFF always cap in hand and unable to fulfill its obligations or perfectly manage any generated revenues, it has become exposed to the maxim;

’ He who pays the piper dictates the tune’’. The outcome of this action can be abridged and summarized into the following;

EXCESSIVE GOVERNMENT INFLUENCE

Excessive government control still prevails at all levels of Nigerian football. They own virtually all stadiums in Nigeria, appoint the management board of all state-owned football clubs, recruit and pay salaries of players registered with them and possibly influence elections into elective positions, to ensure compliant people manage the game.

 

 DEARTH OF CORPORATE SPONSORSHIPS

An extremely disconcerting aspect of Nigeria’s Football Development is the paucity of corporate sponsorships. Over 40 years ago, virtually all Nigerian banks, had a fledging football club in Nigeria. Currently, no Nigerian bank owns a team in the Nigeria Professional Football League, the GSM service providers have never owned a team, and have withdrawn their corporate sponsorship of football in Nigeria. This fact is true about other FCMG organizations in Nigeria. Skeptics would easily ascribe Nigeria’s poor economy to the dearth of corporate sponsorship, but rational judgment would aver that Nigeria’s economic situation is not isolated from the rest of the world. Corporate sponsorship is evidently an aspect of business marketing & advertising of an organization's brand assets and does not necessarily give them a negative balance sheet. The reasons for the above cannot be farfetched seeing how successive leaderships have managed the industry.

 

INFRASTRUCTURAL UNDERDEVELOPMENT

The consequences of the 3RS programme on sports enable stadiums to be located in virtually every Nigerian state capital and diverse state governments provide the same for their people. A detailed appraisal of the current infrastructural suitability of these facilities to the modern requirements of such facilities, in terms of seamless broadcasting, training facilities, accommodation, etc would reveal that our entire nation cannot boast of less than a handful of 21st-century stadia facilities.

 

THE FAILING NPFL PROJECT

Several salient objectives of the Nigerian Professional Football League regulations have not been implemented over thirty years after its inauguration.

  1. Revenues accruing to clubs for player transfers do not appear to be reflected in the balance sheets of most clubs, rather, the role of agents has become more prominent.
  2. Despite the incentives related to the ownership of stadiums by clubs, not up to ten percent of Nigerian clubs own the one or the practice pitches they use. Gate takings have never been a prioritized revenue option for Nigerian clubs and even the national teams.
  3. Government has still not divested from football and its continued involvement in every facet, is counterproductive, considering the unstable nature of government activities in Nigeria.

SUBMISSION

Football management goes beyond organizing the Nigerian Professional Football League and participating in international competitions. Job creation would be enhanced when football teams are structured (through deliberate policies, as already articulated in the NPFL statutes) to grow from the bottom to the top. This would necessitate infrastructural and capacity development within the industry, legitimize contractual obligations, and attract the development of several ancillary businesses, like in other climes. Despite the humongous salaries of several European football teams, they still thrive and generate revenues, even from FCMGs in Africa!

Comparing our antecedents in the 1990s to the present, the following is evident;

  1. No Nigerian club side has won any African club championship for the past ten years. Conversely, winners of the same trophies have come from North and South Africa, which have the most developed football facilities.
  2. Nigeria has never won the African version of the African Nations Cup and rarely qualifies to participate. This failure is directly attributable to the organization of our local league and the intricacies of player selection.
  3. Not more than 20% of registered Nigerian club sides own an organized age-grade team or own their own stadium facility. This does not include the state-owned club sides.
  4. The level of Nigerian Football development requires serious interrogation about the reasons it’s been unable to attract FCMG sponsorships. More than 80% of our biggest business enterprises do not sponsor football. This is against the norm, considering the unique advantage of football as a tool for branding and corporate advertisements.

Noteworthy, is that we have succeeded the very few times football was managed by a purposeful and deliberate leadership. The examples of General Yakubu Gowon and Ibrahim Babangida’s initiatives of the 1970s and 1990s are clear.

The Nigerian football industry can still grow far better than its current level and like England, can become the melting point of professional football within our sub-region and beyond. The leadership of the Nigerian Football Federation can achieve this through deliberate planning and concrete focus!

 

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