Category: SOS

  • SAMUEL CHUKWUEZE: MY BREAKTHROUGH WITH VILLAREAL IN EUROPA LEAGUE

    Following his dream first team start in the Europa League recently for Villarreal CF in an away tie against Spartak Moskva, Nigerian teenager, Samuel Chukwueze, speaks about his breakthrough with the Yellow Submarines and how he’s grappling with life at his current place of abode in Europe, reports CHIZOBA NWACHUKWU.

    At the end Match Day Two, in group G of the Europa league, the Otkritie Stadium had served up an entertaining fixture between Villarreal CF (proudly nicknamed The Yellow Submarine) and Spartak Moskva, the game ended with three goals apiece.

    Of course, The Yellow Submarines took the lead twice, then went behind at 2-3 but they powered back to salvage a point in a thrilling 3-3 draw.

    Yet, one of the highlights of the energy-sapping encounter was the first senior start for Villarreal in the Europa League for former Nigerian youth international, Samuel Chukwueze, barely weeks after making his debut as a replacement for Nicola Sansone in  the 2-2 home draw against Rangers FC.

    But at the Otkritie Stadium, the FIFA U-17 World Cup Chile 2015 bronze ball winner, played as the right winger in a 4-4-1-1 system used by the team, helping in the build up to the second goal by Pablo Fornals.

    Until he was later subbed off in the 70th minute of the game for Santi Cazorla, who scored the equalising goal from the spot to spare the team’s blushes, Chukwueze dazzled with his velvet skill on the right wing much to the pleasure of the travelling fans who gave him a standing ovation.

    “It was a dream come true for me,” Chukwueze whose middle name Chimerenka in his native Igbo dialect means ‘God did this one’ told The Nation. “Although I knew I worked hard, I was not expecting it.

    “I was surprised when the coach said ‘Samuel you’re starting’; I was very happy. It was a nice experience for me and I loved it,” added Chukwueze, showing that awesome feeling like a kid handed his first toy car.

    For the uninitiated, the Europa League is the second most important club competition in Europe with the winner guaranteed huge cash as well as the chance to play the winner of the UEFA Champions League for the prestige UEFA Super Cup.

    No wonder, Villarreal manager, Javi Calleja, had some good words for the Nigerian teenage star, tasking him to work harder in order to add his quota to the overall success of team they want to go all the way to glory.

    Chukwueze would equally admit he needs to work “harder” to maintain his growing status in the team and improving himself since according to him his happiness lies turning out regularly for the Yellow Subramines.

    “I am happy that I have made my debut for the first team in the Europa league, this is my second season,” he said when pressed about his progress so far.

    As the saying goes, talent without hard work is nothing and the lad further explained: “I want to put in more hard work and make more progress, move up and never come down.”

    This is only his second year of his five-year contract with Villarreal, so making his first start is definitely a step in the right direction. Consistency is key for growth and development as well as setting reachable goals is very important.

    “I am working hard so as to make my debut in La Liga,’ he reassured.

    Villarreal currently are in the top half of the table, battling among the big boys of the Spanish league, including the likes of Real Madrid, Barcelona and Atletico Madrid and they have the prospect of going beyond their 5th finish in the 2016-2017 season.

    Despite playing several games in the Segunda Division B where he scored two goals, Chukwueze explained that his best moment yet was a rare opportunity of showcasing his talent in the Europa League.

    He offered: “My best game was against Spartak Moskva in the Europa League. It was a good game with good experience, although the cold was much, it was still a nice game and loved it,” Obviously, he had been dreaming about his start and after the game he gained more exposure that added to his maturity as a player.

    Meanwhile, in a file interview with The Nation, Chukwueze had talked about his dream of becoming Africa’s Best Player in the foreseeable future, adding that he was always inspired by the success story of former Super Eagles captain, Nwankwo Kanu, who shone from his youthful days in Ajax before being revered throughout the world for his other accomplishments, especially while at English Premier League side, Arsenal.

    Why shouldn’t Chukwueze dare to dream?

    He is a young talent with a long career still and he admitted that with hard work and humility, he would one day become a household name in Nigeria.

    As a young footballer fraught with emotions, he recognised the support of his family, especially his adorable mom.

    “The initial plan was for my mom to stay with me after being here when I signed my first contract with Villarreal but it didn’t work out,” he volunteered. “She had to stay in Nigeria since she is also working there and taking care of my siblings.

    “I am the first born of the house and that is a huge responsibility, but I really thank my family for their support always.”

    He continued about the challenges of leaving home early at a young age in order to eke out a living and develop his career:  “I had to do it; that is coming over here, though it was difficult initially. I had to face the reality of life and become a man my siblings can look up to.

    “I have to put food on the table for my mom and siblings and the only way I can do that is by focusing on my career and working hard.

    “I miss them so much because settling down has not been easy. I haven’t settled well, I am still coping, learning the language, coupled with the environment and everything.”

    Of course, moving away from one’s country to another is not easy. Language becomes a barrier, one finds it hard to communicate and express oneself.

    A player needs to communicate with the teammates and coaches and because of this obvious inability, Chukwueze said he has been using his spare time wisely.

    “I go to classes to learn Spanish, so that I will understand everybody and communicate well, so after training sessions I go to learn. After the classroom, I come back home to use my laptop to watch and learn more Spanish,” Chukwueze added.

    Surely, all work and no play makes Chukwueze a dull boy. “Most often, I hang out with friends to have fun, watch jokes on YouTube and go out to play soccer on FIFA.

    “What makes me happy?” Chukwueze jokingly repeated the question. “My progress and seeing my mom and my siblings happy.”

    Chukwueze sure sounded like a mummy’s boy. Well, a mother’s love is what everyone should be able to feel as it is important to growth and the making up of a person.

    Having stated several times that his mother is the source of his happiness, there is no doubting that Chukwueze will do everything possible to remain a delight of Villarreal faithful and Nigerians in particular.

  • Geoffrey Kamworor: Flipside of Kenyan distance running king

    Is there any endurance challenge beyond Geoffrey Kamworor?

    Still aged just 25, the remarkable Kenyan has already notched up a hat-trick of World Half Marathon crowns, two World Cross Country titles (three, if we count his U20 gold from seven years ago) and he is also the reigning New York Marathon champion.

    As the 2015 world 10,000m silver medallist, he is also a supreme operator on the track making him truly the a “Man For All Surfaces” – and the world’s pre-eminent all-round endurance talent.

    When Kamworor talks of his successes, he does so with a total confidence in his abilities yet without a trace of arrogance. He has total faith in his extraordinary gifts, yet the long-striding Kenyan did not always possess the swaggering belief he does today and had to be coaxed into the sport by a schoolteacher.

    “Running 5km to and from school twice a day as a primary school student I knew I was fast,” explains Geoffrey, who grew up the second youngest of seven children on a maize farm.

    “At high school I won every distance from 800m and 10,000m but I was scared to proceed to the next level.  I did not believe in myself.

    “It was only after a teacher encouraged me that I could become a professional runner and I saw Kenyans competing at a world-class level, did I have that desire to one day compete against them.”

    It was not an entirely straight-forward transition, though, and for some time he grappled between pursuing a career in running against his academic ambitions.

    “I was a good student, a hard-working student,” he insists. “After high school I wanted to be a lawyer. I thought it would be the best profession for me.”

    Yet after stringing several impressive wins together including in a domestic 10km road race as a 16-year-old, running ultimately won the tug-of-war for his affections.

    “From that point, I saw the talent in myself and my running,” he explains.

    In 2010, at the age of just 17, he spent a summer racing track in Scandinavia. He performed admirably clocking PB’s of 7:54 and 13:42 for the 3000m and 5000m, respectively yet “everything was to change” in late-2010 when he joined Global Sports Communication and started training with their world-class Kaptagat-based group under the influential coaching of Patrick Sang.

    Rated as one of the world’s leading coaches, Sang, a former world and Olympic steeplechase silver medallist, is lauded for not only his intense knowledge of the sport but for the fatherly-approach he adopts with all his athletes.

    With Sang in his corner, gradually Kamworor’s self-confidence grew, a belief augmented by training alongside marathon great Eliud Kipchoge.

    “I knew Eliud was a great athlete but what I have really learned from him is the value of hard-work and discipline and how you treat yourself as an athlete,” says Kamworor of the Olympic marathon champion. “He has been very encouraging and has become a great friend.

    “In fact, the training group [which also includes two-time world marathon champion Abel Kirui] is always so friendly and jovial – we have a lot of fun in Kaptagat.”

    Living in small dorm with two people to a room, conditions in the camp are best described as basic with few distractions.

    Training from Monday to Friday in Kaptagat every week – he only returns to his home in Eldoret on a weekend – his workload is centred around two key sessions every week; the Tuesday speed session on a hard-packed dirt track in Eldoret and the gruelling long runs of up to 40km on the red-coloured trails at an energy-sapping altitude of more than 2500m.

    Progress under Sang has been rapid. Just three months after joining the camp, he raced to U20 gold at the 2011 World Cross Country Championships.

    The next year – two months shy of his 19th birthday – he ran a stunning marathon debut of 2:06:12 on the streets of Berlin.

    Even the occasional speed bump in his career has been met with a stunningly positive response. At the 2014 Tokyo Marathon, Kamworor was disappointed to place sixth in 2:07:37 before he and Sang set their sights on the World Half Marathon Championships in Copenhagen just five weeks later.

  • KELECHI NWAKALI My special relationship with Kanu

    New Super Eagles recruit, Kelechi Nwakali tells MORAKINYO ABODUNRIN about his fond relationship with legendary Nwankwo Kanu as well as his yet to be fulfilled dreams. Enjoy…

    Arsenal legend Nwankwo Kanu has yet been praised for his stirring roles in shaping the career  of many youngsters even as  youngster Kelechi Nwakali poured encomiums on the erstwhile captain of the Super Eagles for being his father-figure

    “I must thank Nwankwo Kanu for being like a father to me all this while,” Nwakali who celebrated his 20th anniversary on  5th June, told The Nation. “He calls me almost every day; telling me what I needed to do in order to improve my game.

    “ He’s always reminding me about being  disciplined and dedicated to the game. He’s more than a brother; I really appreciate all his contributions so far towards my success as a professional footballer.”

    Three years ago, Nwakali was the cynosure of all eyes when he led the Golden Eaglets to win a record fifth title at the FIFA U-17 World Cup  Chile 2015 and was personally rewarded with the Golden Ball Award  as the overall best player of the tournament.

    It was on the strength of  his performance in Chile that he was immediately  snapped up by English Premier League side, Arsenal  on a five-year deal.

    He was later sent to MVV Maastricht and VVV Venlo  to gain valuable experience in the Dutch league  from where he signed on a season-long loan deal with FC Porto in the Summer.

    “I really thank God that I have been given the opportunity to come down to FC Porto and I want to continue to work hard in order to fulfil my dream as professional footballer ,” he explained.“ But I really want to  thank Mikel Agu who has helped me to settle down well in Porto;  he has done more than a friend and I really appreciate all his efforts  so far since I  arrived in Portugal.”

    According to Nwakali, Porto is not yet his final destination  with his eyes still firmly focussed on turning out for his parent club at the Emirates in the foreseeable future.

    He offered:  “I had good experience playing in Holland because I had the opportunities  of playing in different positions but It is still my dream to play for Arsenal.

    “I believe doing well with FC Porto and  playing for Super Eagles would on the long run, help  in getting the opportunity to play for Arsenal   in the future.”

    The romance between Arsenal and Nwakali seemed to have been made in heaven and the lad is never tired speaking enthusiastically about his love for his adorable Gunners.

    “From a young age, I’ve dreamt of playing for Arsenal,” Nwakali  enthused  in a file interview with our correspondent. “I think God made it easy for me to join them  because that has been my dream team.

    “It is true that everybody thought that I would join Manchester City because of my brother (Chidiebere Nwakali) but I have always admired Arsenal; I have always loved Arsenal; they have always been my dream team.

    ” Since my tender age, I have always admired them; and watching clips of players like Thierry Henry, Patrick Viera, Kanu Nwankwo and others  made me to love the club even more.

    “(Nwankwo) Kanu called me [after the U-17 World Cup] and said Arsenal wanted me; that the boss [Arsene Wenger] called him about me,” he told Goal. “He’s [Kanu] has been my mentor, a brother and a friend. He advised me to go and develop and prove who I am.”

    The erstwhile captain of Nigeria U-17 and U-20 youth teams, has overtime impressed   everyone with his smooth skills and he earned  further credits last  June with the Super Eagles B team in an exhibition match against visiting Atletico Madrid at the Uyo International Stadium where he scored a screamer to the delight of everyone.

    Yet he would be the first to admit that there is more work to be done in the days ahead: “Being regarded as one of the upcoming players in Nigeria is a sort of motivation for me.

    “I would do my best anytime I’m called upon to play for Nigeria because getting a call up to the Super Eagles is also a dream comes true for me; but it’s also a big challenge and it’s left to me to embrace this challenge.

    “It is not enough to  just  be  part of the team rather, I want to get the opportunity to play and represent Nigeria very well and I believe with hard work and humility,  I will achieve this dream.”

    Interestingly, the lad’s humble beginning is rooted at ASJ Academy in his native community in Eastern Nigeria but he has acquired more tricks as a loanee from Arsenal to MVV Maastricht and VVV Venlo in the Dutch Eredivisie.

    Armed with this savoir-faire, Nwakali said he was ready for greater responsibility with the Super Eagles: “Sincerely, I was not disappointed that I did not make the Super Eagles’ squad to the Russia 2018 World Cup because I believe I still have enough time to prove myself.

    “The Russia 2018 World Cup is gone; I’m ready to contribute my quota anytime I’m given the opportunity to play for the Super Eagles and I pray more of such opportunities will come as we fight for ticket to the 2019 AFCON.

    “It has always been my dream to be one of the top players in Nigeria and in the world.  With all concentration and discipline I can do it; it is an achievable dream.

    “ I can follow the footsteps of others who had done that in the past and  I want to reassure Nigerians that I will always give my best whenever I’m called upon to play for the Super Eagles,” he reitreated as he speaks on sundry issues.

    On best career moments so far

    My best moment was captain the U-17 team to win the World Cup in Chile; you asked if it’s my dream to captain the Super Eagles? I will rather say  I will come to pass if it’s my destiny to captain the Super Eagles. I have been having good moments in my career; captaining the U-17; moving to Arsenal and lately being called into the Super Eagles  and all these have added value to my career and I’m very happy about the progression.

    On future dreams

    My other dreams that are yet  to materialized are many; I’m just starting my career and it’s like I have not started at all. One of my dreams is to be Nigeria’s greatest footballer and it’s not just saying it but to work for it. I believe with hard work and humility, I will achieve my dreams.

    On first official call up to the Super Eagles

    It’s  a great excitement for me to be called up to the Super Eagles; I felt so excited the same way I felt when we won the U-17 World Cup. It has always been my wish to see that any Nigerian team do well and I will be ready to contribute my quota to ensure that the Super Eagles qualify for the next Africa Cup of Nations in 2019

    Words for adoring fans

    I want my fans to know that I love them because I get lots of encouraging messages from them  and sometimes I do get some critical messages too; but I want my fans to know that I’ll always do my best for the country and I will strive to make them proud; by the grace of God, everything  good will be achieved.

    On living in Europe

    Nigeria is not like Europe, so it’s a difficult place to survive. You have to work hard to get what you want. Both my mum and dad played important roles before I got to where I am today. I lost my dad in 2006. He was a big Arsenal fan, a diehard Arsenal fan and he and my mother contributed a lot, buying boots, jerseys and taking me to training.

  • LAWRENCE ACHUDUME’I was once tagged sinner for playing football’

    Apostle Lawrence Achudume, founder of Victory Life Bible has for the first time revealed his strong attachment to the beautiful game of football before he received the call to God’s vineyard.

    “Of course, I played football  even up to the  university level,”  explained Achudume in a revealing interview with The Nation. “I grew in Benin; there is no way you’ll  grew up in Benin City in those days without getting involved with football and  I had the opportunity to practice with the  likes of  late Stephen Keshi; Austin Eguavoen and a host of others.”

    But he was forced to  jettison the prospect of being a professional footballer  following a divine intervention and Achudume revealed  it wasn’t an easy decision until he was dramatically stopped by a confidant.

    “I stopped playing football  during my undergraduate days at University of Lagos (UNILAG but it was an interesting story,”  stated Achudume even as he disclosed his love for politics in the days of yore.

    “We usually played football on Wednesdays  which  coincided with our Christian fellowship but there was this Deeper Life brother  and whenever he sees  me playing on Wednesdays, he will come over and start shouting : ‘Brother Lawrence,  you are playing football when souls are perishing and when the trumpets sounds where will you be?’

    “In fact,  we called him ‘Brother Bros ‘ and he was embarrassing me anytime I’m playing football on Wednesdays;   but I have to go time and again to confess my sin  during the fellowship.

    “And what was my sin? I played football; but I eventually stopped because football was taking too much of my time.”

    Yet football remains the opium of the people hence Achudume is still very much at home  with the game :“I still love football  and I’ve  organised an inter-church football competition here in Abeokuta too.

    “But I don’t watch live football matches  for so many reasons. One, I don’t want to support a team that would lose and secondly, I don’t like the tension that football can give.

    “As a pastor, I have enough burden and I don’t want to add football to it. In my younger days, I used to go to the stadium to watch football matches live at the National Stadium in Surulere and sometimes, I was there as early as 9am because you don’t want to be locked out because  of the crowd.

    “Football is still very much part of me and hopefully before the end of the year, we can  organise another inter-church football tournament here in Abeokuta.”

    Meanwhile, Achudume has questioned the integrity  of politicians vis-à-vis  lack of quality leadership in the country’s body polity.

    The Abeokuta-based cleric known for his prophetic messages, said the spate of defections ahead of   the 2019 general elections was an indication of the structural defects that has stunted the growth and development of the country since independence.

    But he  remains positive that  Nigeria would fulfil its destiny and the dream of a  great nation, adding selfless service on the part of leaders and renewal of minds  by all Nigerians are panache to the desirable change this interview with MORAKINYO ABODUNRIN. Excerpts…

     

    Aside  football  and your pastoral calling, what are your other passion?

    Though I’m not partisan, I love politics because it gives you the room to know people’s needs and how to be of help. Politics in the sense that it has to bring the mighty at par with the common men on the streets.  I love the American model which we are trying to copy  and let me give you an instance, when Joe Biden left  government as Vice President ; he joined train to go back to Delaware with his loads and  his people with maybe the secret service. In politics, there shouldn’t be that dichotomy between the big and small. But in Nigeria, you see a mere local government with almost six  mobile policemen as guards, what is that for? If we are to practice politics or democracy as it should be done, there should not be gap between the rich and the poor. If well practised, politics is beautiful but they make it so rigid and tough in Nigeria . Even in the  British system, you’ll see the  Prime Minister going from door-to-door to campaign but here rigging of election is the order of the day. That is why I hate poverty because it has made Nigerians not to have a sense of decency; once they are given peanuts, they’ll start singing praises of these corrupt politicians. We celebrate thieves because they distribute peanuts to the masses .

    Poverty is a Nigerian problem yet  some people don’t want the church to preach against poverty. But I’ll keep preaching against poverty because that is the only thing that can make a man stands on  his own without fear. Until a man  has what he can feed his family with, he would keep compromising  because poverty makes a man to be eroded with decency.

    What are your thoughts about the country’s political landscape ?

    Those that think they have mouth and feel  they are not the only thieves, are running back to People Democratic Party (PDP) while the thieves that have big cases with Economic and  Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) are running back to All Progressives Congress (APC ) to have cover. So where is the integrity of our politicians?  We said we are copying the American presidential model  but look at the spate of defections in our country, is that how they defect from one party to the other in the USA when they lose elections?  The other day our senators were talking about lobbying and I wondered if that was the same way it’s done in the USA because in our own case it is the height of deceit and bribery. Lobbying is influencing you to see my view but not distributing cash in  ‘Ghana-must-go’ in order to have my support which is purely trading one’s conscience  and integrity. Many governors don’t listen to their people in order to execute projects  and that is why most of those projects are usually abandoned when they are out of office. Here in Ogun State, there are several projects done by previous  governments that have been overgrown with bush today because those projects were not people’s oriented. In democracy, you start from the people to the government  and not vice versa ; so the first thing that should come to the mind of anybody in government is what are people in my constituency  saying? Bui the present circumstance, they collect money, sell the people and come back to give them peanuts.  What are the constituency projects you have seen anywhere around the country?  Except for repainting of toilet facilities or digging of boreholes that doesn’t bring out water. So we need  true elections  for us to get true and righteous leaders in Nigeria. Unfortunately, INEC is compromised and that is why we have not been able to credible elections; and the police must be independent of any ruling party. The military and Department of State Security must be independent so that they can’t be used to intimidate opponents.  A situation where they say the INEC commissioner is related to a member of the ruling party  doesn’t inspire Fairplay,  equity and it’s just not ethical.  Irrespective of the present challenges, the dream of Nigeria as a great nation shall come to pass.

    What is your prophesy and predictions for the 2019 general elections?

    Sincerely, I don’t have any prophesy yet about 2019 and I just live my life on a daily basis.  But I know 2019 by the grace of God will come like any other day; each day has its own good and bad; and it is what you want that you’ll get.   Why won’t things be better if Nigerians sow righteousness into 2019? Evil and goodness happen every year and 2019 will not be different. If they are men of integrity, elections should go ahead as planned for 2019 and nobody should start seeing vision that elections should not hold because of the way Nigerians are behaving. If the Presidency and people at INEC are men of integrity, they should allow for free and fair election in 2019. We don’t need prophets to tell us that elections should hold or not. Any prophet that says elections should not hold in 2019 is an evil doer and he’s not from God.

    Are you satisfied with the quality of leadership we have now?

    I’m not because of integrity challenges all over the place. Where can one start from? Is it the ministers or the senators? I don’t hate President Buhari or the APC but what will cost to fix few things. Imagine spending four hours on that short stretch  from the long bridge to the Redeem camp; in other places they often fix roads at night so that you don’t stress commuters  because the more people are delayed on the roads the more we lose economic values. Is it electricity? For the past 15 years, I have not used electricity in my house?  For almost eight years that we are here (VLBC Headquarters), we have not been able to use NEPA or what do you call it because it can’t carry the gadgets and equipment we are using? What is that we can’t get the issue of electricity solved? High cost of  power generation increases cost of production which invariably leads to high cost of  goods and services. So what kind of leaders do we have that can fix electricity after so many years after independence? Is it not a shame that Nigeria has the largest market for generating sets in the world? How can I then be satisfied with the quality of leadership we have?

    What honestly do you thing can bring the change Nigerians desire?

    It is easy to make change a slogan but one of the cardinal ways to bring the expected change is for our leaders to be selfless. One of the problems we have is that as soon as our leaders get into power, they begin to steal as much as they can in order to win the next election; and this is the problem at all level of government from the federal to the local government. The only vision they have is how to acquire money to win second term in office.  I don’t also know the work of the national orientation agency if they can’t let people know that monetarised politics and buying of votes is killing us in this country. Nigerians need renewal of minds; since nobody can live to be 150 years because we have all seen presidents, senators die. So why can’t we use the opportunity and available resources for the common good of all Nigerians? They borrowed money to steal yet none of us can sleep on two beds at time or sleep in two rooms or where four pairs of shoes at the same time. So we need a complete change of mind and I think our house of worship have great roles to play.

    What is the role of the church in nation building and do you subscribe to partisan politics by men of God?

    I’m not against any pastor or men of God going into politics because that’s their own personal decision.   Pastor Tunde Bakare of the Latter Rain Assembly is one man I respect so much and I’ll support him in the best way possible because he’s forthright . Anyone is free to go but if they go, they shouldn’t compromise. Pastors should keep telling their people in government to remain forthright and that is what I do here at Victory Life Bible Church; money should not allow anybody  to forget this because immediately you compromise on this, you have lost your honour . That we want to eat cow doesn’t mean we should call cow an uncle. Any pastor that dances around men based on what he wants to get will definitely lose honour. Pastors must speak truth and the mind of God to our leaders; it’s normal and expected to be hated if you speak the truth. I know we still have genuine and outstanding men of God in this country and I beseech them to be steadfast.

    Do you see Nigerians getting to the promised land?

    I’m a Nigerian and I’m convinced that we would get to the land of our dream. I’ve never lived abroad and there is nothing bad about living abroad; but I’m convinced that Nigeria will get it right. Those who are stilling money and buying properties abroad are not wise because their children might not be able to inherit these properties when they die.  They should rather learn to give as much as they can give; no giving is easy. We must be ready to sacrifice for our people. I recently gave cars to two widows in the church and everybody thought it was too much. I didn’t have the money at the time I ordered for the cars but the spirit led me to see how I can ameliorate the sufferings of these widows.

    So, what are some of the challenges you have faced since you founded  Victory Life Bible Church?

    I think everybody has challenges but I have never seen any challenge that made me cry or that would give me sleepless night…

    But what can make you cry?

    Honestly, I don’t know. I’ve cried praising God for all that he has done for me but I don’t see what anybody can do for me that would make me cry. God’s favour to me has been too much and I considered myself as one of the most favoured person by God in this world and that’s why I  can’t cry no matter  what anybody would do against me. I have seen betrayer at the greatest level but I see that as human’s bad behaviour. That human beings can be ungrateful is something that I considered as normal and I don’t fray over it because I can’t be caught unaware;   I’ll already knew before anyone can betray me.  What I’m doing is not mine but God’s; and that is why you can’t find my name in the property of Victory Life Bible Church.

    How do you separate the church money from Apostle Lawrence Achudume’s purse?

    I think you have answered the question. The purse of the church is different from my personal purse.  I pay my tight and sew my seed like any other member of the church; I don’t draw salary from the church and the same as my wife though she’s a full time minister in the church. That is the standard and we want everyone to live by faith according to the words of God. My covenant with God is that I want to serve him and he has been faithful to supply all our needs. I have never shipped in goods of any form from abroad to sell and I’ve never asked anybody to do that on my behalf.  Abeokuta is known for its adire but I have never taken any to sell outside the country.  I have lived by faith and I can tell anybody that God is a provider.

    You spoke so much about prophesying….

    I’m a product of prophesy and I believe in prophecy. I’m not talking about these fake things the fake men of God claimed to be doing. Fake prophecy is cooked up and arranged in order to win fame or favour of the people.   I can prophesy that you’ll be great or that you’ll return to Lagos safely, why won’t you travel back safely? But genuine prophesy is revelation of hidden things long before it happened and I’m a product of such prophesy. There is nothing that would happen to me now that God has not revealed it to me years back. There has never been an alleged scandal or betrayal that has happened in this church that I was not aware before it happened. I usually tell my pastors ahead and the need for them to pray when God has revealed such to me because   I’ll already knew what was going to happen before hand.

    What major scandal or betrayal have you suffered since the start of the church?

    I have faced all sorts of things anybody can think of in this ministry. I have been accused of sexual immorality; even doing magic and deceiving people. But it doesn’t bother me because most people that accused me of such usually come back to apologize.  So I already have a ready-made answer when  people come  to me saying  someone said something to me;  and my answer has always been:’ the person who told you  this story knows the truth and I know the truth, so leave the person.’ Often times, when people lied against you when they are a victim of something. For instance, some lied against me because I counselled him to repent over something bad and actually told him not to tell anybody about it but before I knew, the story was everywhere and he was actually saying another thing. Such doesn’t bother me again; why would I argue when both of us knew the truth.  Someone I sent to university accused me of rape and I asked was it in her dream or how?  I’d also been accused of dating wo ladies who were close  to me but I knew I never did and fortunately  when they got married, their husbands came back begging  for my  forgiveness because  they met the two ladies in question as virgins.  There is nothing I would say behind people that I would not have said it to their face;  I would  have told you to stop stealing If I knew you are thief and what difference would it make if I now tell someone that I’ve told him to stop stealing but he has not?

    How much of support do you get from your wife?

    We met during our NYSC in Kaduna; I was the secretary of the Christian Corpers Fellowship while she was the assistant secretary; destiny brought us together because we didn’t plan it. It never crossed my mind that she was going to be my wife during our service year in the NYSC.My wife is a very quiet person except when she’s with the microphone to preach or praise God. I think she was born to be a missionary because she loves evangelism. I don’t think there is any village around Abeokuta that my wife has not gone on mission giving food stuffs, drugs and clothing where necessary.  She has that compassion to help people. Her latest advocacy is rehabilitating prostitutes; picking them from the streets and putting them in good accommodation where they acquire business skills and rehabilitated in order to give them a more meaningful life. She’s partnering the state government on this to keep these prostitutes off the streets. The bottom line is that she loves God. Both of us found early life that we needed  to help people and part from scholarships we give out, we still try to help in other various ways.

     

     

  • SERENA: Giving birth to Olympia nearly killed me

    Tennis star Serena opens up on the agony she went through during and after the birth of her baby, Olympia, the battle to regain fitness and back to the court

    Serena–who long ago ascended into the pantheon of stars known by a single name–swap her pink Crocs for sneakers, and grabs a broom and dustpan to sweep pine needles off the hard court,

    Just three nights earlier, Serena suffered the worst defeat of her 23-year professional career, a 6-1, 6-0 drubbing at the hands of Johanna Konta in the opening round of a U.S. Open tune-up tournament down the road in San Jose. That it was only her fifth tournament since giving birth to her daughter in September – or that in the fourth, Wimbledon, she made it to the finals in one of the most spectacular displays of will, skill and grit in the history of the game–didn’t make the loss hurt any less.

    Serena has won 23 Grand Slam singles titles, one short of Margaret Court’s all-time record. The U.S. Open, which begins on Aug. 27 in New York City, is her last chance to even the score this year. And with age and the demands of parenthood looming over her singular career, Serena knows every chance matters. So, time to work.

    She pounds shots from every angle, moving side to side, sending one ball screaming crosscourt at a cone target near the baseline. After a few hundred swings, her fitness guru, a white-haired sexagenarian named Mackie Shilstone, suggests she take a 30-second break. She insists on 20. He offers her water. She refuses.

    Finally, Serena calls time. She sits on a wooden bench and fiddles on her iPhone. She’s tinkering with designs for her new clothing line when Alexis Olympia Ohanian Jr. waddles out the back door. Mom’s thwops and grunts have woken her from her nap. Serena leaps up to guide Olympia down the stairs to the court, counting off the steps in French: “Un, deux, un, deux.”

    The moment can’t last. Serena isn’t done with her workout. Shilstone’s waiting to chase her all over the court and make her dodge tennis balls he tosses at her midsection. Olympia is led back inside, and Mom digs into more ground strokes. But for the rest of the training session, she steals glances at the house. “I wonder,” Serena says between backhands, “what my baby is doing?”

    Millions of working parents wrestle with this question every day. In cubicles and call centres, at restaurants and on assembly lines, a large portion of the world’s workforce consistently thinks about their children. That concern can be deep, gnawing, and even painful for anyone, but no working mother on the planet is quite like Serena Williams.

    Becoming one almost killed her. The pregnancy was easy, she says, but the delivery led to a series of complications, including a life-threatening pulmonary embolism and hematoma that required multiple surgeries. She spent the next six weeks mostly in bed, too weak to get up on her own, let alone swing a tennis racket. Even as she gradually regained her strength, Serena couldn’t shake a sense of sadness, a feeling that she had done something wrong or wasn’t doing enough. She had gone through hell to have Olympia, and she loved her like it. “I didn’t think I’d be this attached,” Serena says. “It’s difficult to leave her.”

    That’s a tricky proposition for a world-class athlete. Professional tennis all but requires selfishness–the time needed to train, to travel and to maintain competitive focus blot out virtually all else. Parenting is essentially the opposite. You are no longer the point. Yet at 36, an age when even the greatest champions tend to lose a step, Serena is determined to show that it doesn’t have to be so. Maybe not everyone can do it. Maybe just her. In her two tournaments since Wimbledon, she couldn’t make it past the second round. But maybe trying will be inspiration enough.

    Mothers the world over rallied around her remarkable run at Wimbledon, which Serena says has helped carry her through the low moments. “I dedicated that to all the moms out there who’ve been through a lot,” she says. “Some days, I cry. I’m really sad. I’ve had meltdowns. It’s been a really tough 11 months. If I can do it, you guys can do it too.”

    The postpartum symptoms haven’t fully gone away, and she says separating herself from Olympia has become even harder. Why keep at it?

    “I’m not done yet, simple,” Serena tells me, as we drive into San Francisco one evening for a speaking engagement. She needs tennis as much as her sport needs her. It’s the one thing, as a mother, she can do solely for herself. “My story doesn’t end here.”

    Serena was two months pregnant when she beat her sister Venus in the 2017 Australian Open final, a victory that broke Steffi Graf’s Open-era record of 22 major titles. (Unfair, Venus joked later: it was two against one.) Serena is convinced Olympia knows she’s a Grand Slam champion, describing her walk as a cocksure, “little bowlegged strut.”

    Serena met Ohanian in Italy in 2015. They were engaged by the end of the following year and married in November 2017, in New Orleans, after Olympia was born. “I always assumed I’d marry a black guy,” Serena says. “I always felt that I could relate more with a black guy, that we’d have more struggles in common, you know?” But the pair clicked.

    Their bond was tested fast. Olympia was born through emergency C-section. The next day, Serena began to feel out of breath. She suffered a pulmonary embolism in 2011, and thought this might be another one. Serena demanded a CT scan for her lungs. “If she doesn’t understand her body as well as she does, and the doctor doesn’t listen to her, I don’t necessarily think we’re sitting here,” says her agent, Jill Smoller, in the players’ lounge before Serena’s match in San Jose.

    The scan showed blood clots. Coughing from the embolism caused her C-section wound to pop; in surgery, doctors found a large hematoma in her abdomen. Another procedure inserted a filter into her veins to prevent more clots. She kept the filter after it was removed, and puts it on her kitchen table as we talk. It’s shaped like a badminton birdie. “How was that in my veins?” Serena asks.

    Ohanian remembers that harrowing stretch as a plunge from highest high to lowest low. “It’s a lot to change gears from being really happy and thrilled about bringing this life into the world to having to kiss your wife goodbye and praying she’ll be O.K.,” he says.

    There were five surgeries, all told, and the first few months of recovery were particularly tough. The couple hunkered down at their home in South Florida, while Serena’s mother Oracene moved in to help. For weeks, Ohanian lifted Serena out of bed in the morning.

    Olympia’s birth, and the frantic, fumbling bond of new parents, brought the family closer together. They now spend most of their time together in South Florida, and also have homes in Southern and Northern California, where Ohanian has installed a PlayStation near Olympia’s playpen. “Yeah, he’s a nerd,” says Serena. They also have a stocked bar in her playroom. “Sometimes,” she says, laughing, “you need it.” Serena even managed to implement “no cell phone” Sundays despite Ohanian’s full-time, device-dependent work life, but she’ll catch her husband in the act. “He doesn’t put it down until I look at him,” she says.

    Her desire to play tennis again, however, never wavered. Williams began slowly, doing some light hitting in Florida. By early 2018, she felt strong enough to return to the pro tour. The results have been mixed. She lost in the first round in her second tournament, in March, and then reached the fourth round of the French Open in June before a pectoral injury forced her to withdraw.

    Serena’s coach, Patrick Mouratoglou, says she made choices that put her family above her career, including staying home with Olympia and Ohanian rather than going early to Europe for clay-court prep. “I felt the decisions were taken through the angle of the family, where before, every decision was taken through the angle of tennis,” says Mouratoglou. “This is a big difference. Even if you are Serena, if you want to be successful in tennis, tennis has to be priority No. 1.”

    Breastfeeding was another tension point. Serena nursed Olympia for the first eight months, even though she believes it made it harder for her to get back into playing shape. “You have the power to sustain the life that God gave her,” she says. “You have the power to make her happy, to calm her. At any other time in your life, you don’t have this magical superpower.”

    Once Serena did arrive in France for clay-court training, Mouratoglou told her she should stop nursing, for the sake of her game. “It’s absolutely hard to take from a guy,” Serena says. “He’s not a woman, he doesn’t understand that connection, that the best time of the day for me was when I tried to feed her. I’ve spent my whole life making everyone happy, just servicing it seems like everyone. And this is something I wanted to do.”

    But Serena also wanted to get back on top, and she says she came around to the idea that she needed to stop nursing Olympia in order to make it happen. “I looked at Olympia, and I was like, ‘Listen, Mommy needs to get her body back, so Mommy’s going to stop now.’ We had a really good conversation. We talked it out.”

    Serena then committed to Mouratoglou’s training plan. “I’ve never seen her work like that before,” says her coach. In July, Serena made her thrilling run on the Wimbledon grass, before falling to Angelique Kerber in the final. The tennis world was floored.

    “I’ve never met an athlete that can just produce the highest level of hunger, desire and mental determination other than her,” says Chris Evert, who won 18 Grand Slam singles titles in her career. “I’m in awe that she got to the finals.”

    Still, Serena feels like she let the opportunity slip away. She stopped scouting her opponents so closely, since they tend to bring their game to another level against her. But she decided to prep for Kerber. “I really wish I hadn’t done that,” she says. “Because she played much, much harder than she’s ever played in her life. Hit nothing like she normally does. I was like, O.K., this is classic. Why did I do this? Just focus on Serena. That’s when I do my best.”

    Olympia is almost always on her mother’s mind. Like so many new parents, Serena still marvels at how strongly she feels pulled to her daughter, finding joy in how Olympia washes her hands in the dog bowl, smooches avocado into her hair and shot puts Tupperware across the kitchen. “Sometimes she just wants Mommy, she doesn’t want anyone else,” Serena says, nearly choking up. “I still have to learn a balance of being there for her, and being there for me. I’m working on it. I never understood women before, when they put themselves in second or third place. And it’s so easy to do. It’s so easy to do.”

    Early on, eager to bond with Olympia, Serena was hesitant to let others even hold her. “She was a bit of a baby hog,” says her sister Isha Price. “She was putting way too much pressure on herself. But that’s what she does.”

    Serena says now it was born of a deep insecurity that she was somehow failing as a mom.

    That’s the thing about being a parent, though, particularly a working mom. No matter your resources–and Serena, who has won more than $86 million in prize money, and Ohanian, a co-founder of Reddit and a prominent venture capitalist, have far more than most, including child-care help–it’s still easy to feel like you’re somehow failing. The stress of juggling family and career has brought out the same insecurities in Serena that other parents feel. “I don’t think I’m doing it right,” she says.

    Serena wants Olympia to see and remember her mom winning a Grand Slam title. When I mention that some kids might not begin recalling specific events until around age 5, she says she hopes Olympia’s memory will be more advanced. Or maybe she’ll keep going, long past when her peers have given it up. “I don’t plan on that,” Serena says. Then again, she never figured she’d still be playing at 36. If someone would have asked her a decade ago if she’d still be swinging a racket in 2018? “I would have said, Absolutely no, impossible, no chance,” she says. “I’d bet my life on it.”

    Priorities have changed. She wants Olympia to have a sibling. She’s learning on the fly, like all parents. She still gets down, and has moments when she doesn’t want to hang out with Olympia and then feels terrible for it. And then there’s all the time she can’t bear to pry herself away, despite knowing that her game will suffer for it. But mostly, Serena is learning to recognize the swings, tell herself they’re normal and fight the urge to beat herself up. “Nothing about me right now is perfect,” she says. “But I’m perfectly Serena.”

    Sometimes a good cry helps. And sometimes lessons come the hard way. San Jose was one of her first night-time matches since she gave birth. Before Olympia, the day of a night match was all about Serena. Practice early, nap, focus. But this time, she tended to her daughter. She took a little rest, but woke up when Olympia did. She fed her, made sure she’s O.K. “I need to be more selfish for just those couple of days,” she says. “I keep telling myself she’s not going to remember that I spent an extra two hours with her. I should be taking that two hours and focusing on my career.”

    Earlier, Serena says as much to Olympia in the kitchen. She wipes yogurt off the baby’s face and swings her around the room, much to Olympia’s delight. “Momma’s going to make you very sad right now,” Serena tells her. “Momma has to go to the gym. But it hurts me more than it hurts you.”

    Serena then steps into the garage and heads out. Back to work. Again.

     

  • FELIX ANYANSI-AGWU

    Recently honoured by the government and people of Abia State for his meritorious service to football as well as supervising the golden era of Enyimba International Football Club of Aba since taking over the reins of the club in 2000, Felix Anyansi-Agwu shares his good and bad moments with the People’s Elephants in a revealing conversation with MORAKINYO ABODUNRIN.

    Football has undoubtedly made Felix Anyansi-Agwu smile and cry as the debonair chairman of Enyimba International Football Club chats his course in the beautiful game of soccer.

    Nearing almost two decades in the saddle, history would forever be kind to Anyansi-Agwu having  yet supervised some of the golden moments of the Aba-based side but he reckons the years gone by have not been without  some difficult challenges.

    In a revealing interview with The Nation ahead of last Wednesday’s Total CAF Confederation Cup first leg semi-final 1-0 home loss to Raja Casablanca of Morocco in Aba, Anyansi-Agwu recalled how his doting son emblematically stabbed him in the back over his love for the club widely known as the People’s Elephants.

    “Above every other thing, my family gives me immense joy and my children and wife have made huge sacrifice because of my involvement with football and, especially, my service to Enyimba.

    “I’m married to football and for someone passionate as I am, it means my family suffers a lot because I’m not always available for them,” stated Anyansi-Agwu who marked his 53rd birthday on August 8.

    Anyansi-Agwu came into the saddle as chairman of Enyimba at the turn of the last century in 2000 and he has revamped the fortunes of the club from a provincial club to continental warlords by leading the People’s Elephants to many conquests at both local and continental levels.

    Under his watch, Enyimba became the first Nigerian club to win the CAF Champions League trophy in 2003 after 39 years of failure by several clubs including foremost Rangers International of Enugu and Shooting Stars Sports Club of Ibadan and they successfully defended the crown in 2004.

    Apart from winning the CAF Super Cup in 2004 and 2005, Enyimba have also won the  Nigeria Professional  Football League (NPFL) title  seven times, as well as four Federation Cups, amongst other silverwares under the watch of Anyansi-Agwu.

    Such remarkable feats with Enyimba, according to him, were not without a price: “I owe my wife a lot of gratitude for her unconditional and unquantifiable support which has helped me to succeed with Enyimba.

    “My wife and children has sacrificed so much because of my involvement with Enyimba. My children don’t see me too often and I remember a particular incident with my little boy.

    “This particular afternoon, I came home to pick something and as I was about leaving the house, he called on me ‘daddy, you are leaving again?’

    “What he said touched me because it was like a stab behind my back and I looked back with tears rolling down my cheeks. You can therefore understand what the family has gone through because of my involvement with football,” explained Anyansi-Agwu who was recently honoured for his meritorious service by Governor Okezie Ikpeazu during the 27th anniversary of the creation of Abia State.

    Of course, Anyansi-Agwu has witnessed bountiful harvest seasons with Enyimba but will easily recollect some bad spell  (such as Wednesday’s home loss to Raja )that actually made him criy: ”Oh, come on, football can blow off your mind and there are matches you lose that you shed tears;  even if it (tears) doesn’t drop ,you shed tears in  your heart.

    “It has not been that easy because one has to soak in a lot of pressure because some results can give you heart attack.

    “Some of us in football have developed high blood pressure for over 15 years and being Enyimba chairman is not only about the fun fare because there are lot of things administrators and coaches pass through that people don’t see.

    “Football management is not an easy thing; the tension is especially much when you are passionate as I’m because of my love for football and especially for Enyimba.”

    Anyansi-Agwu’s magic wand should be of interest to football aficionados having supervised what would be regarded as the club’s golden era since its formation in 1976 by a civil servant – Jerry Amadi Enyeazu – who was the first Director for Sports of Imo State out of which Abia State was carved out.

    “I’m always grateful to God for his mercies and grace upon me, my family and the Enyimba family in general,” he volunteered. “It is not easy to be in a particular position for so long and still remain relevant but God has been very merciful.

    “Football management is all about experience and you can only gather such experience the longer you stay on the job.

    “You must also be committed and have enormous passion for the job; this is paramount because you cannot be in a particular position without passion for the job.

    “My passion for football is immeasurable; my commitment to football can’t be quantified. Football is me and I’m also part and parcel of football.

    “Football is my first love; a game that I loved from my younger days and I played the game at the primary, secondary and higher schools where I also played active role in terms of its administration. “I’ve also played active role in private capacity even before I came on board as an administrator of the club and I couldn’t have succeeded without the grace of God.

    “My commitment to football and especially to Enyimba is second to none because without commitment, you cannot achieve much.

    “It also goes with its own challenges but the experience acquired over the years has helped in manoeuvring what could be a major problem,” noted Anyansi-Agwu, as he speaks on other sundry issues.

    Stewardship since 2000

    In 1999, I came in as the vice-chairman of Enyimba Football Club and I grew from VP to Chairman in 2000 and the club actually had two matches left to escape relegation. If they had lost those two matches, they would have been relegated but by the grace of God we were able to win those two matches. That saved Enyimba from relegation that year. In 2001, we won the league title for the first time in the history of the club. We retained the trophy in 2002 and also in 2003. Also in 2003, we went as far as winning the CAF Champions League for the first time in the history of Nigerian football and we added CAF Super Cup in 2004. We retained the CAF Champions League in 2004 and also won the league title and FA Cup in Nigeria as well as the CAF Super Cup in 2005. That was the trend with high level of consistency; and that has been the great motivation for us. We have set and broken records in Nigerian football and we were usually between second and third positions in some years we didn’t win any trophy in Nigeria. When you go into the history of Enyimba, it’s very rich because we have won everything winnable in Nigeria including seven league titles and four Federation Cup.

    Comparison between the 2003-2004 and present Enyimba squad

    The 2003 and 2004 set was fantastic and because the team was built from 2000, you can see clearly a certain level of consistency; those were memorable moments. With the benefit of my experience over the years, I can say that our current team has winning mentality and they have the capacity to achieve like their predecessors of 2003 and 2004. Having reached this stage, the players are well motivated and they want to make names for themselves.

    Bold bid for CAF Confederation Cup

    The only continental trophy that is left for us to win at Enyimba is the CAF Confederation Cup. But we are very hopeful and God willing, this is the year for us to win this important trophy.  As in boxing, we have likened the Confederation Cup to the unification bout and we want to win the trophy to complete our haul of trophies in Africa. We still believe it is possible for us to achieve because of the way people, especially His Excellency the Governor of Abia State, Dr. Okezie Ikpeazu, have rallied behind us coupled with the support of our teeming fans here and across Nigeria and beyond. We know that Nigerians eagerly want us to win this elusive Confederation Cup and we believe this is possible through hard work and commitment.

    Dealing with several coaches over the years

    Yes, a lot of coaches have passed through here. Many of them have been so wonderful but I must confess that it’s not easy to manage players and coaches. But it comes with some skill and understanding about the nature of the job. From day one, I’ve created the enabling environment for them to do their job without any distraction. You can ask the coaches that have worked here and they will tell you that I’m probably the only club chairman that has never bothered to see their list for matches until it’s officially released. Over almost 20 years that I’ve been in charge, I have never requested to see the team list and that shows that I give the coaches the freehand to do their job. I don’t interfere with their job.

    Plans after leaving Enyimba

    There are still lot of things and dreams  that I still want to achieve  and before I came in fully to Enyimba, I  was an importer of goods and other things that I’d put my hands on. By the grace of God, there is a whole lot of progress on whatever that I’ve touched.  One thing is sure: I will always be around football even when I leave Enyimba. I have a dream of running a model football academy that will be educationally based. This will be purely for young people so that they can combine education with football.  I’m not going to forget my business acumen and will continue to supervise some other things that I already have in my private capacity.

    From football to political minefield

    Contesting for governorship in Abia Sate? Don’t even go there. Honestly, I’m not over ambitious and I’m a very calm person because I know what I want. At the moment, I’m not a trained politician and going into politics now is not even in my thinking. My thinking now is to do my job with Enyimba in a respectable and honourable way so that we can take the club to the next level. I want to leave a stable Enyimba that will be self-sufficient so that others coming behind can achieve much based on the platform we’ve created.  My resolve now is not only about getting results though it helps. We want to build a capacity so that Enyimba can be self-sustaining. We want Enyimba not to depend solely on government funding in order to survive in a foreseeable future.

  • EDEN HAZARD: I don’t care about goals

    Chelsea’s Eden Hazard wants his reputation as one of the world’s great players to be based on titles rather than goal records as he embraced being put on the same pedestal as Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi.

    Hazard scored what could be the goal of the season against Liverpool at Anfield in midweek, further demonstrating his peak form since the World Cup.

    His manager, Maurizio Sarri, thinks Hazard can score 40 this season, but Hazard does not want his contribution measured by his strike rate.

    “I don’t have (goal) targets to be fair – my only target is to win something every year. I want to win trophies,” he said.

    “It is not important how many goals I score. You know me, I don’t care about that. I just want to enjoy my football and win games.

    “At the moment I am scoring goals, that is why everyone is talking for me to be in the top three (players).

    “It is a pleasure to be there. I just want to keep going. I am the same player as two years ago, three years ago. I’m now in a period that I score a lot of goals, and hopefully I keep on scoring. It won’t be simple. Definitely not in the Premier League. I’m feeling good since the FA Cup final. Something you see. I play in strong teams, here with Chelsea and with Belgium who were very good at the World Cup, and that helps me to perform better too.”

    Team mate Ross Barkley says Hazard is currently the world’s best and puts the team’s needs above personal accolades.

    “Compared to them (Ronaldo and Messi), they are probably a lot more selfish than Eden is,” said Barkley.

    “He is not a selfish player. He is happy getting two assists and the team winning. What he has done against Liverpool, honestly he’s doing it every day in training.

    “He is establishing himself in the top three players in the world. At the minute, he’s probably the best player in the world.”

    The Belgian is the star for @ChelseaFC once again as he cuts through the @LFC defence to put his team ahead!

    Hazard acknowledged the influence of Sarri’s style on his game. Chelsea are playing a possession-based game now, but the 27 year-old was careful not to sound disrespectful to the former managers who brought the title to Stamford Bridge.

    “You see it on the pitch. We have different players, players that we didn’t have last season, players who like to have the ball,” said Hazard.

    “We have more possession than before. The attacking players benefit from that. We get more touches, more opportunities to create chances, to dribble more, more chances to shoot on target. Sarri is a manager who likes to have the ball. That makes a big difference. Besides that, he’s an Italian. Just like Conte there’s a lot of tactics and we have to work hard in training.

    “But I don’t feel like saying that I didn’t have any freedom under my previous managers. Conte and Mourinho also let me do what I wanted in the last third. That’s why I could excel under them, too. Defensively, I know what I have to do.”

    On his winning goal at Anfield, ending Jurgen Klopp’s flawless start to the season, Hazard said: “It’s one of the most beautiful goals I have ever scored. But I have already made a few nice ones in my career. It feels special, though. Because it’s at Anfield, against a big club like Liverpool that, on top of that, had won all of their games this season. When I got the ball on the touchline I only thought about scoring that goal. I didn’t want to go to a shoot-out session. So that played in my mind all of the time.”

     

    Such is Sarri’s impact, Hazard joked he would be happy to work with him during the international breaks, too.

    “I don’t want to be disrespectful towards Roberto Martinez, but maybe, when his spell at Belgium is over, we can start thinking about Sarri,” he said.

    Despite the encouraging results and mood at Chelsea, Hazard is yet to commit his long-term future to the club.

    “I haven’t signed a contract. Not yet. Not yet,” he said.

    Hazard added: “Even when the things are not going well, I try to be happy when I am on the pitch. That is why I like football. At the moment, we are winning games so it is more easy to smile but when I am on the pitch I just try to be happy. At the moment it is good. I am scoring goals, we are playing good, so I am enjoying it but we will see in the future.

    “We won the last FA Cup last year. We know the Premier League is going to be hard. City and Liverpool, they have a lot of good players.”

     

    Culled from The Telegraph

  • VICTOR OSIMHEN: Struggle has been my life.

    Nigeria youth international, Victor Osimhen, with incredible introspection recalled his humble beginning and European trajectory through VfL Wolfsburg to Charleroi in the Belgian Jupiler League, reports MORAKINYO ABODUNRIN.

    Apart from soccer, music is certainly the only thing that catches his fancy. Former Nigeria junior international Victor Osimhen has waxed lyrically about his life-changing loan deal from Wolfsburg in the German Bundesliga to Charleroi in the Belgian Jupiler League.

    “I believe I can fly now,” Osimhen told THE NATION in apt reference to music star R Kelly’s hit track ‘I believe I can fly’ after scoring his first goal for Charleroi last weekend against Waasland-Beveren

    Here was a lad who loved to be ‘sitting on the throne’ in accordance with the hit track of his favourite musician Nigeria’s rapper, Olamide, but he was nearly turned to a  wreck in the tough Teutonic environment.

    Osimhen, despite arriving Wolfsburg on high recommendation following his goal-rious exploit at the Chile 2015 FIFA U-17 World Cup – where he won the golden boot as top scorer and silver ball as second most valuable player behind compatriot, Kelechi Nwakali – he was virtually consigned to the bench at the Volkswagen Arena.

    But on his first debut for the Les Zebres (The Zebras) in an away tie to Waasland-Beveren on Match Day 8 of the Belgian Jupiler League, Osimhen’s quality was there for all to see as he struck with an uncommon élan that is worthy of recollection.

    After receiving a deep-lying cross in the box, the burly striker in a spectacular show of skill and precision, nutmegged an on-rushing defender and within a twinkle of an eye, he scored with a back heel goal much to the delight of over 8,000 spectators at Freethel Stadion with thousands humming on the social media over the well-executed goal.

    “It’s a great feeling for me to get my first league goal in Europe after two years,” stated Osimhen with an emotion-laden voice.

    Yet, Osimhen means ‘God is good’ in Victor’s native Ishan dialect in Esan South East Local Government Area of Edo State in Nigeria and the lad is full of splendour about the turn of events. “I’m really happy because I have been working hard; and I think the hard work has started paying off again.

    “I really want to thank God because this goal is important for me, my family and all my loved ones.”

    The goal indeed is worth its weight in gold and it’s the sort of goal that naturally, easily elicits frenzy on the internet even when it wasn’t done by the likes of Mohammed Salah, Lionel Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo. At the last check, the picture of Osimhen celebrating first goal for his new Belgian club has attracted over 1000 likes and over 300 comments on just one social media platform.

    “I think my first goal for Charleroi against Waasland-Beveren was special,” he volunteered. “I have been watching the different styles of all the top strikers, especially with the way they score some marvellous goals to add to my own skill and I didn’t think twice when I had a similar opportunity to score with the back heel against Waasland-Beveren.

    “All along, I had the mentality that I was going to try out one of the tricks and this really helped me; I’m grateful to God.”

    Osimhen has reasons to be grateful for what can best be described as divine intervention after going through the vicissitudes of life at Wolfsburg.

    After some cameo appearances for Wolfsburg, he copped an injury and ended his two seasons at Volkswagen Arena with an unimpressive14 matches that included just 12 Bundesliga games, two German Cup matches and one other inconsequential game of which he was mostly coming on as a substitute without a single goal to his credit.

    Of course, the knives were out as the cynical press and public lacerated the youngster to shreds by writing off his budding career.

    “I wasn’t disturbed in any way by some of the negative comments and stuff that were written about me during my period at Wolfsburg,” noted Osimhen who hustled and hawked sachet water on the streets of Lagos in his formative years. “Some journalists speculated so much about my career but the truth was that I was even sick and I couldn’t join them for the preseason. It took me about three weeks to come out of that sickness and I really thank God for my life.

    “My friends sent me all what some journalists were saying; that I went for trials at Zulte-Waregem and Club Brugge which wasn’t the truth in any way. But rather than discouraging me, it actually got me motivated and I’m happy everything is now on the positive note for me at Charleroi.”

    For years, the Belgian Jupiler had been a Mecca of a sort for Nigerian footballers and at some point, Anderlecht housed former national team captain and coach, the late Stephen Keshi, who actually led the exodus of talents to Europe in the late 1980s.

    There was also Daniel Amokachi at Club Brugge while Victor Ikpeba, Sunday Oliseh and goalkeeper Alloy Agu were the three musketeers at Standard Liege in the 1990s. Other Nigerian standard bearers in Belgium include Celestine Babayaro who won the annual Ebony Shoe Award for the best African or Africa origin player in the Belgian league.

    “This season, I’m not setting any standard for myself because so many Nigerian players have done well in the past here in Belgium. But I just want to score as many goals as possible at Charleroi,” he offered with a breathy purr. “The most important thing is to achieve the target set by the club and it’s my hope to contribute my quota towards the success of the club this season. I want to be an important player and help the club in the best way I can.”

    Weaned on the streets of Lagos where he learnt preservation and perseverance, the message on the display photo on Osimhen’s Whatsapp logo easily elicits the interest of this writer since it’s very instructive with three heavy-duty words: Focus-Hustle-Believe.

    “I actually received the display photo on my Whatsapp as a message from one of my fans and this means so much to me because it sums up the philosophy of my life,” noted Osimhen who has cult followership numbering over 50,000 Instagram. “Strangely, I’ve not met this great fan of mine but he perfectly understood all what I went through at Wolfsburg. He kept urging me to work hard and asked me to put the picture at a place I can see every day.

    “That picture has been on my Whatsapp logo for over one year now and it’s going to be there for a while and I may probably not even change it.

    “I believe I can achieve all that I conceive in my mind with focus and that means, I have to continue to hustle and believe that God will certainly bless my efforts.” It has indeed taken Osimhen some years to arrive at this point after starting his budding career in Lagos at a neighbourhood side now known prize.

    “I learnt a lot in terms of football and life at Wolfsburg because I was surrounded by good people,” admitted Osimhen who will be 20 on December 29. “I perfectly understood almost 90% of the way they play in Germany because I wanted to learn and improve on my quality and that was the main reason I actually went to Wolfsburg.

    “They have one of the best facilities in the world at Wolfsburg and Germany is one of the most powerful countries in the world.

    “Everything, and I mean about everything, is different from where I was coming from. The first five months were very strange to me because the mentality is different, but luckily I met this wonderful French guy of African origin and I mean Joshua Guilavogui who has been with Wolfsburg for three years and he really assisted me in settling down to a new life in Europe.

    “He was my guardian all through my stay at Wolfsburg and it was a great experience because I was able to increase my knowledge. Aside playing football, I can now live in any European country on my own without difficulties because my mentality is great, very great.”

    Of course, it has been well said that you have to behave like Romans if you’re in Rome and this sense of mission is not lost on Osimhen as he settles down to a new lease of life at Charleroi in the province of Hainaut which is the fifth largest Belgian city by population and sometimes referred to as French Hainaut because of its origin.

    “My German is not so fluent because I can only speak some few words and hopefully I can be fluent with it if I have the opportunity of going back there to play because,  for now, my focus is doing well with Charleroi;  and I have to learn to speak in French or the Belgian language.”

    Meanwhile, the language of football and standard for  measuring  progress of youngsters by discerning managers remains the same from Germany to Greece or from France to Faroe Island following hints by Super Eagles’ Franco-German manager Gernot Rohr about the possibility of Osimhen joining the new guns in Nigeria’s national team now undergoing a rebuilding process post  Russia 2018  FIFA World Cup.

    “We have an exciting crop of young players and I think Victor Osimhen would be useful in the future after he moved from Wolfsburg to Charleroi. The coach of Charleroi is my personal friend and I told him about the quality of Victor,” Rohr revealed ahead of the 2019 AFCON qualifier against Seychelles in Victoria.

    On the basis of Rohr’s testament, Osimhen readily admitted that his future for both club and country is bright as he enthused about the prospect of donning the famous green-white-green colours of Nigeria.

    “I missed the opportunity of playing for the Super Eagles while at Wolfsburg,” admitted Osimhen who earned his first cap for Super Eagles after coming on as a second half substitute for Ahmed Musa in the 3-0 thrashing of Togo in international friendly match at the Stade Municipal de Saint Leu La Foret in Paris .“But I’m hopeful now for more games with the Super Eagles by playing regularly for Charleroi.

    “Gernot Rohr is a top coach and everybody he has extended invitation to deserves it and this sort of gives me confidence that I would get my chance if I start scoring goals and doing very well in Belgium.

    “Right from my childhood, I have always been a big fan of the Super Eagles and I was rooting for them even while I was in the hospital during the Russia 2018 Wold Cup and I think they did the country proud though some people felt otherwise.

    “I will remain a fan whether I’m invited to play or not and I’m wishing the Super Eagles the best in upcoming fixtures and I know with quality we have as a country, we can be a major contender for the next  AFCON and World Cup in the future.

    “For now, I’m  keeping my fingers crossed and will continue to work hard here at Charleroi since I know with time, I’m going to have the chance of playing for the Super Eagles and Nigeria again,” stated  Osimhen who equally  featured for the Nigeria national Under-20 side (Flying Eagles) under Amuneke that he’s immensely  indebted to.

    He explained: “Coach Amuneke is a good man; and he’s like a father to me and I can only wish him all the best and I pray he’ll be able to take Tanzanian football to the next level.”

    Similarly, Osimhen seems to be inching forth to the next level in Belgium as he grabbed his second goal for Charleroi in as many matches after coming on as a second half substitute on Wednesday night in the 2-0 defeat of Aalst in the Belgian Cup.

    “I feel great and overwhelmed about my second goal for Charleroi and I’m really happy to be here in order to get my career back on track; the people here are nice and the coach (Felize Mazzu) believes so much in me and I really want to learn more.

    “The good thing is that the period I spent in Wolfsburg has really shaped me into the kind of striker that I wanted to be. I’m still learning and under construction but it’s good to be back in my scoring way,” he stated.

     

     

  • TOBI AMUSAN: I’m a fighter-that is my story

    Call her dynamite and you won’t be wrong. Standing at 5.1 feet, Oluwatobiloba Amusan is definitely the next big thing in women’s 100m hurdles, after the storied Gloria Alozie who represented Nigeria before switching nationality to Spain. The ambitious Amusan spoke exclusively to TAIWO ALIMI recently in Asaba.

    Though, the Commonwealth and Africa Athletic Championship champion don’t want to be compared with Glory Alozie-Africa and national record holder at 12. 44s in 1998, she looks forward to smashing her record in the nearest future.

    “I would like to surpass the achievements of Gloria one day. I look up to her in many ways and beating her record would crown my athletic glory,” she said.

    At 21, Tobi, as she is simply known, believes she has what it takes to rule Africa and the world in some years.

    She has partly achieved her 2018 dream as the winner of the Gold Coast-Australia Commonwealth Games in June, as well as the Africa Senior Championship in Asaba-Nigeria held in August.

    “I’m happy for my achievement in Australia. All eyes were on the Jamaican girls, so it was a great that I beat them to gold.”

    However, she said her target was to erase the Games’ record in Australia, a feat she could not achieve.

    Her 12.68secs, ahead of Jamaica duo Danielle Williams and Yanique Thompson, however, confirmed her   first Nigerian gold medallist in the momen’s 100mh at the Commonwealth Games. In-fact, the medal is Nigeria’s only gold in athletics in Gold Coast.

    The Commonwealth Games record is 12.65secs set by Jamaican Brigitte Foster-Hylton at the Melbourne 2006 Games.

    “I went with the mind of setting another record in the 100m hurdles but I didn’t get it.”

    She added: “I have always prepared hard for every competition – the Olympics, the African Championships, and others – with the same positive energy and attitude. I knew that winning the event at the Games would be tough and I was prepared for it and I am glad it worked out well in the end.”

    Coming tops again on home soil, Asaba, she confessed, was exhilarating.

    “It feels good to win at home and good to be appreciated by your people. Nigeria has a team that has capacity to grow because we are young and I look forward to more competitions and flying my country’s flag.”

    Amusan is among the exclusive few that left Asaba with more than a gold medal. She was a member of the Nigeria 4 X 100m relay team that dusted South Africa to the gold medal.

    She ran the third leg and made her inclusion count alongside Blessing Okagbare, Joy Udo-Gabriel and Rosemary Chukwuma. Nigeria won the relay in 43.77s ahead of South Africa. Shortly after the race, she said she would be happy to compete in the same team for many years, while predicting that the team will go far in future competitions. “I would like those in authority to support us because we are young and eager to make our mark.”

    Amusan has shown grace and confidence from the junior level. At the African Junior Championships and All-Africa Games in 2015, she competed in the 100m flat and hurdles, 200m and Long Jump and won gold in the hurdles.  She was also a silver medallist at the 2013 African Youth Championships in Warri.

    She was runner-up at the 2016 NCAA Outdoor Championships in the 100 mh running a windy 12.79 s. Amusan also competed at the 2016 World Junior Championships in Bydgoszcz. Despite running her second fastest time ever, she placed fifth in the final. She eclipsed Kim Turner’s 100mH UTEP record in 2016, with a 2016 best of 12.83 s. She has bettered her own high school record in the 100mh finishing the race at the UTEP Springtime Invitational in 12.63 s.

    She noted that living, schooling and training in the United States (U.S) made her realised her potential.

    “My school and the country have been good to me. My transfer from Nigeria is yielding fruit and that I am running well now is because I have the best people, talking about coaches and trainers and the best of facility at my disposal.”

    Growing up

    I am the last child of my parents. We are three and my mom is a lover of sport, so it was for me to convince them this is what I want. My journey into athletics started from secondary school and progressed when I got into higher school. Moving to the U S (United States) to continue my education is the biggest positive decision I made in my whole life. It’s pretty different but all worth it. There are coaches there who just want me to reach my highest point in my career. U.S colleges have good programmes for their athletes and most of their Olympic team members are in this system.  I did well in a couple of school meets and my coach put me up in the hurdles and here I am, doing dash and hurdles. I am enjoying the ride.

    In 2015, fresh in international competitions, I won my first 100mh gold. And that was my breakout year. The completion was the African Junior Championship and I was 17 years old.

    Moving abroad

    It was not easy at first growing up from a different environment but I coped well and it is paying off. I had to get used to the new faces, new teammates and they thought I could not understand my accent. I had to repeat myself a lot of times. But we had a great team and once they discovered what I was bringing to the table, the rest was easy. I let my legs do the talking and respect followed. I have made good friends and a great career waits.

    Schooling and sports

    As I said, it is not easy because I transferred from a university in Nigeria and it was pretty tough. In Nigeria, I trained once in a week because of the work load and if there are competitions to attend, you are on your own. The lectures don’t give you concession. But when I got to the U.S I could concentrate better. All I have to do is send emails to the professors so as to exempt student athletes in an exam or whatever! There is concession for you and they allow you to take the exam whenever you think is convenient. I had to write many exams well ahead of others because of my athletic schedule. Other times, I do it after. They are considerate and even the school will make a case for you. We are called student athletes and that is why I have maintained good grades and doing well in the track too. They know how to prioritise, and that has helped me immensely.

    Even my coming to the U.S was divine. God loves me and He shows up whenever I need Him. Everything came with ease. The day I went for my visa, five students before me were denied and I got it. Then, I was looking for money to travel down and start my schooling and it became a problem. I made the Nigeria team to the All Africa Games where I did well and that took care of the ticket for me. It is God indeed at work and I don’t forget that; not now, not ever.

    Challenges

    I have many challenges but I do not allow them to get me down. In-fact, I love challenges because it is under that kind of heat that I do excel. I have faith too and very positive. I don’t for once lose faith in God and I never quit.

    Motivation

    Like my name Oluwatobiloba (God is the greatest king), God has been my greatest motivation! I have met somebody that took a look at my height and told me I could not amount to anything as an athlete. That is an additional motivation for me. It’s like proving to them that I can do anything that I set my mind, and God be with me, to do.

    Mentally, I am tough. I don’t care who is racing with me. My goal is always to surpass my previous time and run PRs every time I compete. Then I pray a lot. I am a believer and that has helped me set goals that are bigger than me.

    Then, I have God, the ultimate, my parents, my coach, my spiritual leaders and my mentors in the field. I pray and work hard. With these elements, you cannot go wrong. I have utmost determination and don’t give up easily.

    Rio 2016 Olympics

    I made it to the semi-final in Rio and that is okay by me. I don’t see myself as a low standard hurdler, but a world class athlete and I know that I can hold my own there. But, I am not going to push it. The experience was good for me. To be candid, I got carried away somewhat. I was faced with a different routine that was strange to me. The way they approach every routine was different from mine but I just told myself ‘soon you will get there’. I am a fast learner and things would be different when I attend the next Olympics.

    I see myself going stronger, running better and jumping well. With God in control of things for me, I can only go one direction, up.

    Philosophy and style

    I don’t wear things that trend. Only what makes me comfortable.  I love pants and top but also have time to dress up for occasions. My philosophy is don’t you ever quit and don’t let anyone tell you, you are no good. Believe in yourself and your abilities. You can achieve whatever you set your mind to. I am a fighter. That is my story..

  • NWANKWO KANU: KHF has saved 542 lives

    The former Arsenal striker on how his heart problem inspired him to set up a foundation and why clubs should do more to monitor their players’ health

    Nwankwo Kanu remembers the shouting, the confusion and the overriding sense of desperation. A woman had brought her gravely ill daughter to him, feeling she had nowhere else to turn, and now she was begging him to save the child’s life. Then the little girl collapsed. “We had to pick her up and run to the hospital,” Kanu says. “Thank God she didn’t die.”

    It was the year 2000 and Kanu had just set up his eponymous heart foundation, having undergone a life-or-death scare himself in 1996. The girl’s mother had read the publicity and tracked the footballer to the Nigeria team hotel, where the squad were preparing for an Africa Cup of Nations game.

    “The mum wanted to show me the girl for me to help,” Kanu says. “When she saw me at the hotel, she was shouting and suddenly the girl fainted. Later on at the hospital I promised the mum that the first kid we were going to operate on would be her daughter.”

    The girl’s name was Eniton and she was among the first children that the Kanu Heart Foundation took from Nigeria to London for surgery at Great Ormond Street hospital.

    “For a little girl of that age – not playing, no energy in her, not moving around; she doesn’t smile, the eyes are blue. They are really suffering, in a really bad situation, and you ask yourself: ‘If nobody comes in to help and they die …’

    “But after all of the children had their operations, I went to visit them and they were full of smiles, jumping and playing with me, rolling around with me and when you looked at the mums, you saw the happiness. From that day, I said: ‘This is something that we have to do more and do more.’”

    There is a beautiful update to Eniton’s story – she is about to graduate from Lagos State university, where Kanu has helped to pay her fees. But the foundation has saved the lives of many more children from underprivileged backgrounds in Africa and Kanu is proud to reveal the precise figure.

    “We have saved 542,” he says. “But we keep doing it. This week four patients went to Sudan and we’re hearing that the operations were successful and another six are about to leave as well.

    “We have partnered with hospitals, we do check-ups, we talk to the parents, we educate them and at the same time we take the kids to other countries for operations. The goal of the foundation is to build our own cardiac hospitals in Africa, starting in Nigeria. It would make it all much easier. As a footballer you win trophies and it’s good. But this is so much more.”

     

    Kanu has always been a guy to stand out and he does not go unnoticed in Hertfordshire, where he lives with his wife and three children. He jokes that he intended to kick back and relax on his retirement as a player in 2012 – “I thought: ‘OK, it’s holiday time,’” he says – but he is too philanthropic, too driven to make a difference, for that.

    The 42-year-old is an ambassador for the Nigeria Football Federation and he also works for Fifa as an ambassador. “I am called a legend and people see me as one but because of that I don’t think I should have to hide at home and only go on holidays, drink champagne and watch TV,” Kanu says. “I am somebody that wants to impact on to people’s lives.”

    Kanu’s labour of love remains his foundation and with more time on his hands, he has been able to give more of himself to the raising of funds and awareness. His latest initiative is a charity match to be played at Barnet’s Hive stadium on Saturday 30 September between African and Premier League players. A host of big-name ex-professionals have signed up, including Jay Jay Okocha, Sol Campbell, Teddy Sheringham and Robert Pires.

    Kanu was shaped by his tough upbringing in Imo state, where money was tight and barefoot street football the norm. He does not forget his roots and after he joined Ajax from Iwuanyanwu Nationale, he says his “first priority was to help those back home that didn’t have anything”.