Tag: athletes

  • Nigerian athletes set for Moscow showdown

    Nigerian athletes set for Moscow showdown

    In what could be a defining moment for their young careers, a trio of promising Nigerian athletes — Faith Osamuyi, Sophia Efetobore, and Ronke Akanbi — are set to test their mettle on the international stage this weekend in Moscow, Russia.

    They will be joined by national teammates Samson Nathaniel and Wisdom Great Musa as part of a five-athlete Nigerian contingent looking to make a strong impression during this crucial phase of the athletics season.

    The group, sponsored by Djoumessi Sports Agency, represents a refreshing wave of talent largely based in Nigeria, many of whom will be competing overseas for the very first time.

    Their participation marks a significant milestone — not just for their individual journeys, but also for the development of grassroots athletics in Nigeria.

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    “This is more than just a meet; it’s a career breakthrough,” a representative from Djoumessi Sports Agency noted. “We’re proud to give these athletes a platform to chase global standards and inspire others back home.”

    The action begins on Friday, where Osamuyi and Musa will go head-to-head in the 60m Hurdles, Efetobore will line up in the 60m flat, and Akanbi will test herself in the 1500m. On Sunday, attention turns to the 400m, where experienced quarter-miler Samson Nathaniel will be aiming to sharpen his form, while Akanbi returns to the track with an eye on bettering her National Record in the Steeplechase.

    With the 2025 World Athletics Championships in Tokyo fast approaching, the Moscow meet provides a golden opportunity for the athletes to clock qualifying standards, earn valuable ranking points, and announce themselves on the global scene.

  • JUST IN: Ogun athletes protest over allowances, ground activities at Gateway games

    JUST IN: Ogun athletes protest over allowances, ground activities at Gateway games

    Athletes from Ogun State in the early hours of Wednesday blocked the main entrance of Babcock University, venue of the camp for all the athletes at the 2024 Gateway Games over unpaid allowance for the ongoing games.

    The Nation reports that the athletes since 5.00am blocked the main gate of the camp preventing vehicular movement, leaving many states stranded.

    It was gathered athletes from other States who also feel ill-treated are secretly supporting the protest by their Ogun counterparts.

    The Nation gathered as of the time of filing this report the protest was still ongoing.

    Details Shortly…

  • Training grants: Olajide faults disparity between foreign and home-based athletes

    Training grants: Olajide faults disparity between foreign and home-based athletes

    Nigeria’s sprinter Olayinka Olajide has expressed disappointment over  the disparity in the payment of training grants between the home based athletes and their foreign counterparts.

    Olajide who won a silver medal at the African Games in Ghana and the African Senior Athletics Championship in Douala, Cameroon thanked Minister  for Sports Development, Senator John  Owan Enoh for the gesture to approve and pay the athletes their training grants.

    Read Also: Why The Olympics Is The Ultimate Tournament For Most Athletes

    However, she said there was no basis and justification to  pay  the home based athletes only 20 percent  of what the foreign-based athletes got as training grants.

    “The session was indeed interactive, and we appreciate the transparency and full responsibility your office holds Sir,” Olajide wrote on her X account. “However, I believe there should be no segregation when it comes to training grants. We all are Nigerian athletes, and we deserve a full right.

    “We appreciate this new progression,  but there is no reason local based athletes should be paid 20% of the amount given to foreign based.

  • Team Nigeria athletes get foreign camping allowance

    Team Nigeria athletes get foreign camping allowance

    The Nigerian contingent to the  2024 Olympic Games have reportedly been paid their foreign camping allowances ahead of Friday’s opening ceremony in Paris.  

    Minister of Sports Development, Senator John Owan Enoh, was quoted as saying  that both domestic and foreign camping allowances have been disbursed to the athletes. “Ensuring our athletes are well-prepared and motivated is a top priority. We are committed to providing all necessary support to help them excel on the global stage,” he said. “Our athletes have shown incredible dedication and resilience, and we believe they are ready to make the nation proud.”

    A total of 88 athletes will represent Nigeria in 12 different sports at the Olympic Games, which commence later this week. 

    The timely financial support, the ministry said in a release  that ‘it  underscores the its dedication to fostering an environment where Nigerian athletes can focus on their preparations and deliver outstanding performances in Paris. 

    “The support from the Ministry has been phenomenal,” said one of the athletes. “Knowing that we have the backing of our nation gives us the confidence to push harder and aim higher.”

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    The contingent held its foreign training program in Saarbrucken, Germany, while the football team camped in Spain. 

    The foreign training followed a period of domestic training camp, which prepared athletes for the games before the foreign camping under conditions similar to those in Paris. 

    “The training in Germany and Spain has been intense and very beneficial,” noted another athlete. “We are more than ready to compete and bring glory to Nigeria.”

    Minister concluded: “Our athletes have the full support of the nation. We believe in their abilities and are confident they will give their best at the Games. Let’s all rally behind Team Nigeria and cheer them on to victory.

  • Paris 2024: Organisers deliver athletes’ village  on schedule

    Paris 2024: Organisers deliver athletes’ village  on schedule

    The organisers of the Paris Olympics took possession of the newly built athletes’ village on schedule, reinforcing growing confidence that they will be ready for the Games.

    At an inauguration ceremony in northern Paris, chief organiser Tony Estanguet received a symbolic key for the complex in front of VIPs including President Emmanuel Macron.

    The roughly 40 low-rise tower blocks will house around 14,000 people over the course of the Olympics, which kick off on July 26, and another 9,000 during the Paralympics afterwards.

    The handover target of March 1 for the crucial piece of Olympics infrastructure was exceeded by a day, with all sides keen to stress that the construction work was finished on time and only marginally over budget.

    “It’s a demonstration that we have honoured our commitments,” Macron told reporters after meeting workers who he said should be “proud” of taking part in what he called “the adventure of a century”.

    The village was a major test of whether the Paris Games could avoid the pitfalls of past editions.

    Wasteful over-spending, rushed construction work and extravagant “white elephant” infrastructure projects have consistently tarnished the reputation of the Olympics.

    Concerns about climate change have also led activists to target the enormous carbon footprint of an event that brings together athletes and spectators from across the world every four years.

    Paris organisers see themselves as promoting a new “sober” model, with a focus on using existing or temporary sporting infrastructure, as well as promoting recycling, re-use and innovative low-carbon technologies.

     “We’ve made a village that’s a showcase, but also a manifesto of what we know how to do best in France today in response to the major questions posed for urbanization in the 21st century,” Olympics infrastructure chief Nicolas Ferrand told Macron.

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    By using low-carbon concrete, wood structures, and renewable geothermal heating, organisers claim the village will create around half the amount of carbon emissions over its lifetime compared with an equivalent built with standard construction techniques.

    The village is the single biggest new-build Olympics project, located on a site by the river Seine that is a focus for regeneration efforts in the economically deprived Paris suburb of Seine-Saint-Denis.

    The suburb, which also hosts the national stadium, is the poorest and most crime-ridden of mainland

     “We made a promise: that we would create above all a new neighbourhood for Seine-Saint-Denis rather than an Olympic and Paralympic village,” Laurent Michaud, director of village operations for the organising committee, told reporters earlier this week.

    Roughly two thirds of the 2.0-billion-euro ($2.2 billion) budget has been provided by private real estate companies, with the state contributing 646 million euros.

    During the Games, it will include a 24-hour restaurant, an alcohol-free bar, as well as training facilities.

    Afterwards, around a third of the 2,800 apartments will be sold off to private homeowners, while a third is destined for public housing, and the rest for rentals, including for students.

  • Ministry to partner with Military to produce laurel-winning athletes

    Ministry to partner with Military to produce laurel-winning athletes

    The Minister of Sports Development, Senator John Owan Enoh, has pledged to work with military and para-military institutions to develop world-class athletes who can win laurels  for the country. 

    He  made the commitment yesterday  while delivering a speech at the first edition of the Military and Para-Military Judo Championship in Abuja.

    He expressed his regret that the fertile grounds which military and para-military institutions once provided for producing sports talents have been eroded over the years as he called for the resuscitation of this practice. 

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    The minister commended the Nigeria Judo Federation for initiating the Military and Para Military Judo Championship. He also encouraged other sports federations to follow in their footsteps and initiate partnerships with the military and para-military institutions to improve the chances of the country for podium appearances.

    The Minister promised to continue supporting the growth of various sports in the country, and if under his leadership, Judo returns to its pre-eminent position as Category A sports, he would have succeeded in his job as minister. 

    Responding,  the President of the Nigerian Judo Federation, Dr. Musa Oshodi, expressed  gratitude to the Minister for honouring their invitation, which he said was an indication of his passion for sports development in the country.

     He further emphasized that the aim of the partnership between the federation and the military was to ensure that judo regains its pride of place in Nigeria. 

  • New findings rubbishes ‘No sex better athlete’ Claims

     

    Avoiding sex does not improve athletic performance, scientists have claimed, insisting that the routine popular among some sporting greats has no scientific basis.

    Muhammad Ali used to abstain from sex before his fights and players on England’s 2010 World Cup side were banned from sleeping with their wives.

    But these rituals may have no scientific basis, according to a small study comparing men’s fitness after sex or no sex. While orgasms were found to reduce blood pressure this did not affect athleticism

    Researchers led by Georgia State University tested the physical performance of eight people, one of them a woman, to work out whether sex affected them.

    During the tests they had to work out to get their heart rate up to 170 beats per minute, do as many push-ups as they could, do a vertical jump and a grip strength test, and test their reaction times.

    They were examined after they had an orgasm during sex the night before, had no sex the night before, or did yoga the night before.

    ‘Our findings show no significant changes in various measures of physical exercise performance following sexual intercourse 7.6 hours before physical exercise,’ the scientists said.

    Muhammad Ali, one of the greatest boxers in history, was said to avoid sex for six weeks before a big fight.

    Other fighters including Lennox Lewis, Mike Tyson and Manny Pacquiao are also believed to have endured dry spells before stepping into the ring.

    And in the 2010 FIFA World Cup, England manager Fabio Capello famously told his team they must resist their wives and girlfriends and save their energy for the pitch.

    Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola, however, has the opposite philosophy and encourages his players to be active between the sheets.

    He said: ‘It’s impossible to play good football if you don’t [have] sex with your partner,’ The Telegraph reported in 2016.’I would never ban that. If you are doing it… better players.’

    The scientific study said athletes may avoid sex in the hope of saving their strength and energy, and to help them keep a ‘game face’.

    But the results, published in the journal Sexual Medicine, showed performance didn’t improve after abstinence.

     

     

     

  • Lagos sports federations to develop growth strategy

    Forum of Lagos State Sports Federations Association Chairmen has resolved to work together to develop a strategic document that will enhance sports development in the state.

    Speaking yesterday after their meeting at the Teslim Balogun, Chairman of Chairmen, Seyi Akinwunmi, who is also the Chairman of the Lagos State Football Association (LSFA) said the it has become necessary for the federation chairmen to work together to foster growth of sports in the state.

    Akinwunmi stated that working has a unit would help the body proffer solution to the myriad of problem bedeviling the sports in the state, while assuring that a working document in accordance with the government policy, would be developed to help the sports association, coaches, athletes and other stakeholders.

    The LSFA boss and his colleagues also called on the Lagos State Sports Council to allow the different associations take over their facilities, noting that the current arrangement which allows some officials to oversee and approve the facilities for use would hinder development. He opined that putting the facilities under the association would help them plan and host their competitions without hindrance.

    The attendees also agreed that more facilities should be provided, coaches should be trained, schools sports should encouraged, while competition should be held periodically to help in the discovery of talents.

    He said committees would be set up to ensure that their activities are well articulated and help the body realise their ambition of taking sports to the zenith.

    Chairman of the LSSC, Kweku Tandoh commended the association chairmen for the move and praised them for their commitment to sports development in the state. He enjoined them to tailor their activities in line with the government policy.

    He also said that the LSSC would partner the associations to develop their various sport but enjoined the association chairmen to become innovative in their way of sourcing sponsors that would help in repositioning their various sports.

    Kweku noted that the emergence of credible associations chairmen has greatly reduced his involvement in the running of the federation. He also urged that the body to develop coaching education, while urging them to make Lagos a pool of talent for the country.

  • Athletes bigger than administrators

    I won’t join the motley crowd pushing for Sports Minister Solomon Dalung’s exit. The Sports ministry should work with the board of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) because both groups owe it as a duty to ensure that Nigeria becomes Africa’s Mecca for soccer. We have the talents. Without the athletes there can’t be administrators. Indeed, sportsmen and women are bigger than administrators in terms of what they have to offer. What we need is the enabling environment for soccer to thrive, not an environment that is perpetually troubled by allegations of fraud, with the minister and the ministry doing the jobs of the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    Football is a money spinner because of its immense followership. Much of this claim can be understood, if we examine how the hosting of the 2018 World Cup from June 15 to July 16, boosted the Russian economy. The Mundial added more than $14 billion to the Russian economy, about one per cent of the country’s gross domestic product, the tournament organisers stated on Tuesday in Doha. Indeed, what countries, such as Russia, do is to appoint business-oriented people to run such projects, knowing that their pedigree in the business world is enormous to convince the big players that their cash won’t be wasted.

    Alexey Sorokin, the CEO of Russia’s World Cup Organising Committee said: ‘’The figure the report comes with is quite surprising.’’

    Sorokin told the football conference held in Qatar, host of the 2022 World Cup that his country calculated the impact the World Cup had on Russia’s GDP between 2013 and 2018 to be 952 billion roubles ($14.5 billion, 12.5 billion Euros), which was the equivalent of one per cent of the GDP.

    Sorokin went on: ‘’The tournament created up to 315,000 jobs per year and would still have an impact on the economy over the next five years.’’

    Honourable minister, this isn’t rocket science, if one considers the fact that Nigeria hosted the second biggest soccer competition organised by FIFA. The reason we haven’t hosted the Mundial rests largely with the bickering between the ministry and the NFF. Whereas, other federations do their businesses with insignificant interference from the ministry, NFF appears to be the territory most ministers must conquer to show supremacy – to the detriment of other sports. Ministers must rise beyond the NFF to compete with their counterparts in other climes. There wasn’t any conflict between the Russia sports minister, the World Cup CEO or the Russian FA boss during the Mundial. They worked seamlessly. There was mutual respect, not suspicion that one was corruptly enriching himself.

    Back to Nigeria. Dalung has the right to supervise the soccer federation as part of his job, but there are limits, which must not be exceeded, so as not to destroy the collective goal of making the beautiful game the number one sport that should bring Nigerians out of their homes to match venues. Soccer is the opium of the people, ‘’a vote catcher,’’ a unifier, a phenomenon devoid of creed or race and an employment generator (a topic for another day).

    Federations have the sole right to fund their operations. But when such ventures lead to representing Nigeria in international competitions, it is the ministry’s duty to get the government to fund the athletes’ participation.

    It is Nigeria’s anthem that is sung when the sportsmen and women mount the podium to receive their medals. It is the country’s flag that is hoisted behind them during the medals’ presentation; the pictures and visuals appear in the media. On the medals’ table and such platforms of identification is Nigeria, not NFF or Musa Kida or Solomon Ogba, for instance. Our sports ambassadors go through a lot to represent us. It is only appropriate that their entitlements should be done with dispatch, not made an issue to settle scores among administrators.

    Most of them lose their places in their teams when they come home for our matches. They are forced to work harder to win back their shirts, yet the stipends which we promise are not paid simply because someone wants to show that he is the boss. We need to remind this boss that when the players come here, their relations are hopeful that some of their needs will be met. And the players will easily settle such family requirements as bread winners, if the $5,000 is paid after the games that are won, and $2,500 for drawn ones.

    Our athletes shouldn’t be made to rely on philanthropists and sports loving governors when they require funds to prepare themselves for national assignments. Other countries have several avenues to source for funds, such as the Sports Lottery Schemes and fund-raisers where the President sits at dinner with the corporate world to show the level of commitment towards such an exercise. Blue-chip firms are given tax incentives for what they pay into the projects’ coffers. The president’s speech will spur others not at the ceremony to join the queue.

    This writer isn’t happy that corrupt people are not being made to face the wrath of the law. One’s angst is hinged on the way the minister is not interested in working with the new order at the NFF, so much so that he was absent at the last game against Libya in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State. It sends the wrong message to those entrepreneurs sitting on the fence, watching if things have normalised. We can only talk of a new dawn in sports marketing when there is a synergy among the federations, not just the NFF or the Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN) or the Nigeria Basketball Federation (NBBF) and the ministry headed by the minister.

    It is shameful reading media reports on Nigeria not being able to pay players’ estacodes and entitlements. It gives the impression that the government doesn’t care about sports. We know that government budgets money every fiscal year for sports. And most of the federations source for cash to run their affairs from the corporate world. The ministry should ensure the prompt release of funds for our ambassadors, even if it means informing President Muhammadu Buhari about the importance of such competitions.

    Honourable Minister sir, Aruna Quadri is a sure gold medal bet at the All Africa Games. Yet, he has not enjoyed any form of financial support from the government, even when his feats are tied to the country. Is it fair? I know that the ministry will be listing Quadri as one of her medals’ hopefuls. The minister is the first to congratulate Quadri after every achievement. What if he decides not to represent the country, when a simple task of getting him a coach has remained unattended for long.

    It is not enough to have chairmen who have the clout to convince the corporate world to fund sports. It is the government’s duty to sponsor teams representing us at major competitions. Money sourced internally by federations should be used for their operations. Our basketball girls qualified for the quarter-finals of the Women World Cup, with the minister in attendance. What that presupposes is that the government supports the sport. Is it by the minister’s presence? The men’s team are poised to attend the men’s version of the World Cup. The body’s president is expected to finance it.

    Howzat Ambode… not out!

    A friend in government is lost because his retinue changes. You can’t access him like in the past. Since Akinwunmi Ambode became the governor of Lagos State, our paths have not crossed and it is understandable. I knew it would someday and I expected him to tease me. Ambode aka Ambods, enjoys doing that. Don’t ask, please, if he takes jibes back.

    And so when former The Guardian Sports Editor Olukayode Thomas asked me to join a group at the Lagos State Government House, I planned to sneak in and out of the place. I knew there would be introductions at some point in the interactive session. I could handle it by quickly standing up for recognition but sit down faster than I got up. Deep inside me, I knew that Ambode won’t fall for the trick. He didn’t. He spotted me before the individual acknowledgement as he looked through the gathering. Good friend, Ambode will always be for me.

    The governor isn’t one who does not find a way of interacting with ‘lost’ friends. The moment Ambode walked round to greet his visitors, I knew he would throw jibes at me. All kinds of thoughts ran through my mind about what to say. Of course, the schoolboy days were gone – some 39 years ago.

    ‘’Hmmm, Ade you don dey old o; how you dey? You dey? Good to see you again,’’ Ambode whispered. I smiled. He must have been surprised I didn’t tease him. Ambode was his warm self.

    Several years ago, I saw him walking on other side of the road from his office. I remember he told me he was the Accountant-General.

    Once I recognised him, I called his cricket alias to be sure it was Ambode; he stood curious, and when he spotted me, he shouted: ‘’Ade Ojeikere!’’ He crossed over to embrace me. How did I know it was Ambode? He kept rolling the sleeves of his white shirt, typical of Ambode while walking down the street. His measured steps flashed back reminiscent of how he walked onto his crease in a cricket game in 1979.

    Thank you, Ambods and best wishes.

  • Athletes proud to represent Lagos at National Youth Games

    Athletes representing Lagos State at the ongoing National Youth Games (NYG) in Ilorin, Kwara State have described the opportunity as a privilege they so much cherish.

    No fewer than 158 Athletes in 25 Sports are in Ilorin, Kwara State, taking part in the 4th National Youth Games at the University of Ilorin.

    The Athletes are being coordinated  by 36 seasoned coaches in individual sports (Athletics, chess, Cycling, Gymnastics, Scrabble, Swimming, Weightlifting); Combat Sports (Boxing, Judo, Karate, Taekwondo, Wrestling, wushu kung-fu); Racket Sports; (Badminton, Squash, Table Tennis); Team Sports (Basketball – Female, Beach Volleyball -male and female, Football -male, Handball -male and female); Para Sports – Para-athletics, Para powerlifting , Para Table Tennis) and Traditional sports  -Ayo and Kokowa – boys and girls).

    Sulaimon Lawal, Student of Anwar -ul- Islam Model College, Agege, who is the Captain of Team Lagos Football (boys) could not hide his excitement being in a strong Team that would wear the Lagos State colours at the NYG.

    He said he was glad to be among the Athletes who are representing Lagos State at the National Youth Games. “I am happy to be here representing Lagos and my goal is to motivate my Team mates to be successful at this Games. My goal in life is to become a football star. My role model is Luka Modric of Real Madrid of Spain”.

    Utukpe Favour, Student of New Era Girls Junior Secondary School, Surulere Lagos, representing Lagos in Squash (female) event said that she is very delighted at being chosen to represent Lagos.

    “I am very delighted that I am chosen to represent Lagos at this National Youth Games here in Ilorin and I want to make Lagos, my Coach and myself proud at this U-15 Games.

    Executive Chairman, Lagos State Sports Commission, Dr. Kweku Adedayo Tandoh thanked His Excellency, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode for ensuring the youth of Lagos State compete against their peers from other states at the 2018 National Youth Games.