Tag: football

  • Lottery fund donates to  Gombe schools

    Lottery fund donates to Gombe schools

    The National Lottery Trust Fund (NLTF) has donated sports equipment to 54 primary schools in Gombe State. The equipment donated are for basketball, badminton, football, handball, high jump, judo, athletics and volleyball.

    The chief executive of NLTF Mr Habu Ahmed said the gesture was a follow-up to a similar one by the Vice President Yemi Osinbanjo who distributed sports equipment to 2,000 public primary schools nationwide on May 20.

    He said, “While urging you to put the equipment to good use in your schools, you must ensure the safekeeping of the equipment so that they do not get stolen, as we have already alerted security agencies to apprehend any culprit who diverts these Federal Government materials.

    “We don’t want to see any of these items in any market in Gombe State because they are not for sale. They are meant for the development of sports in the state. If you notice that the equipment is not in your school, ask your teachers: where is our sports equipment?”

    Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo who was represented by his Deputy, Charles Iliya, reinforced the warning, adding that the administration will not accept any act that will compromise the proper development of its children.

  • World Cup:Results of Russia 2018 Africa Zone Qualifiers

    World Cup:Results of Russia 2018 Africa Zone Qualifiers

    Following are all the results Match Day 4 fixtures in the 2018 FIFA World Cup Qualifiers, played on Monday and Tuesday (listed in the order of date, venue and match):

    Group A

    04.09.2017    Monastir        Libya 1-0 Guinea

    05.09.2017    Kinshasa        DR Congo 2-2 Tunisia

    Group B

    04.09.2017    Yaounde        Cameroon 1-1 Nigeria

    05.09.2017         Blida   Algeria 0-1 Zambia

    Group C

    05.09.2017    Bamako         Mali 0-0 Morocco

    05.09.2017    Bouake          Cote d’Ivoire 1-2 Gabon

    Group D

    05.09.2017    Durban          South Africa 1-2 Cape Verde

    05.09.2017    Ouagadougou Burkina Faso 2-2 Senegal

    Group E

    05.09.2017    Alexandria     Egypt 1-0 Uganda

    05.09.2017    Kintele           Congo 1-5 Ghana

  • Football: Transfer Window Update

    Football: Transfer Window Update

    Chelsea to sign Drinkwater

    Negotiations with Chelsea are ongoing as the clock ticks down towards the end of Deadline Day but the Premier League champions are still some way short of Leicester’s valuation of Drinkwater.

    Everton’s Barkley rejects Chelsea move

    Everton midfielder Ross Barkley has rejected a move to Chelsea after a bid of $30m was agreed between the two clubs.

    The midfielder had traveled to London and began his medical before the change of mind.

    Thomas Lemar move to Arsenal off.

    Arsenal club-record breaking deal for Monaco forward Thomas Lemar was accepted, according to Sky Sports, but the deal is now very unlikely to happen before the close of the summer transfer window.

    Thomas Lemar is not interested in a switch to the Emirates and would prefer to move to Liverpool.

    Zappacosta seals Chelsea move

    The 25-year old has agreed to move to Stamford Bridge for a reported £23m, plus add-ons, where he will link up again with Antonio Conte – who selected the defender for Italy in 2016

    Liverpool accept $26m Sakho bid.

    Crystal Palace’s $26m bid  for Liverpool Mamadou Sakho has been accepted.

    Liverpool formally rejected three bids for sakho before finally accepting this offer and the deal will be done when he completes his medical.

    Mbappe to Psg confirmed- Monaco.

    Paris Saint-Germain have announced the signing of Kylian Mbappe from Monaco.

    The striker joins on an initial season-long loan deal and will sign a permanent four-year contract next July, when PSG have an option to make the transfer permanent for a fee understood to be worth £166m.

    Zappacosta seals Chelsea move.

    The 25-year old has agreed to move to Stamford Bridge for a reported £23m, plus add-ons, where he will link up again with Antonio Conte – who selected the defender for Italy in 2016

    Reds striker Divock Origi has joins Wolfsburg on a season-long loan.

    Belgium international Divock Origi has signed for Wolfsburg on a temporary basis after agreeing a loan fee in the region of £6m with Liverpool. Wolfsburg are also covering Origi’s wages.
    Origi has struggled to secure a regular first-team place at Anfield since joining from Lille in a £10m deal in 2014.
    Swansea completes loan signing of Bayern Munich’s Renato Sanches.

    Midfielder Renato Sanches has joined Swansea for the season in a move which reunites him with former Bayern coach Paul Clement, now in charge in south Wales.
    Sanches cost Bayern £27.5m in the wake of Portugal’s victory at Euro 2016, where he was named young player of the tournament.

    Tottenham signs Serge Aurier

    Paris Saint-Germain right-back Serge Aurier has signed a five-year 23 pounds contract with Tottenham.
    He will be a replacement for Kyle Walker, who joined Manchester City in a £50m deal earlier in the window.

    “This is a huge and exciting opportunity at a massive football club and I am determined to prove myself as a professional both on and off the pitch,” Aurier said.

  • Home-based Eagles beat Junior Pillars 3-1‎ in friendly

    Home- based Super Eagles, on Friday in Kano whipped Junior Kano Pillars 3-1 in a friendly match.

    The match was played at the Sani Abacha Stadium before a handful of spectators.

    ‎Mathias Samuel put the home-based Eagles ahead before Kano Pillars Feeders leveled up.

    Ibrahim Alhassan restored the lead minutes later and he increased the tally to make the third goal for the Eagles.

    Shortly after the match, Salisu Yusuf, the Coach of Super Eagles, said his players’ performance was inspiring and‎ commendable.


    He expressed confident that his players would perform well in the qualifiers and qualify for CHAN 2018 in Kenya.

    “The performance was commendable and we hope to make it to the finals in Kenya,” he said.‎
    ‎‎
    ‎He said that the players went on break to play for their various clubs in the Nigeria Professional Football League at the weekend.‎

    The home-based Eagles are camping ahead of the 2018 CHAN qualifiers.

    The first leg of the qualifier against Benin Republic in Cotonou comes up on Aug.  13, and the reverse fixture holds less than a week later in Nigeria.‎

    ‎The team is being handled by assistant coaches Salisu Yusuf and Imam Amakapabo. (NAN)‎

  • Rethinking football and national interest

    SIR: As most sport enthusiasts would know, there was a Nigeria – South Africa match on Saturday, June 10 at Uyo, Akwa Ibom State. In order not to miss watching it live, those of us who found ourselves in Atlanta in the United States had to go to the CNN Centre to arrange the facility. Doing that had its own pleasant hassles but it was worth it.

    Tragically, Nigeria lost to South Africa. Again, as most sport enthusiasts would remember, the score was 2- 0. Perhaps, that was a ‘good’ defeat in relation to what followed. One is referring to the ambience of a funeral that descended on all the many Nigerians that were part of the arrangement of watching it live through the CNN facility. There was no tribalism, no ethnicity, no regional or religious differences. It was national grief of inestimable proportions, to recast late Chief Awolowo’s similar usage decades ago. To the extent that many were weeping, it was genuine outpouring of nationalism, even as our friends in psychology might call it banal nationalism.

    Watching the entire spectacle play out was as personally humbling as it was an unpacking of Nigeria in terms of what we might, collectively, have taken for granted. That is that, like the national economy, there is also the national culture in shared values, hopes, aspirations, sentiments and sensibilities. The defeat and the reaction to it that one saw in Atlanta strongly suggests how losing is such a devastating downside of Nigeria’s national culture. And how strategic winning is to that national culture, thereby necessitating the question: if winning has such a powerful unifying import, why is sports in Nigeria not organised in such a way that we keep on winning and winning and winning? This cannot be too much to ask for if we are the giant of Africa and should manifest a winning way unique to that status.

    In other words, is it not possible to isolate the organisation or administration of sports in Nigeria as the country’s model of a merit system? It should be possible to implement a merit system that is, however, not exclusionary. The idea here is that the spirit of excellence in a merit system would keep us winning and winning and winning and coming together to share the benefits of primacy in an arena of joy for all. After all, from what we can see, sports is the only arena where differences disappear, be it class, ethnic, religious and regional differences.

    One might still be under the influence of that emotional moment at Atlanta but this might be one instance where emotion has been more powerful than reality or, in fact, created a reality. In any case, sports has become an all involving social domain with something for everybody – national and international unity, professionals and professionalism, governments, business, security and tourism.

    One is, therefore, associating oneself with the dominant sentiment in Atlanta as to whether the Nigeria Football Federation, (NFF) is fully aware that the only thing which brings people together in a manner unique to it across the above barriers is football. Like the military uniform when Nigeria goes to military or humanitarian engagement outside, the jersey has its own magnetic pull that winning is no longer something to be pursued as a matter of chance but of strategic thinking and actions. This is a process from which other actors and factors cannot be excluded but which, for the start, the Nigerian Football Federation, (NFA) is well placed to lead on behalf of the government. This is not naira and kobo stuff at this level but about strategising on how best to convert main features of this particular domain in relation to national interest. Here also, it is not national interest in terms of old fashioned territorial integrity, but the projection of national identity through the sporting competences of nationals.

    It is amazing how a single experience could have had such a transformative impact on one’s thinking as far as the potentials of sports in national interest is concerned. This is an area that has hitherto been relatively remote even as involving as sports has been in one’s life.

     

    • Chief Steve Lawani,

    Abuja.

  • Eguaveon’s resignation a product of a corrupt system, say Odegbami, others

    Eguaveon’s resignation a product of a corrupt system, say Odegbami, others

    Football enthusiasts have blamed Austin Eguaveon’s resignation as the coach of Sunshine Stars FC of Akure on the corruption that has eaten deep into football.

    `Mathematical’ Segun Odegbami, in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) said that the situation was sad.

    “It’s a psychological thing, this has been an issue for a very long time and nothing has been done.

    “I don’t know if anything can be done in this regard because it seems nothing has been done to make our referees better.

    “It’s like corruption in this country it has eaten deep into the system, in fact that’s what is wrong with our football.

    ” It is the same set of people that have been there that are still there so you don’t expect much from them, ” he said.

    Dosu Joseph, a former Super Eagles number one goalkeeper said that it was quite unfortunate, that for Eguaveon to resign after two matches and spoke volumes of the state of football in the country.

    ” The truth is at times human error comes into play but when it becomes consistent it shows something is wrong.

    ” For him to resign after two matches to me shows that he knows what he is doing and since he saw that he could not cope he did the needful.

    “It takes guts for him to do that ; it’s unfortunate that he resigned Sunshine has lost a good coach, ” Joseph said.

    Also sharing same view was Nduka Ugbade, he told NAN that there could be more to it.

    “I’m yet to call him, but there is more to it, that’s my assumption, Austin is a coach that knows his worth.

    ” It’s so unfortunate that things ended like this for Sunshine, they really needed his experience, ” he said.

    However, Wahidi Akanni, a board member of the Lagos State Football Association, said Eguaveon’s resignation due to referee’s conduct was not enough reason for his resignation.

    “The truth is our referees need reorientation but the truth is, it’s not enough for Eguaveon to resign that’s my take.

    “He should present his evidence to the relevant authorities, this is not to justify anything but the truth is officiating in the NPFL needs serious upgrade,” he said.

    NAN reports that Eguavoen left his post as the Technical Adviser of Sunshine Stars after the Week 23 match against Plateau United.

    Sunshine Stars played five games with the former Nigerian Coach in charge, winning two and losing three.

    The club defeated Rangers International of Enugu 2-0, lost 0-1 to Lobi Stars of Makurdi, defeated Enyimba International of Aba 1-0 and also lost 0-1 to 3SC of Ibadan and 1-2 to Plateau United of Jos. (NAN)

  • Bafana Bafana shocks Eagles with 2-0 defeat

    Bafana Bafana shocks Eagles with 2-0 defeat

    The Super Eagles on Saturday lost 0-2 to Bafana Bafana of South Africa.

    They lost in the African Cup of Nation qualifier played at the Akwa Ibom Stadium in Uyo to the shock of many Nigerian fans.

    The two goals were scored in the second half of the match.

  • Odiaka rates PSG-Irukka football talent hunt high

    Former Super Eagles ace striker ,Monday Odiaka has said that he is happy to be part of the proposed PSG-Irukka football talent hunt.

    Odiaka praised the management of Irukka Online Limited  for coming up with such bold initiative  which he said would help make Nigerian football ,first among equals in the world of football..

    He also commended the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) for endorsing the talent hunt and  also for having youth football development  as one of its cardinal objectives.

    His words :“I am glad to be part  of the PSG-Irukka talent hunt because it is a laudable project  with the capacity to develop grassroots football in Nigeria .I am rating it very high going by the quality of personnel that have been assembled for the talent hunt .People like Samson Siasia ,Garba  Lawal ,Waheed Akanni  among others .These are men who have played football at the highest level and therefore , know what football is all about .I am also happy that the NFF is strongly backing the talent hunt because it is in line with its cardinal objective which is youth football development .It is this type of synergy that Nigerian football needs to develop to international standard.

  • Our dramatic escape from Calabar viewing centre tragedy

    Our dramatic escape from Calabar viewing centre tragedy

    Lucky survivors relive incident Only 10 persons died —Eye-witnesses

    IT was a path football lovers in Nyaghassang Community in Calabar Municipality, Cross River State, had trodden for years – watching football matches at a popular viewing centre on Access High School Road. Hence they had not the slightest inkling of the tragedy that lurked in the corner when they gathered to watch the Europa League quarter final match between Manchester United and Anderlecht football clubs on Thursday night.

    A high-tension cable, which, according to a Port Harcourt Electricity Distribution Company (PHEDC) official, was the UNICAL 11KV Feeder, fell on the viewing centre at about 9.30 pm, leaving many of the passionate football lovers in the building electrocuted. Initial reports put the casualty figure at more than 30. But when our correspondent visited the scene, several eyewitnesses said the number of people that died on the spot ranged between seven and 10.

    The Chairman of the Medical Advisory Committee of the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH), Dr. Ogbu Ngim, who represented the Chief Medical Director, Dr Thomas Agan, said 18 persons were brought to the hospital with various degrees of burns. He said seven were confirmed dead, while the remaining 11 were responding to treatment.

    It was observed that the viewing centre, constructed with zinc, was located directly under a high-tension cable, just like many other buildings in the area. The cable fell on the building when a nearby transformer exploded. It was estimated that the viewing centre harboured about 120 people at the time.

    It was gathered that while the match was on, there was a loud noise from the transformer occasioning power outage, following which the cable landed on the roof of the viewing centre. It was gathered that the football fans were aware that the cable landed on the roof, but they were so keen on watching the match that they ignored it. Rather than vacate the hall, they urged the owner of the centre to put on his generator, saying that there was no current in the cable that fell on the roof. Unfortunately, moments after the owner of the viewing centre switched on the generator, public power was restored and fire erupted in the building.

    An eyewitness recalled that the building suddenly began to vibrate while the fire raged. In the ensuing stampede, many of the viewers escaped while many others got electrocuted.

    “As their bodies got in contact with the zinc, which now had current running through it, many of them got electrocuted. That was how the problem escalated,” the eyewitness said.

    A young man who identified himself simply as Innocent said: “I was inside the building when we heard the first explosion. Some of us came outside and we saw the cable that had fallen on the roof. In fact, some people were passing under the cable as they were calling the owner of the viewing centre to put on the generator so that they could continue watching the match.

    “When the generator was switched on, people went inside. My saving grace was that I stood outside, waiting for the DSTV (Direct Satellite Television) to finish loading. You know that DSTV normally takes time to load when it goes off. So I stood outside for some minutes. But just as I was going inside to check if the match had restarted, I saw a close friend who had sat in front of me running out. His body touched the zinc wall and he fell to the ground.

    “Before I knew it, people started running out in numbers, trying to get out of the door at the same time. That was how they started falling one after the other right in front of me. I saw my friend die in my presence but there was nothing I could do.

    When the fire had died down, people came around to help remove the bodies. They were just pulling bodies out like logs of wood. It was like hell fire. This is something that would traumatise me for the rest of my life. Those who did not rush out during the incident were the ones that were safe.

    “For me, I counted eight people who died on the spot. They were six men and two women. Thank God it did not happen on the day Barcelona played Juventus or the day Chelsea played Man United, because the place would have been more jam-packed and the causalities would have been more.”

    Another young man who identified himself as Dominic said he had paid to watch the match and was already watching when he got a call from a friend to join him for a drink.

    He said: “I had already paid N50 and was watching the match. Then, a friend of mine called me to join him at Doris O Hotel, so I left and joined him there and continued watching the match also. It was when I came back here that I learnt of the disaster. It was the call from my friend that saved my life.”

    Mr. Chris Abang, who also would have been at the viewing centre, said he was delayed by his wife.

    He said: “I had just come back from Ogoja and was in a hurry to go and watch the match. I am a Man U fan, so I could not wait to watch match. But my wife insisted that I stayed back and eat something. I decided to listen to her. By the time I arrived the viewing centre, the whole incident happened right in my presence. My wife’s delay saved my life.”

    But a certain Emmanuel Okon, who lost his life in the incident, was not so lucky. According to his wife, Mary, being a Manchester United fan, he left to watch the match, ignoring her plea that he should eat before going for the match.

    Speaking between sobs, she said: “I was boiling rice for him, but he decided to go and watch the match. I told him to stay back and eat but he said I should come and call him when it was ready. When the incident occurred, I went there to look for him. When I finally found him, he lay on the ground lifeless. There were bodies everywhere on the ground. I carried him with the help of his nephew, but he was not responding. His body was cold. With the help of a neighbour who is a taxi driver, we took him to the hospital where we were told that he was dead.”

    The late Okon’s nephew, Godswill Okon, also recalled in tears: “That evening, my uncle and I were just joking about the match. He is a Man U fan and I am a Chelsea fan. So we were playfully arguing and I told him that Man U would lose but he said they would win. When it was time for the match, he called me to go with him to watch, but I felt somehow and decided not to go. Normally, I would be there to watch the game, but I suddenly did not feel too well. People were even surprised that I did not go to watch.

    “While we were at home, we heard about the incident. I got there and saw my uncle dead. My uncle was a very loving and kind person. He was the one taking care of me. My school fees, accommodation, feeding, clothes, everything. I don’t know what I would do now that he is gone?”

    Spokesperson of the Port Harcourt Electricity Distribution Company (PHEDC), John Onyi, said the company was yet to ascertain the number of casualties.

    He said: “We are not here to apportion blame but to investigate. It was UNICAL 11KV Feeder that snapped and fell on top of the roof. The viewing centre was in PHEDC’s right of way. There should be at least a 12.5-metre gap with the high-tension cable. But as you can see, there are buildings right under the high-tension cable.

    “Our investigations would include who gave approvals for buildings to be constructed under high tension cables. But like I said, we are not here for blame. Our condolences go to families that have been affected. We appeal for calm.”

    The Secretary of the Nyaghassang Qua Clan Council, Comrade Iso Basey Edim, said it was unfair that the PHEDC did not bother to maintain their equipment but were only interested in collecting money or disconnecting power. He urged that the government should do something about the situation.

    The Deputy Governor of Cross River State, Prof Ivara Esu, who visited the scene of the incident, commiserated with the victims, saying the government would take charge of the treatment of those affected by the incident. He said an investigation would be launched into the matter.

    Cross River State governor, Prof. Ben Ayade, in a statement signed by his Senior Special Assistant on Media, Mr Christian Ita, ordered the setting up of a commission of inquiry on the viewing centre tragedy.

    Ayade, who also commiserated with the victims, described the incident as tragic and horrifying, saying the state government would also offer assistance to the victims and their families.

  • UEFA Match: Many feared electrocuted in Calabar

    UEFA Match: Many feared electrocuted in Calabar

    Many people were reportedly feared dead on Thursday night at a football viewing centre in Calabar, Cross River State after being electrocuted by a high tension cable that fell on them.

    Although 30 persons were initially reported dead in the incident at the centre located in Nyaghassang, our reporter who visited the scene on Friday morning said eyewitnesses and hospital officials confirmed about 15 dead, while others were

    The football fans were at the centre to watch a UEFA Europa League quarter-final match between Manchester United and Anderlecht.

    The State Police Public Relations Officer, Irene Ugbo, confirmed the incident but said the number of casualties would be ascertained on Friday.