Tag: Germany

  • Germany’s Weidmann rejects calls for euro devaluation

    The head of Germany’s Bundesbank has rejected calls from some European countries for the euro to be devalued to help exporters in a magazine interview.

    In a pre-publication statement, Germany’s Focus magazine reported Jens Weidmann as saying any move to weaken the currency could lead other central banks to follow suit, prompting a “devaluation race” that would only have losers.

    “Competitiveness cannot be brought about through a devaluation. It is generated (by) companies with attractive products that stand their ground on the markets,” Weidmann, seen as the most hawkish European Central Bank policymaker, said.

    “A strong economy can also tolerate a strong currency.”

    Euro zone states including France have called for talks to address what they consider the excessive strength of the euro once a new European Parliament is in place later this year.

    The ECB does not target the euro’s exchange rate but the strength of the currency has been seen as contributing to inflation that has fallen far short of the central bank’s target of just below two per cent.

    The euro is trading at around $1.35 (1.08 pounds), having fallen from $1.40 at the start of last month as markets anticipated moves made early in June by the central bank to loosen policy to spur growth and avert the threat of deflation.

    A strong currency makes exports more expensive.

    Weidmann, who emphasised his opposition to the ECB buying government bonds, also appeared to dismiss potential purchases of other assets by the euro zone central bank.

    “In some countries – including in Germany – we see the danger of a real estate bubble. And then we as the euro system should buy Dutch real estate loans?” he said.

    The ECB decided unanimously this month to cut interest rates to record lows – taking the rate on overnight deposits below zero – and to launch measures to stimulate lending to small and medium-sized companies, the backbone of the euro zone economy.

    Weidmann said he had misgivings about the package but had agreed to it because it was justifiable given low inflation.

    He did not expect the negative deposit rate would do much to boost loans in the euro zone, however, arguing that banks provided few loans in southern regions because “many firms (there) hardly demand fresh money due to the weak economy”.

     

  • BRAZIL: LET THE SAMBA PLAY

    BRAZIL without football, without the Samba, would be like Green Land, lost in the North Pole. Great nations of world: Germany, Italy, Spain, Belgium etc, play good football. But it is something else when Brazilians take to the field to play the Jiso. When the yellow-clad eleven move into the field, Brazil add into the game their dance foot work. In obedience to the African heritage, Brazilian music tends to transform functional motions into dance. With the fans cheerleading, the players selling the dummies, the excited audience commit themselves so completely to the marriage of the eye and the ear. In a few days time, the world will converge on Brazil to celebrate the football theatre that is the World Cup. The Brazilian eleven will dance their samba and the global audience will get their money’s worth.b

    Quick passing and clinical finishing continue to mark Brazilian football since 1970 when Pele, Jairzinho, Tostao, Carlos Alberto and Rivelino took the world apart. In the 90s, a new Brazilian outfit starring Careca, Romario, Bebeto and violent-shooting Dunga emerged.

    We had described Belgium and Spain as the complete teams to Brazil. However, as we watch the preparations and the build-up matches, it is clear that Brazil has the most complete squad. The Samba exponents seem very conditioned and as usual the most creative. The world is waiting for Neymar da Silva Santos; Brazil will triumph playing at home.

    ITALY:

    As usual, the “CATENACCIO” defence is as mean as ever. In the USA 1994, Italy replaced the deadliness provided by the generation of Altobelle, Paolo Rossi with Aldo Serena, Nicola Berti, Gianluca Vialli and the unforgettable Roberto Baggio.

    Tactically, Italy tends to slow it down at the preliminaries, increasing the tempo as they move into the finals. Will be in Brazil to compete and may win it again.

    USA:

    This is a workman team. Effective, disciplined with very few frills and lacking ball jugglers. From its debut appearance when it knocked out England, the Americans cannot be taken for granted, Remember a German ex-striker Jurgen Klinsmann is the USA Football Manager.

    GREECE: THE RETURN OF THE EAGLES SKIPPER

    He came into prominence manning Nigeria’s right full back position. He was so good he was able to move into the central defence in his years as a professional and later as the skipper of the national football team, Yobo in spite of his petit height knew it. The Nigerian defence, not the midfield, is the pivot of our pressure game. The midfielders most of the time, extra ordinary, multi talented are like they say in military operations, decoy commanders. The Nigeria defence as a result of its thorough conditioning is always able to contain the opponents’ offensive.

    Once the ball is safe in the hands of the goalkeepers or the defence line has blocked the opponent attack, the defence takes the ball and moves in with the midfield sector commanders.  The Commander-in-Chief, Stephen Keshi, calls it “possession football and pressing the opposition.” In that process, the central defence suddenly moves in with the decoy commanders and the midfield is occupied by so many green boots.  In 90 minutes of ravaging blitz, the Super Eagles pressure flag pivoted on its defence would eventually cross the opponents’ goal line and clatter the net.

    Against Greece, the Nigerian defence returned to its traditional role. My boy, Kunle Odulanmi, did not allow any Greek gifts from the outside left flank and when Captain Yobo went in, the defence established its authority. The balls were being headed down and our libero Kenneth has bared his teeth and Omeruo added aggression to his game. Efe Ambrose showed his dexterity by returning to the No. 3 position and played well. We can safely keep Echiejile to warm the reserve bench. That defence can decide to pair Omeruo with either Yobo or utility ace Godfrey Oboabona, and still have a rich reserve. No. 1 Vincent Enyeama, we are happy is now catching the balls once and safe! If the defence is back then the Eagles will go. No shaking.

     

    KESHI’S INCOMPLETE 23

    When I was provided with the full list of the final 23 going to Brazil I did not bother to check the details.

    When I watched the Greek encounter with the Eagles I knew it. Who is playing our set pieces? In the last World Cup in South Africa, Kalu Uche was the confident tiger taking our corner kicks and set pieces. During the last Africa Tournament, Ejike Uzoenyi was confident on those deliveries, and almost converted a flick from an impossible angle. The set pieces at the World Cup level are as good as spot kicks.

    These set pieces and corner kicks under the foot of a skilled creative player is surely a banger. A World Cup squad that is unable to hit a set piece away from the block to score or frighten the goalkeeper is a downer for that team’s manager. Nigeria had Jay Jay Okocha, Sunday Oliseh, Christian Chukwu Stephen Keshi to either flick in the set pieces or kill somebody with a thunderous free kick! We cannot afford to be pussy footing anytime we are awarded a free kick or corner kick. Even then, Moses, Mikel and Babatunde cannot settle on who to execute those free kicks and when Nigeria delivers set pieces, they are predictable or the keeper catches it with one hand!

  • Brazil tipped to win World Cup

    Brazil tipped to win World Cup

    Brazil is the clear-cut favorite to win a sixth World Cup title, confirming on home turf its reputation as a soccer superpower, according to a global survey of over 120 football-loving market analysts polled by Reuters.

    Brazil was the best bet for over half of the respondents, way ahead of Germany and arch-rivals Argentina, as international soccer fans vie for one of the millions of tickets to cheer on their home country after the first kick off on June 12.

    “The Brazilians are the big favorites. It will be very difficult for Brazil to lose there,” said John Welch, a strategist with CIBC in Toronto. “But because of the way (Brazil’s coach) Felipao plays, they are not going to be winning by 3 or 4 goals every time like they did in 1950 until the final.”

    Market professionals from across the world who regularly participate in Reuters economic polls were invited to showcase their forecasting powers on sporting matters. Most responses came from Europe and South America, in line with the greater presence of both regions in the 32-team tournament.

    However, being the favorite of analysts and bookmakers should not cause too much enthusiasm in Brazil, according to Reuters polls on previous World Cup tournaments.

    Although most were right in predicting Spain’s glory before the 2010 South Africa cup, economists failed miserably in forecasting Italy’s fourth title in 2006.

    Some used sophisticated statistical models to predict World Cup results but were beaten by Paul, an Octopus living in a aquarium at Sea Life Centre in Oberhausen, Germany, who picked the right winner in 12 out of 14 matches in the latest cup.

    A Reuters Breakingviews calculator based on the hard numbers – the players’ transfer value, population, participation and public engagement – suggested Germany will squash the dream of a sixth win for Brazil.

    In any case, this year’s solid consensus is evidence of the great impression left by Neymar and his teammates last year, when they crushed once-feared Spain by 3-0 to win the Confederations Cup after a flawless campaign.

    Despite unrest in Brazil’s streets over the staggering cost of the World Cup and jeers for President Dilma Rousseff, Brazil’s team received massive support from its fans, giving economists another reason to be optimistic about the Selecao.

    Brazil last hosted the cup in 1950 and an unexpected defeat then by Uruguay in front of more than 200,000 fans left deep scars in Brazil’s national psyche and nurtured glory-thirsty teams which, led by Pele, were crowned world champion three times in the following four editions.

    The best candidates to repeat Uruguay’s feat in the economists’ opinion are Germany, with 18 votes, and Lionel Messi’s Argentina, with 13. Spain had more mentions than Germany to appear in the World Cup final match, but only eight expect a second straight title.

    None saw Brazil’s challengers coming from England, though. The inventors of football were pointed as the most likely former world champion to crash out of the tournament in the group stage, with 64 mentions.

    “England will return from Brazil without scoring a single goal a la France in 2002,” said Isaac Matshego at Nedbank.

    Pessimism about England’s World Cup prospects seems to have reached the highest levels after a British government report suggested that the national team faced their customary early exit from the tournament.

     

  • BEITAR JERUSALEM  HANDS ADAMS  TRIAL IN JUNE

    BEITAR JERUSALEM HANDS ADAMS TRIAL IN JUNE

    ACCORDING to leaks gathered by allnigeriasoccer.com’s editorial staff, former Nigeria Under 20 international Moses Adams will begin training with Beitar Jerusalem sometime in July with a view to bagging a contract.

    The Israeli Premier League campaigners have invited the 25 – year – old to their training camp in Germany this summer.

    While in Germany, manager Ronny Levy will run the rule over the one time Westerlo midfielder. These days, you will find Moses Adams playing in the Belgium third division for Cappellen .

    He chose to join the club to maintain his fitness and await the outcome of his application for a European Union passport. The Nigerian has made 16 appearances this season for the basement club.

  • Central banks in  other climes

    Central banks in other climes

    Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf takes a look at how the apex bank in other countries work

    CENTRAL Banks operate in different parts of the globe, from the USA, Britain, Germany, Belgium, Canada, Portugal, to Middle East Asia and in Japan, China, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, to Brazil as well as the African continent.

    For sure, most of these countries’ central banks are saddled with the onerous responsibility of ensuring that the economy is on a clean bill of health in terms of monetary policy formulation, among other fiscal functions.

    But by far, the central banks in the USA and Britain remain, in the view of some economic and financial pundits, a model, in part, because of their socio-economic and technological advancement.

     

    The making of Bank of England

    From the middle of the 17th century, England, and London in particular, buzzed with ideas – indeed the era has been dubbed ‘the age of projects’ – but one which kept coming to the fore was the notion of a national bank.

    People sensed that the country was on the brink of a tremendous expansion of trade, but one vital element was lacking: what was needed was a bank or “fund of money” – more liquidity, in modern parlance – to drive the trade of the country. They looked with some envy across to the continent at the example of the Dutch who were then pre-eminent in Europe.

    Central to the success of the Dutch was the Amsterdam Wisselbank, which had been founded in 1609. It provided the motive power for the Dutch economy by lending to the City of Amsterdam, the State in the form of the Province of Holland and trade in the shape of the Dutch East India Company as well as being responsible for coinage and, of course, exchange. Much later, in 1683, it was empowered to lend to private customers. Payments over a certain amount had to pass through it and it therefore was convenient for the important finance houses to hold accounts with it. Thus, not only was it in a position to oversee the Dutch financial scene, it was also able to act as a stabilising influence on it.

    Dutch William had brought to his adopted country, England, an understandable desire to help his native country in its war against the French and this proved to be the catalyst necessary for the idea of a national bank to be accepted, albeit grudgingly by some.

    But it took a London-based Scots entrepreneur, William Paterson, to propose the scheme that eventually found favour: his first, proposed in 1691, had been rejected for several reasons. This was partly because, as he wrote in 1695, “Others said this project came from Holland and therefore would not hear of it, since we had too many Dutch things already.”

    Thus, the Bank of England can be said to have experienced some chequered existence which dates back to its foundation.

    But in 1997, the new government announced its intention to transfer full operational responsibility for monetary policy to the Bank of England. The Bank thus rejoined the ranks of the world’s “independent” central banks. However, debt management on behalf of the government was transferred to HM Treasury, and the Bank’s regulatory functions passes to a new Financial Services Authority.

    Subsequently, in 2013, the Financial Services Act 2012 established an independent Financial Policy Committee (FPC), a new prudential regulator as a subsidiary of the Bank, and created new responsibilities for the supervision of financial market infrastructure providers. The reforms came into force on 1st April 2013 when the Financial Services Authority ceased to exist.

    The Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) at the Bank took responsibility for the prudential regulation and supervision of banks, building societies, credit unions, insurers and major investment firms. The PRA’s role was defined in terms of two statutory objectives to promote the safety and soundness of these firms and, specifically for insurers, to contribute to the securing of an appropriate degree of protection for policyholders.

    In promoting safety and soundness, the PRA focused primarily on the harm that firms could cause to the stability of the UK financial system. A stable financial system is one in which firms continue to provide critical financial services a precondition for a healthy and successful economy.

    The PRA worked alongside the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to create a “twin peaks” regulatory structure in the UK. The FCA was a separate institution and not part of the Bank of England. The FCA was responsible for promoting effective competition, ensuring that relevant markets function well, and for the conduct regulation of all financial services firms. This included acting to prevent market abuse and ensuring that consumers got a fair deal from financial firms. The FCA operated the prudential regulation of those financial services firms not supervised by the PRA, such as asset managers and independent financial advisers.

     

    The USA experience

    United States encompasses various bank regulations, from the early “wildcat” practices through the present Federal Reserve System.

    The Federal Reserve System (also known as the Federal Reserve, and informally as the Fed) is the central banking system of the United States. It was created on December 23, 1913, with the enactment of the Federal Reserve Act, largely in response to a series of financial panics, particularly a severe panic in 1907.

    Over time, the roles and responsibilities of the Federal Reserve System have expanded and its structure has evolved.

    Events such as the Great Depression were major factors leading to changes in the system.

    The U.S. Congress established three key objectives for monetary policy in the Federal Reserve Act: Maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates. The first two objectives are sometimes referred to as the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate.

    Its duties have expanded over the years, and today, according to official Federal Reserve documentation, include conducting the nation’s monetary policy, supervising and regulating banking institutions, maintaining the stability of the financial system and providing financial services to depository institutions, the U.S. government, and foreign official institutions. The Fed also conducts research into the economy and releases numerous publications, such as the Beige Book.

    The Federal Reserve System’s structure is composed of the presidentially appointed Board of Governors (or Federal Reserve Board), the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks located in major cities throughout the nation, numerous privately owned U.S. member banks and various advisory councils. The FOMC is the committee responsible for setting monetary policy and consists of all seven members of the Board of Governors and the twelve regional bank presidents, though only five bank presidents vote at any given time (the president of the New York Fed and four others who rotate through one-year terms). The Federal Reserve System has both private and public components, and was designed to serve the interests of both the general public and private bankers. The result is a structure that is considered unique among central banks. It is also unusual in that an entity outside of the Central Bank, namely the United States Department of the Treasury, creates the currency used. According to the Board of Governors, the Federal Reserve System “is considered an independent Central Bank because its monetary policy decisions do not have to be approved by the president or anyone else in the executive or legislative branches of government, it does not receive funding appropriated by the Congress, and the terms of the members of the Board of Governors span multiple presidential and congressional terms.”

    The authority of the Federal Reserve System is derived from statutes enacted by the U.S. Congress and the System is subject to congressional oversight. The members of the Board of Governors, including its chair and vice-chair, are chosen by the president and confirmed by the senate. The federal government sets the salaries of the board’s seven governors. Nationally chartered commercial banks are required to hold stock in the Federal Reserve Bank of their region; this entitles them to elect some of the members of the board of the regional Federal Reserve Bank. Thus the Federal Reserve System has both public and private aspects.

    The U.S. government receives all of the system’s annual profits, after a statutory dividend of 6% on member banks’ capital investment is paid, and an account surplus is maintained. In 2010, the Federal Reserve made a profit of $82 billion and transferred $79 billion to the U.S. Treasury. This was followed at the end of 2011 with a transfer of $77 billion in profits to the U.S. Treasury Department.

    The primary motivation for creating the Federal Reserve System was to address banking panics.

    Other purposes are stated in the Federal Reserve Act, such as “to furnish an elastic currency, to afford means of rediscounting commercial paper, to establish a more effective supervision of banking in the United States, and for other purposes.”

  • Public school pupils for Germany

    Eight pupils from some government secondary schools in Lagos who are members of the Climate Change clubs in their schools will be departing for Germany for a two-week training on Sunday, November 17.

    They include:Ukokalu Onyinyechi (Awodiora Senior Secondary School); Oluwade Abosede (Obele Community Senior High School); Adegbulugbe Ayomide (Badagry Senior Grammar School); Gbadegesin Joshua (Gbaja Boys Junior High School); and Ogunbiyi David Kayode (Federal Government College, Ijanikin). They won in the climate change quiz contest organised by the state government.

    Similarly, three others were rewarded by the state government for their impact on their environment.

    They are: Kehinde Omotayo from Community Junior Grammar School, Gberigbe, Ikorodu, who planted flowers in his school premises, sensitised people on climate change, and provided waste bins; Osiyemi Quadri of the Ajayi Crowther Senior Grammar School Bariga won an award for clearing blocked drainage on Deji Aladejobi road, Bariga; while Odutan Mubarak of the ArchDeacon Adelaja Senior High School, created a school garden for relaxation.

    In an interview when the group visited the corporate headquarters of The Nation in Mushin, Lagos, on familiarisation tour, David who is the president of the climate change club in his school, said he looked forward to visiting Germany because he wants to learn more about how citizens of other countries value their environment so that he can replicate same in Nigeria.

    Mubarak said he was going to Germany to acquire knowledge.

    “Climate change is a global issue. We should plant trees instead of felling them because a tree can absorb as much as 48 pounds of carbon dioxide that we emit every day, and release oxygen which we need into the air. That is why it is not good to cut down trees. Some tras inhale carbon dioxide from the ozone layers, so if we cut them down, it will be dangerous to our health,” he said.

    The project officer, School exchange programme, Ministry of the Environment (Climate Change Division), Mr Tiamiyu Oluwatoyin, said the pupils would join their counterparts in Germany to go on what he tagged ‘Eco tour’.

    “They will visit the Water Warf, attend classes with pupils about the same age as them, and learn conservation. They are expected to come back, compare what they saw with Nigeria and the impact on her environment.

    The Project Consultant, Mr Adeola Ijandipe, explained that the Climate Change club is aimed at raising environmentally-conscious youths as change agents against climate change and global warming.

     

  • Why I’m sending youths to Germany, by Aregbesola

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola has explained why he is sending some youths to Saxony-Anhalt, Germany, for advanced training in agriculture and food production.

    He said after the training, the youths would help the state move from subsistence to mechanised farming.

    Aregbesola spoke yesterday in Osogbo, the state capital, at a send-off ceremony for the youths.

    He said his administration was determined to provide enough food for local consumption and exportation.

    The governor said the administration had been providing infrastructure and support for farmers, such as improved seedlings, fertiliser, fumigants and cleared farmlands.

    He said the government was liaising with reputable local and international partners, such as the Institute for Agricultural Research and Training (IAR&T) and the International Institute for Tropical Agriculture (IITA) in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, for technical assistance.

    Aregbesola said: “Our efforts are geared towards taking farming from the subsistence level to the modern/commercial level, because that is the level at which farming is really worth it as a profession.

    “To realise this goal, it is needful to add value to our agricultural practice by applying advanced knowledge in science and technology. We have adopted a multi-pronged approach to achieving this objective.

    “On one hand, we are providing the necessary infrastructure and supporting our farmers with input. This requires supplying them with input, such as improved seedlings, fertilisers and fumigants, among others; giving them hundreds of thousands of hectares of already prepared farmlands; reviving old farm settlements that were the hub of agricultural miracles in the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s era; opening up rural areas through aggressive road construction and rehabilitation to facilitate easy accessibility and movement of goods from farms to markets; and the linking of farm produce from Osun to the huge market in Lagos via the Lagos-Osun Rail Logistics System.”

    Mr. Olumide Ojo, who spoke for the trainees, thanked the governor for giving them such a privilege and pledged not to disappoint the state.

    The trainees will undergo a four-week course on modern agriculture and food crop production techniques at an agricultural training school in Germany.

    After this, the trainees would be attached to 11 large-scale co-operative farmers in Saxony-Anhalt for eight weeks.

     

  • The Nigeria, Germany union

    After its successful premiere at —The Festival of Pan African Cinema in Ouagadougou, Burkina faso, otherwise called FESPACO, and the ongoing 34th Durban International Film Festival in South Africa, Goethe Institut’s documentary film, Drama Consult, was screened in Lagos last week.

    The documentary was directed by German film-maker, Dorothee Wenner.

    Shot in 21 days, DramaConsult depicts an ethnographic expedition from Africa to Europe of real life Lagos businessmen who embark on a journey to Germany accompanied by smart business consultants to link up with potential partners and investors.

    The film was shot in Lagos and Germany featuring business personalities such as spare parts dealer,Sam Aniama; real estate developer Dolapo Ajayi and young shoe manufacturer, Femi Ladipo. DramaConsult backs up the three entrepreneurs with two ambitious consultants: Biyi Tunji-Olugbodi and Jude Fejokwu.

    Apart from tracking the process of economic interferance in the era of globalisation, DramaConsult stages and expansiates the difference between two business cultures. Despite this, the three entrepreneurs and their consultants are determined to make the best out of their trip to Germany. They were involved in meetings with architects and shoe designers, Berlin-based spare part dealers, bankers and a trading company in Hamburg with a 175-year long tradition of doing business with African countries.

    DramaConsult explores the terrain and discovers quite some surprises, from the Nigerian perspective. The relevance of varying national tastes in sneaker design, the legendary German timidity in taking risks, the difference in attitude towards domestic help and its consequences for modern architecture – or simply the importance of dressing for the right ocassion.

    Ajayi introduces his German partners to a community in need of housing and they also are in possession of valuable land in Lagos. Who wants a good stew needs good ingredients – and those are costly comments by the chief of the community as models for construction are negotiated. But how costly and how good should the ingredients be?

    Sam Aniama, an experienced spare parts dealer, specialising in Volkswagen and Mercedes and Femi Oladipo, good looking start-up entrepreneur, manufactures shoes for Nigerians who are addicted to fashion.

    According to the producer, Dorothee Wenner, the film was not aiming at a financial profit. It is a non-commercial documentary film that seeks to highlight what makes a business brand.

    “We have already had the film at six African festivals and we are now going to India and Japan and for Germany, we have done one festival so far because we are planning a big premiere of the film. Because of this, we are partnering with business organsations, unions and students who are not interested in coming to cinemas. We would also organise events that surround the documentary. Now,we already have a partner, GIZ(Corporation for technical corporation).They are also incharge of improving and enhancing business in Nigeria.I hope businessmen can participate and share their experiences to get farther in the subject matter,” she disclosed.

    Dorothee said for her as a film maker, this has been a interesting challenge. One of the protagonists, Biyi Tunji-Olugbodi, said ‘it was an opportunity to say Nigerians are not that bad.There is still a lot of us that are genuine you can do business with’. She disclosed that, she is working with Dolapo Ajayi.

  • Flying Eagles return to Germany

    Flying Eagles return to Germany

    The Flying Eagles will head back to their training base in Germany on Sunday after they took part in the Toulon International Tournament in France.

    The Toulon Tournament was won by Brazil, who pipped Colombia 1-0, while France beat Portugal 2-1 in the third-place playoff.

    The Nigeria U-20 team will leave their hotel at Le Castellet by 1pm and fly out by 5pm local time from Marseille for the one and the half hour flight to Munich.

    The nine players dropped from the squad are expected to leave for their various bases on Monday morning. The players are Sakiru Alimi, Lucky Omeruo, Sebastine Osigwe, Bright Ejike, Jamilu Collins, Hassan Abubakar, Daniel Etor, Samuel Mathias and Oluwasemilogo Ajayi.

    On Saturday, the Flying Eagles thrashed French lower league side FC Seynois 4-0 with goals from Moses Orkuma, Olanrewaju Kayode, Umar Aminu and skipper Abduljaleel Ajagun.

    Several of the first-team players who did not feature at the Toulon Tournament, namely goalkeeper Jonah Usman, Chidi Osuchukwu, Agboyi Ovbokha and Chizoba Amaefule were on parade.

    Two test games have been lined up for the team in Germany. The team are then due in Turkey on June 17 and play their opening 2013 U20 World Cup group match four days later against Portugal in Kayseri.

    They will also take on Cuba and South Korea in the first round of the tournament.

  • NIGERIA VS GERMANY CALL-UPS FINALLY,  SIDNEY SAM  REJECTS EAGLES

    NIGERIA VS GERMANY CALL-UPS FINALLY, SIDNEY SAM REJECTS EAGLES

    BAYER LEVERKUSEN winger Sidney Sam has denied ever considering playing for Nigeria after he was called up to the German team that is touring the United States this summer.

    Sam had been on the radar of Nigeria for a while as his father’s homeland sought to cap him in the senior level, having played for the German youth teams.

    Even though Sam could still switch nationality after playing in friendly matches for the senior German side, it seems he’s now closed the door on ever appearing for Nigeria, after denying his prior interest in featuring for the African champions.

    In October 2012, Sam spoke about the Nigerian federation and the contact he was making. Nigeria coach Stephen Keshi had also disclosed speaking to the player on the phone.

    With his recent call up to Die Mannschaft, Sam’s future looks settled as he sets his sights on making the World Cup team next year.

    “2014 is still far away but for me it is only Germany that counts. We don’t have to speak about Nigeria,” Sam told German sports agency SID.

    “I never really thought about Nigeria and I do not know who invented that. I always wanted to play for Germany and I know I was on the coaches’ list. A pity, I was often injured. But now I am here and want to prove my strengths,” he said.