Tag: Gotv

  • GOtv Boxing Night: Edo Boy wins N1.5m, Light Welterweight title

    GOtv Boxing Night: Edo Boy wins N1.5m, Light Welterweight title

    Stanley “Edo Boy” Eribo, on Saturday, became the national light welterweight boxing champion when he defeated Sunday “Capo” Olalekan by knockout  at the GOtv Boxing Night V, which took place at the Indoor Sports Hall of the National Stadium in Lagos.

    Cheered on by the capacity crowd at the venue and using his longer as well as superior guile, Edo Boy toyed with Capo. He effectively held off his opponent’s savage punches, while delivering his own with brutal efficiency that yielded a 10th-round knockout.

    Edo Boy was adjudged the best boxer of the night, winning the cash prize of N1.5m and the Mojisola Ogunsanya Memorial Trophy. In another explosive title fight, Olaide “Fijaborn ” Fijabi dethroned Sadiq “Police Machine ” Ahmed as the national welterweight champion.

    Fijabi, who made his professional debut last year at the GOtv Boxing Night, was not in the charitable mood of Christmas as he thumped the Police Machine into a daze.

    The former champion became unsteady and unable to continue in the fifth round. In the night’s major bout, Nigeria’s Waidi “Skoro ” Usman lost the chance of becoming the African Boxing Union featherweight champion when he lost to Edward ” Ring Messiah” Kakembo of Uganda by a split decision.

    The Ugandan, who boasted pre-match that beating Skoro would be his Christmas gift to his countrymen, was better on the night. He was lightning-fast in offence and clever in defence, evading Skoro ‘s punches. In the national super middleweight challenge contest, Rasheed “Afonja Warrior ” Abolaji defeated Sunday “Golden Child” Ajuwa by unanimous decision. Sponsored by GOtv, the event was supported by MultiChoice, SuperSport, Paragonis Multimedia Limited, Newsbreak.ng, KSquare Security, Brila FM and Bond FM.

  • GOTV Boxing Night gets bigger

    GOTV Boxing Night gets bigger

    • Best boxer to win N1.5
    • As African title fight highlights Boxing Day event

    Pay-TV provider, GOtv, has announced that the best boxer at the fifth edition of the GOtv Boxing Night will go home with an increased cash prize of N1.5million attached to the Mojisola Ogunsanya Memorial trophy in addition to his fighter’s purse.

    This was disclosed on Tuesday at a press conference in Lagos by Jenkins Alumona, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Flykite Productions, promoters of the four-bout professional boxing event to hold at the Indoor Sports Hall of the National Stadium, Lagos on  December 26.

    The last two editions had seen the best fighter go home with N1m prize money in Olaide Fijabi while Otto Joseph won the last edition.

    The biggest bout on the card at the tournament, approved by the Nigerian Boxing Board of Control, is the 12-round Africa Boxing Union (ABU) featherweight title bout between National and West African Champion, Waidi Skoro Usman and Michael Nyawade of Kenya.

    Also on the card is a 12 Round National Light Welter weight title bout between Sadeeq ‘Hand of God’ Ahmed and Olaide ‘Fijaborn’ Fijabi.

    The event will also feature a National Welterweight title duel between Stanley ‘Edo Boy’ and Sunday ‘Capo’ Olalekan. The fight will span eight rounds.

    There will also be eight rounds Super Middleweight Challenge between Sunday ‘Golden Child Ajunwa and Abolaji ‘Afonja Warrior’ Rasheed.

    The last two editions had seen the best fighter go home with N1m  in Olaide Fijabi while Otto Joseph won the last edition.

    And as part of events to make the fifth edition of the GOtv Boxing Night a memorable one, 50 lucky fans will go home with 50 GOtv decoders with three months subscription via a raffle craw. The first 500 will also go home with free gifts.

    Sponsored by GOtv, the event is supported by MultiChoice, SuperSport, KSquare Security, Newsbreak.ng, Complete Sports, Brilla FM and Paragonis Multimedia Limited.

    The fights will be broadcast live on SuperSport from 5pm.

  • MultiChoice ‘spent $800m on GOtv’

    MultiChoice ‘spent $800m on GOtv’

    Call it a magical night filled with the best of African entertainment you may be right. That was the atmosphere as MultiChoice Africa hosted its second content show at the Outrigger Resort, Mauritius Island, penultimate week. It was a five-day content extravaganza that witnessed DStv’s biggest channels previewing their latest and greatest contents, reports Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME. 

    If the calibre of guests who walked  the redcarpet on to the sensational night of dazzling event was a measure of success, this year’s content show has not only hit the mark, but also achieved its desired objective, offering the biggest week in Africa’s video entertainment.

    Laced with glitz and glamour of Hollywood, Bollywood and Nollywood berthing on the Mauritius Island paradise, guests who included Genevieve Nnaji, Rita Dominic, Desmond Elliot, Ramsey Nuoah, Basket Mouth, Eku Edewor, MC Ik, Banky W, DJ Sose, Flavour, Stoneboy and The Mavins were given the full music and movie-star treatment. It was a night that featured IK and Eku as MCs.

    However, the week-long event provided an opportunity for MultiChoice and its various partners to provide answers to some issues affecting the industry, especially piracy, pricing, repeating of programmes and local contents, among others.

    Chief Executive Officer MultiChoice Africa Tim Jacobs described piracy as a massive threat to broadcasters and right holders across the globe, adding that ‘they are only enriching themselves.’ He said MultiChoice Africa, is however, working with rights holders and broadcasters to tackle it, but that it is a moving target because ‘their infrastructure means they can open new portals as we shut others down.’ He said it’s not easy to evaluate how big the impact is, since by definition, a lot of it is underground and spread through social media.

    Jacobs, who spoke at an interaction with reporters said the challenge is broader as certain competitors broadcast a beam that comes down into Africa. “If you have that decoder and smart card that can pick up a service that is not designed to be broadcast in African territories, that is also piracy because the rights for that territory either haven’t been assigned or they are owned by a mainstream service,” he added.

    Reacting to a question on video entertainment service provider’s pricing structure, Jacobs said MultiChoice Africa is constantly evaluating its cost structures while taking into account the cost of content relative to its different audience groups,” he said.

    He noted that there have been massive increases in the cost of content such as the English Premier League football rights, which MultiChoice has factored into its pricing. He said: “We’re conscious that a large part of the population is looking for a good set of quality content at the bottom end of the market, in the USD10 area, and we make decisions on the price points of our bouquet structure – it’s a continuous evaluation. We’re looking at alternatives too – there’s strong consumer behavior (especially in Nigeria) where many consumers are self-employed, and therefore, not monthly earners, so we’re looking at whether it’s viable to address a different type of model. However, it’s not something that’s on the immediate cards.

    “The market for GOtv is specific, and targeted at viewers sitting on analogue signals. This is a sector of the population that has never engaged on Pay TV. They get a rich experience on a digital platform but at a price point that’s at the bottom of the affordability scale. If you start to move up the value chain, you start to confuse the market between the DStv product, which is aspirational and high-value, and GOtv which is a fun, new, mass-market product. There’s also a capacity on DTT that’s much more restrictive than what we have on satellite, so there are also technical reasons we have to be more cautious.”

    According to him, pay-per-view sounds attractive, but it is actually a red herring. He said an easy example is the Mayweather/Pacquiao boxing match earlier this year, which sold on Pay-Per-View across the world – in the USA at USD99 for three to four hours of viewing.

    “Across the continent, subscribers pay less than that for DStv Premium for a whole month of viewing across all our channels – and in this instance, that included that fight, which was broadcast on SuperSport. That’s the benefit of scale for us. If you segment sports, for example the EPL, the reality is that the cost of that is much higher than everyone thinks because you need to divide up those expensive rights between a much smaller viewing populations so the cost goes up exponentially. That doesn’t mean we’re not looking at Pay-Per-View as an option – we need to be flexible and we get a lot of requests for it. We’re watching consumer demand and looking at whether it’s economically viable. It’s not on the cards right now, though, but we do have a research team trying to work that out,” he noted.

    He disclosed that MultiChoice investment in GOtv n excess of USD800 million, in eight countries across the continent and to recover such money means that MultiChoice cannot roll out towers into every city where the population size and affordability aspect lend itself to Free-To-Air (FTA). This, he said, explained why GOtv cannot be accessed in all regions of the continent, adding that they look at each market on the basis of population size and the economics of rolling out a network.

    “Because we’re a Pay TV service, we can’t offer FTA service like governments do. In those areas, we’d typically pair up with an FTA operator, or the national broadcaster, which is a big part of our offering. We have a limit in terms of where our network reaches – we can generally cover 70-80% of a country. Areas that are remote need to be serviced through our satellite services because of factors including accessibility and terrain – the DTT signal needs to go across ground. Normally the national broadcaster or signal provider has the responsibility to ensure that FTA has national coverage, so they put towers in areas that it’s not economical for Pay TV providers to do,” he said.

    On striking a balance between the inaugration of in-house and independent productions, the M-Net Regional Director West Africa Wangi Mba-Uzoukwu said: “We make productions in-house, but also commission, do co-productions and acquire content from elsewhere. You can’t generate enough content in-house. We need multiple production platforms to be able to service our subscribers with the quality content they desire. Our premise is that our content is created by Africa, for Africa, and we continue to nurture and build creative talent, in the hope of developing future producers and directors.

    “We invest in building them up to the quality standards we want. A good mixture of in-house and commissioned content also allows for greater variety and allows us to engage with audience and local producers – that’s how we build talent on the continent. As the Maisha Magic channels roll out, our business model is to nurture local producers and once the channels are off the ground that’s a strong focus for us.”

    The show witnessed the hosting of DStv’s and GOtv’s biggest channels, such as Sony, SuperSport, Zee World, A+E, Disney, MTV Base, BET, Comedy Central, BBC and M-Net.

     

  • Multichoice spent 800million dollars on Gotv

    Multichoice spent 800million dollars on Gotv

    Call it a magical night filled with the best of African entertainment you may be right. That was the atmosphere as MultiChoice Africa hosted it’s second content show at the Outrigger Resort, Mauritius Island, last week. It was a five-day content extravaganza that witnessed DStv’s biggest channels previewing their latest and greatest contents, reports Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME. 

    If the calibre of guests who walked  the redcarpet on to the sensational night of dazzling event was a measure of success, this year’s content show has not only hit the mark, but also achieved its desired objective, offering the biggest week in Africa’s video entertainment.

    Laced with glitz and glamour of Hollywood, Bollywood and Nollywood berthing on the Mauritius Island paradise, guests who included Genevieve Nnaji, Rita Dominic, Desmond Elliot, Ramsey Nuoah, Basket Mouth, Eku Edewor, MC Ik, Banky W, DJ Sose, Flavour, Stoneboy and The Mavins were given the full music and movie-star treatment. It was a night that featured IK and Eku as MCs.

    However, the week-long event provided an opportunity for MultiChoice and its various partners to provide answers to some issues affecting the industry, especially piracy, pricing, repeating of programmes and local contents, among others.

    Chief Executive Officer MultiChoice Africa Tim Jacobs described piracy as a massive threat to broadcasters and right holders across the globe, adding that ‘they are only enriching themselves.’ He said MultiChoice Africa, is however, working with rights holders and broadcasters to tackle it, but that it is a moving target because ‘their infrastructure means they can open new portals as we shut others down.’ He said it’s not easy to evaluate how big the impact is, since by definition, a lot of it is underground and spread through social media.

    Jacobs, who spoke at an interaction with reporters said the challenge is broader as certain competitors broadcast a beam that comes down into Africa. “If you have that decoder and smart card that can pick up a service that is not designed to be broadcast in African territories, that is also piracy because the rights for that territory either haven’t been assigned or they are owned by a mainstream service,” he added.

    Reacting to a question on video entertainment service provider’s pricing structure, Jacobs said MultiChoice Africa is constantly evaluating its cost structures while taking into account the cost of content relative to its different audience groups,” he said.

    He noted that there have been massive increases in the cost of content such as the English Premier League football rights, which MultiChoice has factored into its pricing. He said: “We’re conscious that a large part of the population is looking for a good set of quality content at the bottom end of the market, in the USD10 area, and we make decisions on the price points of our bouquet structure – it’s a continuous evaluation. We’re looking at alternatives too – there’s strong consumer behavior (especially in Nigeria) where many consumers are self-employed, and therefore, not monthly earners, so we’re looking at whether it’s viable to address a different type of model. However, it’s not something that’s on the immediate cards.

    “The market for GOtv is specific, and targeted at viewers sitting on analogue signals. This is a sector of the population that has never engaged on Pay TV. They get a rich experience on a digital platform but at a price point that’s at the bottom of the affordability scale. If you start to move up the value chain, you start to confuse the market between the DStv product, which is aspirational and high-value, and GOtv which is a fun, new, mass-market product. There’s also a capacity on DTT that’s much more restrictive than what we have on satellite, so there are also technical reasons we have to be more cautious.”

    According to him, pay-per-view sounds attractive, but it is actually a red herring. He said an easy example is the Mayweather/Pacquiao boxing match earlier this year, which sold on Pay-Per-View across the world – in the USA at USD99 for three to four hours of viewing.

    “Across the continent, subscribers pay less than that for DStv Premium for a whole month of viewing across all our channels – and in this instance, that included that fight, which was broadcast on SuperSport. That’s the benefit of scale for us. If you segment sports, for example the EPL, the reality is that the cost of that is much higher than everyone thinks because you need to divide up those expensive rights between a much smaller viewing populations so the cost goes up exponentially. That doesn’t mean we’re not looking at Pay-Per-View as an option – we need to be flexible and we get a lot of requests for it. We’re watching consumer demand and looking at whether it’s economically viable. It’s not on the cards right now, though, but we do have a research team trying to work that out,” he noted.

    He disclosed that MultiChoice investment in GOtv n excess of USD800 million, in eight countries across the continent and to recover such money means that MultiChoice cannot roll out towers into every city where the population size and affordability aspect lend itself to Free-To-Air (FTA). This, he said, explained why GOtv cannot be accessed in all regions of the continent, adding that they look at each market on the basis of population size and the economics of rolling out a network.

    “Because we’re a Pay TV service, we can’t offer FTA service like governments do. In those areas, we’d typically pair up with an FTA operator, or the national broadcaster, which is a big part of our offering. We have a limit in terms of where our network reaches – we can generally cover 70-80% of a country. Areas that are remote need to be serviced through our satellite services because of factors including accessibility and terrain – the DTT signal needs to go across ground. Normally the national broadcaster or signal provider has the responsibility to ensure that FTA has national coverage, so they put towers in areas that it’s not economical for Pay TV providers to do,” he said.

    On striking a balance between the inaugration of in-house and independent productions, the M-Net Regional Director West Africa Wangi Mba-Uzoukwu said: “We make productions in-house, but also commission, do co-productions and acquire content from elsewhere. You can’t generate enough content in-house. We need multiple production platforms to be able to service our subscribers with the quality content they desire. Our premise is that our content is created by Africa, for Africa, and we continue to nurture and build creative talent, in the hope of developing future producers and directors.

    “We invest in building them up to the quality standards we want. A good mixture of in-house and commissioned content also allows for greater variety and allows us to engage with audience and local producers – that’s how we build talent on the continent. As the Maisha Magic channels roll out, our business model is to nurture local producers and once the channels are off the ground that’s a strong focus for us.”

    The show witnessed the hosting of DStv’s and GOtv’s biggest channels, such as Sony, SuperSport, Zee World, A+E, Disney, MTV Base, BET, Comedy Central, BBC and M-Net.

     

  • For Love & Justice airs on DStv and Gotv

    For Love & Justice airs on DStv and Gotv

    THE management of DStv and GOtv have promised subscribers exciting times this August as its Telemundo channel launches For Love &Justice. Described as a sinister tale of intrigue and passionate romance, the series starts airing on Monday August 10.

    Gabriel Porras, known for his role as Roberto Acosta in Behind Closed Doors, returns to screens in the  melodrama inspired by Victor Hugo’s classical, Les Misérables.

    For Love & Justice follows the story of Lucía Durán (Aracely Arámbula), who has just been released from jail having served an11-year sentence for a crime she didn’t commit.

    Lucía lands in Mexico City where she becomes involved in a love triangle with 33-year-old cop, Daniel Ponce (Erik Hayser), and a terrifying and yet charismatic criminal mastermind called El Diablo (Gabriel Porras). Lucía must make a choice, a decision that will ultimately alter the course of her life forever.

    The plot continues to thicken when successful lawyer Cesar Mondragon is murdered under very suspicious circumstances and the only one who seems to know what happened is Liliana (Lucía’s sister), a beautiful woman with her own share of struggles, and who only desires one thing  to marry the man she loves.

  • On GOtv’s new pay-off: Live it, love it

    On GOtv’s new pay-off: Live it, love it

    Messrs Nwaobodo and Adindun Nnebedum are GOtv subscribers, who both live in Enugu. I met them at a GOcustomer Forum organised for GOtv subscribers in Enugu last year. The GOcustomer Forum is one of several customer engagement initiatives of MultiChoice, which provides subscribers an opportunity to ask questions, air their views and learn more about the GOtv service.

    Unlike other subscribers at the Enugu forum, these gentlemen opted to give testimonials during the question and answer session. Mr Nwaobodo said that GOtv helpss child development. “My daughter learnt how to say her first words from watching children’s programmes on GOtv,” he said.

    For Mr. Nnebedum, GOtv, through its documentary channels, is great source of education for him.

    These testimonials underscore the new GOtv pay-off line, “Live it, Love it”. GOtv enables youthful guidance through friendliness. If your toddler is a follower of cartoon series like “Barney and Friends” or “Mickey Mouse Clubhouse”, with the great sing-alongs, then Mr Nwaobodo’s testimonial would be very relatable.

    As geography students in secondary school, we relied on textbooks to understand natural disasters like earthquakes, avalanches, tornadoes and volcanic eruptions because these conditions are alien to our environment – and thankfully so.

    Many of us will probably never experience an earthquake, witness a hurricane or see a whale, but documentaries can give a reasonably good understanding of what such natural occurrences look like or feel like or why they happen.

    The height of Mount Kilimanjaro, measuring 5,895 meters, is unfathomable when you read about it. But the emergence of pay-TV, with dedicated documentary channels such as GOtv’s Channel ED and Discovery World, enable us to appreciate the greatness of Mount Kilimanjaro much more than any textbook ever would.

    Documentary channels expose us to previously unknown facts. For instance, from programmes such as Ultimate Animals on Nat Geo Wild, we learn that a flamingo can only eat when its head is upside down, or that some snails sleep for three years at a stretch.GOtv began its journey to “Entertain Nigeria” in October 2011 by providing affordable and quality entertainment.  From Ibadan, where it was launched, GOtv now provides its hundreds of thousands of subscribers with unforgettable television experiences.

    “Live it, Love it” is an expression of the value – more than entertainment – which GOtv offers. It is about the unforgettable viewing experiences of its subscribers. It is the power of GOtv’s clear pictures and sound, and the ability of the content to transform the worldview of subscribers.

    Live it, Love it is also about escapism. The content on GOtv allows subscribers escape to places they wish to be.

    Take Disney Junior’s “Doc McStuffins”. The cartoon series is about a little girl named Dottie, who decides she wants to become a doctor like her mother. She pretends to be one, “Doc McStuffins”, by fixing toys and dolls. When Dottie puts on her stethoscope, toys, dolls, and stuffed animals come to life and she can communicate with them.

    With help from her stuffed animal friends – Stuffy the Dragon, Hallie the Hippo, Lambie the Lamb, and Chilly the Snowman, Doc McStuffins helps toys “feel better” by giving them check-ups and diagnosing their illnesses with “The Big Book of Boo Boos”. Kids who are fans of Doc McStuffins are transported into her world and soon begin to visualise themselves as doctors, too.

    “Live it, Love it” is also about the wide variety of appealing content on GOtv. It is about family bonding, the moments shared with family, friends and loved ones, when they gather to watch programmes like “Family Ties”, “Meet the Adebanjos” and “The Johnsons” on AfricaMagic Family.

  • GOtv plans holiday pack for kids

    GOtv plans holiday pack for kids

    Ensuring that this holiday period is not entirely a playful time for kids, pay TV company, Gotv, has evolved educative programming over the Easter weekend and throughout the month of April, to keep children absorbed.

    GOtv’s General Manager, Elizabeth Amkpa, said the variety of children’s programmes on the channel are meant to entertain its younger audiences, while also enabling them to channel their energies to learning.

    According to Amkpa, “From the Kids’ Choice Awards on Nickelodeon which will air on the 1st of April to loads of movies at Easter, and other great shows, kids are in for an unbelievable viewing experience this month.”

    She added that “Kids will also be enchanted by the famous fairy tale princess, Cinderella on Disney Junior. Airing of the three-part movie will begin on 12 April. Cinderella 2: Dreams Come Truewill follow on 19 April and finally, Cinderella 3: A Twist in Time on 26 April,” she pointed out.

    With over 40 channels containing news, music, movies, sports, religious and children’s programming, GOtv caters to a variety of viewing tastes within the family.

  • GOtv extends digital TV to more subscribers

    GOtv extends digital TV to more subscribers

    BY extending its signals to cities like Awka, Ilorin, Ikom, Nsukka, Ondo, Owo, Sagamu and Umuahia, the footprint of digital terrestrial pay-TV, GOtv, is fast becoming a household name, having reached over 20 states and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

    The TV channel, which prides itself with the features of the much-anticipated migration to full digitalisation later in the year, said “viewers in these cities can now enjoy the benefits of the digital television revolution namely; clearer pictures and sound, by purchasing the highly subsidised and latest approved GOtv DVB-T2 decoders in the ongoing “GO Gaga” offer.”

    The company which released this in a statement noted that the use of the outdoor antenna (GOtenna) is recommended to guarantee optimal reception.

    “With affordability at the core of the GOtv offering, subscribers have the option of two bouquets  GOtv with 28 local and international channels which is accessible at a monthly subscription of N1, 000, and GOtv Plus with 41 channels, at a monthly subscription of N1, 500.”

    Both bouquets offer seven programming genres namely; news and current affairs, general entertainment, music, documentary, sport, religion, sport and children’s programming. The channels including Al Jazeera, CNN, SuperSport Select 1 and 2, AfricaMagic, E! Entertainment, Mnet Movies Zone, Telemundo, Televista, BET, Sony Max, Faith Broadcasting Network (formerly TBN), One Gospel, Disney Junior, Nickelodeon, JimJam, MTV Base, Hip TV, Discovery World, Nat Geo Wild, Channel ED and several more provide entertainment which cater to the varied tastes of different members of the family.

    “With schools just back in session, teenagers can learn of the latest happenings in the world of science, art and business by tuning into Channel ED on GOtv, while pre-schoolers can be engaged with several programming on Disney Junior, JimJam and Nickelodeon which will enable them to laugh and learn,” said GOtv’s general manager, Elizabeth Amkpa.

    “For men, there is a lot of sporting action to look forward to. Women can get the best of the red carpet coverage on E! Entertainment as the awards’ season kick-off with the 2015 Golden Globes and Fashion Police returns,” she said.

    GOtv was launched in October 2011 in Nigeria, and it is enabling digital migration with readily accessible decoders.

  • Multichoice to showcase three Nigerian festivals on pop-up channel

    Multichoice to showcase three Nigerian festivals on pop-up channel

    Living up to its bid on current happenstances, management of Pay TV channel, GOtv, have promised to boost content this yuletide season, with special broadcast of some of the best Nigerian festivals on GOtv Plus channel 29.

    The plan, according to the company, is to feature the select events of 2014 from Friday December 19 to January 1, 2015 on its special event pop-up channel, starting with the sixth edition of the Akwa Ibom Christmas Concert from December 19 to 21.

    The concert will feature a top line-up of artistes, including a 200-man Ibom Choral and Orchestra as well as renowned five-time Grammy Award-winning singer, Israel Houghton and South African gospel legend, Lionel Peterson. International worship leaders, Sinach and Nigerian gospel rock artiste Frank Edwards will also form part of the entertainment lineup.

    Known as Africa’s biggest street party, the annual Calabar Carnival, which celebrates its 10th year, will air from the 26 to 29 December.

    The musical concert, which takes place on the streets of Calabar, the Cross River State capital, features top Nigerian artistes plus a parade of colourful costumes, dancers, elaborate floats, all interpreting this year’s theme, Celebration Time.

    The on-screen festivities will culminate in the Lagos Countdown to the New Year from December 29 to January 1, 2015, where viewers will join the city of Lagos as it counts down to 2015 with a massive concert featuring top artistes and a spectacular fireworks.

     

  • GOtv to honour Lasisi, Obisia, others

    GOtv to honour Lasisi, Obisia, others

    PURSUANTto its  stated mission of restoring the popularity of boxing as a sport in Nigeria through the GOtv Boxing Night, six legends of the sport will be specially honoured during the inaugural night of the fight series scheduled for November 23.                                               The GOtv Boxing Night is a professional boxing event featuring a national title fight and five supporting bouts scheduled to hold at the Indoor Sports Complex of the National Stadium in Lagos.

    The event, which is sponsored by GOtv, Custodian Life Assurance Plc, Paragonis Multimedia Productions and Zetaweb, is aimed at sparking a revival of boxing in the country. Those to be honoured include a former Commonwealth Light Heavyweight champion, Joe Lasisi,  Jude Ilo, a former African Light Heavyweight champion and Obisia Nwakpa, a former Commonwealth Light Middleweight champion. The others are Ray Amao, a former Commonwealth Super Flyweight champion;  Hogan Jimoh, a former Commonwealth Bantamweight champion and ex-Olympian, Jeremiah Okorodudu.

    The decision to recognise the contributions of the legends to the sport was recently disclosed by Jenkins Alumona, promoter of GOtv Boxing Night and Managing Director/CEO, Flykite Productions.

    Each of the six legends, Alumona said, will receive a commemorative plaque for excelling in the sport and bringing honour to the country during their active days. The gesture, he further said, is to motivate aspiring professional boxers to surpass the achievements of the legends.

     GOtv Boxing Night, which has been sanctioned by the Nigerian Boxing Board of Control (NBB of C), will feature six fights in different weight categories. The biggest bout on the card is the National Featherweight title duel between Dare “Fighting Machine” Oyewole and Waidi.

    There is also the Heavyweight contest between Adewale “Tiger” Abbey and Tope “Young” Ogunshakin. David ‘Lucky Boy’ Ekpeyong will duel with Muhammed “Fearless” Tijani in the Featherweight category, while Chijioke “Painless” Nigige will do battle with Sunday “Capo” Olalekan in the Middleweight category. For the Light Welterweight contest, Stanley “Edo Boy” Johnson fight Saheed “Happy Boy” Olayiwola, while Dele “Lagelu” Adeleke will fight Rasheed “Afonja Warrior” Abolaji in the Light Middleweight contest.