Tag: Itiako Ikpokpo

  • Niger Delta Games’ coaches, technical officials to be trained, says Ikpokpo

    Niger Delta Games’ coaches, technical officials to be trained, says Ikpokpo

    Coaches and Technical Officials of the Niger Delta Games (NDG) would benefit from a training programme planned to improve their efficiency ahead of the 2026 Games.

    Sir Itiako Ikpokpo (KSM) Managing Director of Dunamis Icon Limited, the Managing Consultant for the Niger Delta Games said as much over the  weekend.

    Speaking  on plans by the organisers  of the NDG to sustain the discovery of talents in the years ahead, Ikpokpo lamented the poor remuneration of coaches and wondered how their employers expect them to travel to communities to identify new talents.

    “We are working with partners, the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) and specifically for this event only, the Nigeria Local Content Development and Management Board to organise a workshop in January for Coaches and Technical Officials,” he said on a TV programme.

    He urged governments in the States and at the federal level to fund sports the same way they are funding road and hospital projects.

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    “For us to make any impact in sports, government must invest in sports infrastructure. It is good to build roads and hospitals, and it is also important that we invest in sports infrastructure.” Ikpokpo challenged the governments.

    Continuing on the challenge of infrastructure deficit, Ikpokpo, who is the chairman of the Delta State Athletics Association, lamented that schools are built in Nigeria without provisions for sports grounds.

    “The schools are the cradle of sports development, yet we have people building schools with no sports facilities.”

    He promised that the 2nd  NDG scheduled to take place in Benin, the Edo State capital, will be an improvement on all fronts than the last edition.

  • Ikpokpo congratulates Okon on AFN Zonal elections

    Ikpokpo congratulates Okon on AFN Zonal elections

    The Chairman of the Delta State Athletics Association,  Sir Itiako Ikpokpo, has congratulated Gabriel Okon, who emerged the winner of the South South Zonal election into the board of the Athletics Federation of Nigeria held in Benin on Monday.

    Ikpokpo, In a statement issued in Asaba,  said: “Okon surely has a name and deserves his place in the athletics world.

    “The zonal election was a family affair, and I fully concede defeat to Gabriel Okon, who is a brother and friend. However, I enjoin him to strive for effective and target-driven representation of the zone on the board.

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    “Athletics is not just big, but a critical subsector of our sports, and our fortunes in recent times indicate that there is a lot of work to do. This requires a high level of commitment and selflessness, which can only be achieved by not continuously pandering to the cleavages that have held the sports down, but by opening up the athletics ecosystem for greater participation and contributions by persons who are passionate about the sport.

    “It is my hope that this sense of purpose will inform the mind of the Nigeria Athletics family as we go into the main election scheduled for June 12,” he stated.

  • How Ikpokpo ignited Niger Delta with thrilling sports festival

    How Ikpokpo ignited Niger Delta with thrilling sports festival

    In the quiet of his home in Asaba, Delta State, Sir Itiako Ikpokpo called a few people together to discuss Nigeria sports. He was concerned about the dwindling fortunes of the sector, and the immediacy of his concern was accentuated by Team Nigeria’s return from the Paris 2024 Olympic Games without any medal

    He recalled that the two medals won by Nigeria at the preceding Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games were delivered by Ese Brume  and Blessing Oborodudu, both from Delta and Bayelsa states, and that in the glory days of the Super Eagles, when the team won the Tunisia ’94 Africa Cup of Nations, qualified to the USA 94 FIFA World Cup, its first time, and won the football gold at Atlanta ’96 Olympic Games, the teams were heavy with players from the Niger Delta region.

    Truly, those successes were anchored by the likes of Stephen Keshi, Augustine Eguavoen, Finidi George, Samson Siasia, Sunday Oliseh, Austin Okocha, Victor Ikpeba, Friday Ekpo, Friday Elaho, Jonathan Akpoborie, Nduka Ugbade, Wilson Oruma, Nwankwo Kanu Taribo West, Emmanuel Amuneke and many more Niger Deltans.

    Similarly, the beautiful days of Nigeria women football paraded the likes of Captain Florence Omagbemi, Patience Avre, Mercy Akide, Stella Mbachu, Maureen Madu, Perpetual Nkwocha, Vera Okoro, Florence Ivwueta, Efionwan Ekpo, and others from the region, with clubs like Pelican Stars of Calabar, Ufuoma Babes of Warri, Rivers Angels of Port Harcourt and Delta Queens of Asaba, providing the nucleus.

    Nigeria secured African, Commonwealth, Olympic medals and world reckoning in boxing with names like Isaac Ikhuoria, Hogan ‘Kid’ Bassey, Davidson Andeh, David Izonritei, Peter Konyegwachie, Jerry Okorodudu, Samuel Peters, Efetobore Apochi, Efe Ajagba and more. All Niger Deltans.

    The story is the same in weightlifting, tennis, wrestling, the para sports, table tennis, and athletics with the likes of Oliver Orok, Chioma Ajunwa, Enefiok Udo-Obong, Endurance Ojokolo, Mercy Nku, Gloria Alozie, Patience Okon, Gloria Kemasuode, Tamunosiki Atorudibo, Yusuf Ali, Henry Amike, Charlton Ehizuelen, Nduka Odizor, the Offiong sisters, Cecilia and Edem, Blessing Okagbare, Seun Ogunkoya and more.

    He also recalled with relish the global energy which the Ogbe Hard Court brought to Nigeria but regretted that it is no longer in existence.

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    “As we can see, things have fallen badly apart, and we must do something to revive our sports,” he declared. “It is not enough to just rue our declining fortunes, blame sports administrators, and fold our hands. All of us who love sports and understand its power in the transformation of society must do something from any space we find ourselves. We need to do this to recover and sustain the place of the Niger Delta in sports, for the benefit of our people and for the nation, by extension.”

    Ikpokpo may have been in the circle of friends who are sports administrators, but he is better known as a politician, entrepreneur, and public servant.

    A former Students’ Union President of the University of Port Harcourt, he was a two-time Chairman of Isoko South Local Government Council, Director General of the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria, ALGON,  he has been quietly minding his business, Dunamis Icon Limited, with interests in transportation, catering, hospitality, entertainment, event management and business consultancy services.

    Yet, he has always recognized the economic potentials of sports and has had a burning zeal for the repositioning and development of sports, especially at the grassroots levels.

    Accordingly, as Chairman of the Delta State Chapter of ALGON, he introduced the Local Governments Sports Festival in Delta State, a project which should have been escalated and elevated nationwide, had the national leadership of ALGON caught the vision.

    Obviously not deterred, he reasoned that the Niger Delta, being the bastion of sports in Nigeria, must take the lead and show the way. Thus was the Niger Delta Sports Festival born.

    The idea of the festival was to spark massive enthusiasm, greater interest, involvement, and participation in sports in the grassroots and inner communities of the region, to precurse the enduring deliverables of talent discovery, grooming and nurturing of outstanding athletes unto high performance class, all aimed at empowering and uplifting the youth of the Niger Delta through sports.

    As noble as the intention is, the challenge was always going to be funding, but as they say, “where there is a will, there is a way.” In finding the way, Ikpokpo identified the Niger Delta Development Commission as a fitting anchor for the cause.

    The NDDC has been intervening in the provision of multi sectorial infrastructure and various forms of youth and women empowerment across its mandate state for the 25 years of its establishment, and Ikpokpo thought that the Commission should as well intervene in a bigger way to uplift the sports sector of the region, especially to provide the teeming youth population a wider and more global consciousness beyond the expectations from the region’s crude oil.

    Ikpokpo’s presentation to the NDDC was articulate and moving, but he says that the real heroes are the leadership of the NDDC, which not only fully understood the dynamics of development, but also had even far deeper convictions about the power of sports.

    “The Chairman of the Board, Chiedu Ebie, had sourced private sector sponsorship to revive the Principals Cup in Delta State, while as Commissioner for Education, with the programme running into its tenth year. The Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Dr Samuel Ogbuku, is not only a protagonist for all-around development of the Niger Delta, he has an unquenchable passion for youth development through the multiple platforms, and he is leading the repositioning of the NDDC into a more transformative institution, for deeper and more enduring impact on the people. The Executive Director,  Administration and Finance, Alabo Boma Iyaye, had been three times Commissioner of Sports in Rivers State. He not only understood exactly what was at stake, he knew the needed bricks to the works and when and how to deploy them. Then, there is Hon Erhiatake Ibori-Suenu, Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on the NDDC, who takes the overall development and progress of the Niger Delta so heartily personal,” he revealed.

    “These are the people who gave heart, flesh, life and blood to what has now become a movement for the revival of sports in the Niger Delta. They not only agreed with our proposition, they possessed it, deepened its reaches and gave it impetus as a platform for the building of greater, unity, friendship and integration of the region, recast it as a platform to retell the true story of a unique people whose abiding greatness and cultural identity have been seemingly shadowed by their oil wealth, and positioned it as a pad for the empowerment of the people to unleash their innate wealth of talents across all spheres of life.

    “Their understanding, foresight, passion and commitment, provided the enabling atmosphere for us at Dunamis Icon to execute the project.”

    Ikpokpo was strategically disruptive and innovative in conceptualisation, recruitment, and operations in pursuit of the success of the Niger Delta Sports Festival.

    As they say, the rest is history. Nigerians have adjudged it as one of the most valuable, best organised, and highly enjoyed events in the nation’s sporting history.

    Not only were the grassroots and inner communities across the over 185 local government areas of the Niger Delta region been awakened to sports, but the youngsters who made it to Uyo have had a life changing exposure and positively challenging experience. The host state, Akwa Ibom, has been left a legacy of upgraded sports facilities, but even more celebratory is the programme put in place for the continued nurturing of the youngsters discovered at the festival, the quintessential victory for not only the region, not only the sports community, but for the entire nation.

  • Ikpokpo counts gains of Niger Delta Sports Festival 

    Ikpokpo counts gains of Niger Delta Sports Festival 

     It had long been  stated that  primary aim of a regional sports festival  was  to promote health, wellness, and teamwork through a variety of sports and physical activities hence organisers of the maiden Niger Delta Sports  Festival (NDSF) could  afford some cheery smiles  after curtains were drawn  this week on its first edition in Uyo . For Sir Itiako Ikpokpo, Co-Chairman of the Main Organising Committee for the NDSF, the festival  was  indeed more than  a platform to offer trophies to successful athletes. He spoke with MORAKINYO ABODUNRIN

    For seven days this past week,  Uyo, the Capital of Akwa Ibom State, was bursting  at the seams  as the usual  calm city played host  to the  maiden edition of the  Niger Delta Sports  Festival (NDSF)  under the  auspices of  the  Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

    Of course, regional sports festivals have emerged as vibrant celebrations of athleticism, community spirit, and cultural unity. These events not only showcase local talent but also foster a sense of belonging and camaraderie among participants and spectators alike.

    Yet Sir Itiako Ikpokpo, Co-Chairman of the Main Organising Committee, would be the first  to admit that the inaugural NDSF  was a testament to meticulous planning, enthusiastic participation, and the unwavering support of the local community.

    “Yes, it ( the maiden NDSF) is a game changer, and the effects are already being felt with the discovery of over 630 athletes across different sports ,”  Ikpokpo who doubles as the Lead Consultant, Dunamis Icon, the Project Consultants for the NDSF, told  NationSports hours  after curtain was drawn on the first NDSF in Uyo.

    Ikpokpo, admitted  that the NDSF has  offered  the NDDC  a veritable  platform  the opportunity  of  meeting  one of the core  values of its mandates and objectives , adding  the management  of the federal agency  established in 2000 simply keyed  into the vision  behind   the inauguration of the regional sports festival.

     “Of course,  the primary goal of the NDDC is intervention in infrastructural and human capital development,” Ikpokpo , the originator of the Local Government Sports Festival in Delta during his term as the  chairman of the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria (ALGON, further explained, adding the NDDC virtually provided  all the funds needed to execute the  successful  regional sports festival.

    He continued: “The board and management made it easy as intervention in sports is part of human capital development, which is already in their plan. So, it didn’t take much to really convince them.

    “ The NDDC provided what we needed to execute the program. We also had an understanding with Nilayo Sports Marketing, and they marketed Premium Trust Bank.

    “ It was for us, a gauge of how the private sector would support what we are doing and we are happy that Premium Trust Bank is showing the way. So we are not disappointed at all, rather we would have been if NDDC didn’t give us what we needed.”

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    At the end of  seven days of intense battles across 17 disciplines  among athletes from  nine  states under the mandate of the NDDC, Bayelsa State  made  history  as the overall  first   winner of the NDSF  after they edged ‘fierce competitors’ Delta State  and Edo State to second and third position respectively.

    Yet Ikpokpo  noted  that  all the states  competed fairly even as he dismissed  insinuations  that  some  circumvented  the rules of the festival  by fielding ‘established athletes’ to compete  against  budding talents  which was the characteristic objective  for the NDSF.

     “Those states and their athletes didn’t break any of the rules,” the frank talking Ikpokpo  stated matter-of-factly. “The festival was not about winning.”

    He  continued, adding   the NDSF was money  well-spent  by  the NDDC: “ It (NDSF) was about getting talents, and we did. The attention is not really on the so-called established athletes.

    “We have seen fresh talents take out so-called established ones now live, and school in America or Europe doesn’t qualify the person as an established athlete. In any case,  we would make  progress, and our vision will be clearer.

     “The NDSF  definitely was (money well spent by the NDDC)  for sure. I am sure from the way we have totally rehabilitated the entire sporting infrastructure that we used in Akwa Ibom State, it’s evident that it was money well spent.”

    According to Ikpokpo, the successful take-off of the  NDSF in Uyo has  certainly have a multiplier effects  in the  Niger  Delta region  given the enthusiasm  by other states  to host  future festivals which organisers  foresee   could be a  biennial event  subject to  the approval of the NDDC. 

    “ Only  my employers, the NDDC, can take that decision (whether  the future NDSF  would be  an annual or biennial  event),” Ikpokpo  further told NationSport. “We are just focused on the assignment on our table .

    He continued: “ Edo State has  openly make a bid  to host the when   the governor  made his remarks at the closing ceremony. Ondo  State too has hinted that it would want to host the next edition, and to us, that’s progress.

    “It’s (NDSF) a product that will sell and integrate and produce more talents for our people. States will deliberately ensure they begin to add value to sports in their states .”

    Pressed on his personal positive perspectives from the  maiden  edition  of the NDSF  despite  some  hitches in between  of the  festival.

     “ When the event was declared open by the President of the Federal Republic, it was a high moment, no doubt,” Ikpokpo, the immediate past Director General of ALGON and  Managing Consultant to Dunamis-Icon Limited, said with his habitual smiles. “ The stadium was beautiful, and the athletes were happy.

    “ I really didn’t have any worst moments in all honesty even with the early morning protests about different issues, including allowances, because some  started receiving earlier those who had received started going to the stadium.

    “They obviously didn’t know that we had a policy of paying directly into the account of every athlete. Most names of athletes got in on Monday evening and payment was being made with the Remitta system to over four thousand people can be tedious but the chairman of the MOC Alabo Boma Iyayi went to the Athletes camp and carefully explained the process and from then on everything went smoothly.

     “I had very great moments moving from event to event and seeing young excited people doing their thing,” noted  Ikpokpo,  the self-assured entrepreneur who currently run a consultancy firm called Crestpoint Consulting Limited, concluded.