Tag: player

  • Yusuf: Scrap NPFL if no player is good for Eagles

    The Nigeria Football federation (NFF)Assistant Director ( Technical), Abdulrafiu Yusuf has described the non inclusion of the home based players in the international friendly match in London as an unacceptable decision on the part of the handlers of the senior national team.

    Yusuf, who made this known to  Sportinglife at the weekend during the closing ceremony of CAF-B Coaching Licence Course in Abuja , said the non invitation of at least 3 or 4 players in the Nigerian league by Gernot Rohr and his assistants  means our league is not good.

    “I’m a firm  believer of our league because I am a product of the League. You can’t  tell me that no player locally is good for the Super Eagles even for friendly matches. How do we develop the game?

    “The essence of the league is to develop and identify players for the national teams. But if they are not good for the senior team why are we playing the league.  Why are we praising the league managed by the LMC. The best thing is to scrap the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL)”, Yusuf said.

    He concluded by saying  that the Super Eagles handlers  should look inwards in future invitation  to the senior national team as some of them playing locally are better than the so -called foriegn based which majority of them are not first team players in their clubs.

  • Making Nigeria a global player in $10b shea industry

    Making Nigeria a global player in $10b shea industry

    With 16  producing states, Nigeria has the capacity to produce 325,000 metric tonnes of shea nut yearly. With that it can grab a huge chunk of the global market worth about $10 billion. The market is expected to hit $30 billion by 2020. Will investors tap into this potential to diversify the economy? CHIKODI OKEREOCHA and DAN ESSIET report. 

    As the push for economic diversification intensifies, Chief Executive Officer of Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC), Mr. Segun Awolowo, has suggested that Nigeria should leverage its nature-endowed comparative advantage in shea butter production and export to replace oil as  major revenue earner.

    Awolowo is seeking  more focus on the non-oil export sector, particularly agric products such as Shea. This, he said, would lead to a surge in Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    At a conference in Abuja, Awolowo said global demand for shea butter was estimated at $10 billion, with a projection of hitting $30 billion by 2020. He noted that if the product is fully harnessed and quality control and standardisation of processing addressed, Nigeria might take a chunk of the huge global market.

    He said with 16 Shea producing states in Nigeria, the sector’s value addition to the economy in the form of inclusive and sustainable growth and wealth creation will be huge. He emphasised that if Nigeria becomes a competitive global player in shea production, it would give impetus to the current industrialisation push and lift millions out of poverty.

    These are not empty claims. Nigeria literarily seats on a shea butter goldmine. At the last count, for instance, Nigeria produces 325,000 Metric Tonnes (MT) of shea nut, making her world’s largest shea nut producer, according to Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).

    However, despite its capacity to earn foreign exchange, reduce poverty, empower women, and generate employ through the establishment of Small and Medium scale Enterprises (SMEs), Shea production and export, like many other agric products in the non-oil sector, remained neglected.

    Why shea industry is rebounding

    But a new thinking in favour of positioning Shea production and export to lead the renewed diversification drive may have taken centre stage. The Nation learnt that some developments both in the local and international scenes prompted hope of a possible rebound of the sector. One of them is the European Union (EU) directive that five per  cent of shea must be added to all confectionaries particularly chocolate.

    The fact that up to five per cent Shea content by weight is allowed under EU regulations in chocolate, other confectionaries and margarine, created a larger international market for shea products. And with wildly grown shea trees predominant in 21 states across the country, the belief is that Nigeria is on good stead to convert her comparative advantage in Shea product to competitive advantage.

    The United State (U.S) government, through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has also stepped up its support for Nigeria’s Shea industry. USAID does this through the Global Shea Alliance, which includes leading retail brands, Shea butter manufacturers, research institutions, ministries, regulatory bodies, and Shea butter producers and exporters.

    That is not all. The Nigeria Investment Promotion Commission (NIPC) has also indicated its readiness to partner the USAID/Nigeria Expanded Trade and Transport (NEXTT) project and Technoserve to facilitate investments in Shea clusters. The essence of the partnership was to provide necessary processing facilities to the shea clusters spread across the 19 states where the shea trees are predominant.

    On the local scene, Shea butter, The Nation learnt, will feature prominently as one of the products for the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) initiative by the US government. AGOA, which allows import of agricultural commodities from eligible African countries including Nigeria to the US duty free, was recently extended by 10 years.

    The trade policy was supposed to have expired on September 30, last yaer, but the US Congress extended it for an additional 10 years until September 30, 2025. With the 10-year extension – the longest in the programme’s history – Shea butter is said to be one of the products Nigeria hopes to push to the US market.

    Perhaps more importantly, shea butter is one of the products that has been selected for the NEPC One-State-One-Product (OSOP) initiative, which seeks to develop one exportable product per state by leveraging on the area’s comparative advantage.

    Private sector operators to the rescue

     Apparently encouraged by the increased local and international focus on Shea production and export, PZ Cussons Foundation, last week, boosted the sector by formally handing over the PZ Nasara Shea-Butter processing facility to a women co-operative group in Tungan Wawa in Kontagora Local Government Area of Niger State.

    The facility consists of raw material store, structures for drying, roasting, blending, finished goods store, borehole and other equipment and machineries. According to the Foundation’s Trustee and former First Lady of Nigeria, Justice Fati Lami Abubakar, the project, executed by the Foundation, was an intervention to empower women economically through encouragement of rural enterprise.

    She explained that the new facility will help upgrade their traditional method of production and make them internationally competitive. It will also bring local processors under one umbrella and organise them into a more formal structure as enterprise.

    Niger State governor, Alhaji Abubakar Sani Bello commended the Board of Trustee of the Foundation for sitting the project in the state. He said it will support government’s effort at diversifying the state’s economy by enhancing productivity in agro allied endeavours at rural levels, help in poverty eradication and employment.

    The governor, who promised to encourage other corporate bodies to do the same, had earlier unfolded plans to distribute new improved shea seedlings to encourage more cultivation. The state government has also intensified efforts at sensitising private sector players and other development partners to awaken rural populace, especially women to tap into the huge potential in Shea production.

    For Director-General, Niger State Commodity and Export Promotion Agency, Mohammed Kontagora, the development of large-scale production of Shea butter in Nigeria would put Nigeria on the right path to diversifying the economy through strategic focus on the commodity’s export business.

    Kontagora, a member of Global Shea Alliance (GSA), said Nigeria, which presently accounts for 57 per cent of the global Shea market, could address its challenge of poverty through Shea butter export. “Nigeria stands a better chance of improving its economy through the processing and sale of Shea butter,” he said.

    He said one way to improve economies of communities is to take comparative advantage in Shea butter production by promoting Shea butter as a food and cosmetic product, noting that EU’s directive that five per cent of Shea must be added to all confectionaries particularly chocolate in the zone could effectively upscale the profile of the commodity’s business.

    “Shea butter has the potential to eradicate poverty. This is the sector I believe we all have to go back to,” the DG said. The Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Shea Origin Nigeria project, Mrs. Mobola Sagoe, has already done that. The Lagos-based entrepreneur has since carved a niche in the business of promoting beauty products. She has even gone a notch higher by assisting women get involved in shea butter production.

    Sagoe has been smiling to the bank by supplying cosmetics and export Shea butter to the United Kingdom (UK) and the U.S. The professional esthetician (skin care therapist), with 28 years’ experience, said the use of shea butter has been increasing in recent years as consumers are demanding better quality natural, minimally processed ingredients in personal care items and food.

    The budding entrepreneur said internationally, 90 per cent of Shea nuts are used in the food and confectionary industry for the production of cocoa butter equivalents or to improve confectionaries and margarines. She identified continued rising demand for cocoa butter equivalents (CBEs) due to rising world consumption of chocolate, high prices for cocoa, and strong demand for natural cosmetics and soaps as principal factors driving the demand for Shea.

    Sagoe said Nigeria is a leading producer of shea nut. This must be why, as part of her commitment to promoting a sustainable shea industry, she commenced the implementation of a pilot project to help women gather the Shea nuts and process them into butter.  She has since taken over the shea processing centre in Saki, Oyo State to train villagers, mostly women, on how to pick and process Shea nuts and make a living from them.

    Sagoe is being supported by USAID Nigeria Expanded Trade and Transport Programme (NEXTT). The entrepreneur, whose firm strives to lift women and their families out of extreme poverty through improved Shea production, said an investment of about N50, 000, prospective entrepreneurs could venture into nuts gathering for  big merchants.

    She said she intends to ensure that companies source products directly from producers in the villages, where villagers are  involved through manually collecting, sorting, crushing, roasting, grinding, and separating the oils from the butter and shaping the finished product.

    The raw nuts collected from them are processed into unrefined Shea butter. The villages also make money by selling the raw nuts to companies that extract, refine and export  the oil  abroad  for cosmetic purposes.

    Apparently in recognition of her exploits, Sagoe’s firm has been selected as global supply partners for Shea Radiance, an international organisation that supplies communities with locally fabricated equipment to help increase production output, relieve physical labour on production and provide a consistent and improved quality of Shea butter.

    Shea origin centres on a community-based cooperative and seeks to improve the livelihoods of women Shea nut producers by offering training, greater ownership within the supply chain and access to improved technology.

    However, the consensus of experts is that the success or otherwise of the current public-private sector collaboration and involvement in positioning shea butter production and export business to drive the ongoing economic diversification agenda depends largely on how far government encourages and sustains the initiative through deliberate policies, provision of necessary infrastructure and enabling environment.

  • Four qualities of a player

    Four qualities of a player

    A COUPLE of years ago, Trisha met Donald in on her way to work, and they exchanged numbers, at first Donald would call Trisha and they would chat, later on he would pick her up from her  office after work and drop her off at home. He claimed that he lived at Epe, but always dropped her at her Surulere apartment every evening, before retiring to his sister’s apartment at Ojuelegba. And never introduced Trisha to his sister. When he started asking her to loan him money, she stopped taking his calls, and asked her staff not to allow him into her office. Years later, they ran into each other, and he admitted that he had been in a relationship with the woman he was living with at the time he met her, but claimed that the relationship was over. Trisha was lucky enough to have avoided a player, and is now happily married to a wonderful husband- a real man. So how do you recognize a player? Enjoy;

    1. Lies a lot.

    A player’s stories never add up. As I have mentioned times without number, when dealing with a man, never listen to what he says, rather look at his actions, actions don’t lie. So you are dating a guy who says one thing and does something else, please watch out, he might have something under his sleeves. If he says he will call, and never does, claiming to be too busy, or says he is in one place and you discover that he is elsewhere, the list goes on.

    1. Won’t invite you to his house or office.

    The most natural thing to do when you are getting to know someone is to be invited to their homes or/and office. When a regular date becomes a serious relationship, and you astill don’t know his office or house, it might be that he has something to hide. Like Donald, who was living with a woman whom he claimed was his sister, and never introduced to Trisha, how many ladies are wise enough to smell a rat? If he won’t show you his house, friends, or relatives; there is a reason. Please investigate.

    1. Attempts to turn you to his ATM with his hard luck stories.

    I can’t count the number of times I have come across the hard luck stories of ladies who gave their love and money to guys, and the guys took off. It never seems to end well, even when the men marry them, the likelihood of them becoming the breadwinners to the women who fended for them in the past remains low. Only this week, a relative of mine was beaten black and blue by her husband; a rich man she married when he had no job. She was actually feeding and clothing the guy. Unbelievably, today, she is responsible for feeding, school fees, and welfare of their four kids, even though he is now very rich, and owns Petrol stations today, can you believe that? Oh, and he also acquired a new wife.

    1. Almost always wants to rush you to have sex with him.

    The decision to have sex with a man you are not married to is a personal decision for the female to make. The player is always in a hurry to get you in his bed, promising you the world for it. Only, afterwards you might find that he is making the same promises to any number of ladies out there. My take on the issue of pre-marital sex? Never give in just because you want to please him. If you want to become the village mattress, it is okay if that is what you want, but remember, the risk is that you might just be another one of the babes he uses and dumps. I like the way the Americans put it, “If he likes it, he should put a ring on it.” Enough said.

  • Lobi Stars introduce Player Monthly award

    Lobi Stars introduce Player Monthly award

    •To honour ex-players

    The management of Lobi Stars FC of Makurdi has revealed plans to reward its outstanding player with best monthly player award.

    SportingLife gathered that the club’s vice chairman Mike Idoko disclosed the plans during his meeting with the club’s management led by the Team Manager, Banarbas Imenger.

    He said the award is imperative to motivate players to do more for the club.

    He also said that the club will put in place a process to honour its former stars that have served and made sacrifices to the team.

    Imenger, confirmed the news to SportingLife stressed that the gesture is to create a competitive atmosphere among the players.

    Imenger said a Technical Committee would put in place to adjudge the winner every month.

    “We have set to reward our most outstanding player with an award every month. There are parameters put in place to discover the winner. The player’s performance to the club would be a yardstick for the award.

    “If a goalkeeper does not concede a goal in a month he may claim the award. A midfielder who provides more assists too can be a potential winner while attacker who scores more goals in a month is in pole position to be rewarded too.

    “At the end of the month a technical committee would put everything together to name the winner. It is a way to create a competitive atmosphere among the players and to encourage them too. Award will be in form of Trophy or plaque,” Imenger told SportingLife.

  • Odibe: Playing time has made me a better player

    Odibe: Playing time has made me a better player

    … set big priority for club

    Forgotten Super Eagles  star Michael Odibe says playing every week for his club has make him a better player and believes his consistency will open big doors as Atyrau battle for Kazakhstan league title.

    The towering central defender has become a major player for Atyrau, his consistency has made him to be one of the most sought after player in the league. He was voted best defender in the league last season.

    Odibe, who has one cap for Nigeria says he want to help his team to European ticket this season.

    “The league is becoming interesting now; we are expecting tough battles as there is already preparation on ground. We know the task ahead of every games and that is why we are much ready,” said Odibe who played all 90 minutes of his team draw at the weekend.

    “I want to help this team to European competition that is a big priority I have set for myself and the club. We missed out last season but we are better off last season and that is just the focus for now. As per the league, anything is possible, we are closing the gap, and with three more games, I think something good can come into our way but I am not written off our chances. We are equally good like every other team in the league.”

    Odibe attributed consistency as the secret of his flourishing form and looking forward to more better outing.

    “As you know that I played every game and I do complete the games, it is something I have been enjoying since I came here. It has really up my games; I am more a better player than before. I am fit, strong and better than before. Playing regularly has changed my orientation of the league. It has really make me a better player and I am always happy seeing myself on the pitch. At the beginning, I thought it was a wrong move but I think my playing chances are giving me more joys in the country.”

    Odibe could be heading to a club in Russia, Turkey or France depending on his choice as clubs already monitoring his situation in the Kazakhstan league.

  • UEFA final match delights MasterCard sponsored player mascots

    After being named winners of the MasterCard Goal Celebration Contest, two football-loving children from Nigeria were part of a MasterCard Priceless Experience penultimate weekend as official player mascots for the UEFA Champions League Final in Berlin at the Olympia Stadion.

    The two winners – Abba Ahmed and Jordan Ubah –walked through the tunnel and onto the pitch, escorting star players from FC Barcelona and Juventus.

    The player mascots, according to MasterCard in a statement, also experienced the buzz and excitement of the pre-match build up, which included access to the tunnel, a practice run out and collection of their official match day uniform.

    The Vice President and Area Business Head, MasterCard, West Africa, Omokehinde Ojomuyide, who selected the two finalists, said the player mascots enjoyed an absolutely priceless experience on the pitch during the final.

    The contest saw parents, teachers and football coaches share videos of their children and students performing a goal celebration on social media to stand a chance to win a MasterCard Priceless Experience, which also included the all-expense paid trip with their families to watch the UEFA Champions League Final.

    The panel of judges consisting of former international footballer Nwankwo Kanu, Tunji Adeyinka, Managing Director, Connect Marketing and Ojomuyide, selected the two finalists from hundreds of entries.

    When notifying these two children that they had won the contest, MasterCard created two Priceless Surprises to make the experience even more special.

    Ahmed’s Priceless Surprise included being invited to attend a movie with his family. The movie was interrupted by a video message from Kanu, who pronounced Ahmed one of the contest’s winners. Kanu then walked into the movie theatre and presented Ahmed with his player escort jersey, after which they performed a goal celebration.

  • La Liga best African player award: Ike Uche snubbed

    La Liga best African player award: Ike Uche snubbed

    The Spanish La Liga has left out Nigeria striker Ikechukwu Uche from the three nominees for the best African star for the past season.

    Last season, Uche netted 14 goals for Villarreal but was overlooked by former Nigeria coach Stephen Keshi for the World Cup in Brazil.

    Last week, Uche celebrated scoring his 100th goal in Spain.

    Cameroon skipper Stephane Mbia, who featured for Seville, was also not considered for the top prize.

    The three nominees for the best African star in the La Liga are Yacine Brahimi of Algeria who featured for Granada before he moved to FC Porto; Morocco’s Youssef Al Arabi, who scored 12 goals for Granada last season, and Seydou Keita of Mali, who featured for Valencia before he moved to Italy.

    The ceremony to announce the winner will be staged on Monday.

  • Mba is Rangers player — Emordi

    Mba is Rangers player — Emordi

    The Head Coach, Rangers International FC of Enugu, Okey Emordi, said on Tuesday that the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) board had no justification to claim Sunday Mba is a Warri Wolves’ player.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Rangers, Warri Wolves and Dolphins of Port Harcourt have been in intense dispute over the rightful owner of the Super Eagles player.

    Emordi told NAN that he was confident Mba was a player of Rangers, saying he had trained with the team before joining the Super Eagles’ Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) camp.

    “The NPFL has no justification to claim that Mba is a player of Wolves. It’s the clubs concerned that are in a good position to lay claims to the player. I strongly believe that Mba is a player of Rangers because as much as I can tell he was already training with us before the Nations Cup. And he was training with Rangers as a bonafide player of the team not on any other condition,” he said.

    Emordi added that the player had been registered in all of the club’s competitions prior to the AFCON and that his name had since been incorporated in the club’s payroll.

    “The player has since been registered in all of our competitions for this season and his name has been included in the club’s payroll. Therefore, by virtue of this fact he is our player, otherwise, we wouldn’t have registered him as part of our plans for the season,” Emordi said.

    The coach said he was optimistic that Rangers would win the dispute over the rightful owner of the emerging football star.

    Mba scored the lone winning goal of the Nations Cup final against Burkina Faso in South Africa that crowned the Super Eagles champions of the continental showpiece.

    The player also scored the winning goal in the Super Eagles’ quarter-finals 2-1 win over Cote d’Ivoire but has been the subject of intense controversy over contractual club agreements.