Tag: Sodje

  • Nigerians’ EPL obsession killing our football – Sodje

    Nigerians’ EPL obsession killing our football – Sodje

    Former Nigeria international Sam Sodje has told AfricanFootball.com that Nigerians prefer English Premier League (EPL) and that is killing Nigeria football.

    He said the obsession with the EPL has made Nigerians believe players who do not feature in the Premier League are not good enough.

    The Premier League is the most popular league on the streets in Nigeria with the local media also lavishing a lot of space and airtime on it even to the detriment of the Nigeria league.

    “We Nigerians are so obsessed with the EPL that we believe if a player is not in EPL, he is not a top or good player and that’s killing our football,” Sodje told AfricanFootball.com.

    The former Portsmouth defender further insisted that Nigeria is not short of quality players and talent to excel internationally.

    “I won’t agree to the notion that Nigeria lacks quality players. We have abundant talents and quality players, but we lack giving these talents the opportunity to showcase what they have.

    “What I mean by this is people are saying Nigeria lack quality players on the basis of those who have made their way up there, but we have talent in Nigeria and with the right programme and system we can discover them. It has been done before and it is still very possible to do again!”

  • Match-fixing: Club backs Sodje

    Match-fixing: Club backs Sodje

    English club Tranmere United have said they will carry on picking Akpo Sodje and Ian Goodison following their arrest in a spot-fixing probe.

    Blackburn on Thursday gave striker DJ Campbell “time off to spend with his family” after he was quizzed by police as part of the National Crime Agency investigation.

    Oldham suspended winger Christian Montano without pay on Monday. But Tranmere boss Ronnie Moore confirmed striker Sodje and defender Goodison will remain eligible for selection at the League One club.

    The duo returned to Prenton Park Thursday for the first time since they and four other men were arrested at the weekend. They have been bailed until April.

    The arrests follow claims made to an undercover reporter by Sodje’s older brother Sam. He said he had taken £70,000 to get sent off deliberately in a match – and had arranged for other players to do the same.

    Moore said: “I spoke to both of them over the phone and they assured me they have done nothing. I have to take that as the truth, until somebody tells me different. Goodison is injured but Sodje is available for selection.

    “It’s difficult, but the good thing about this country is that you are innocent until proven guilty, so we are taking it that there is no truth in what has been said. If it comes out that there are one or two things that they have done, then the whole situation changes. At this present time, we put our arms around them and we get going. Nobody has proven anything. The police have not charged them and we will just get on with it.”

  • MATCH-FIXING! Sam Sodje faces arrest

    MATCH-FIXING! Sam Sodje faces arrest

    • Admits getting £70,000 for red card against Oldham
    • Claims players get £30,000 for yellow card, £50,000 for red
    • He can get crooked players to manipulate World Cup games

    An ex-Premier League footballer faces arrest after he was filmed bragging that he can arrange for professional footballers to get yellow cards or even sent off in return for cash.

    Sam Sodje, who played for Portsmouth and also in the top flight at Reading, says he can guarantee certain events in play in return for money.

    In the video, 34-year-old Nigerian defender Sodje brags that he can arrange for a player to get themselves booked for a £30,000 pay-out.

    Fraudsters can capitalise on this through in-game betting, where they put large bets on incidents like red and yellow cards, penalties and even corner kicks.

    In the video recorded by an undercover reporter from the Sun on Sunday, Sodje claims he fixed it for an ex-Premier League player, who now plays in the Championship, to get a yellow card and can even organise similar events in Premier League games – for a much greater price because of the huge fines for players at that level.

    He even boasted he can arrange for African players to influence what happens in World Cup games, claiming some players could be easily tempted to fix because they do not get paid as much to represent their national teams.

    He added that it was child’s play for a player to get a yellow card, as they are so common no one suspects anything is amiss and the player can continue playing afterwards.

    He said: ‘This guy came to meet me at my house and it was sorted. That’s how easy it is – it’s nothing.’

    Now police are investigating after the Sun on Sunday handed over information on Sodje, gathered over a period of four months by an undercover reporter posing as a middleman for a betting syndicate based in the Far East.

    Sodje and his brother Stephen claim they can even get players sent off – an event which can cripple a team’s chances in a game – for between £50,000 and £70,000.

    He even said he could set up a bet an entire week before a game, while he warned the reporter not to pay one player rumoured to be involved in fixing matches because the sportsman was already under scrutiny.

    Sodje spoke of meeting a Premiership player in a Manchester hotel room, as well as at the home of another to discuss a potential fix. The footage also shows him admitting punching an opponent in the groin to get sent off for a £70,000 pay-out.

    While playing for Portsmouth, Sodje punched Oldham Athletic’s Jose Baxter twice in the game, which took place in February. He said: ‘Do you know how much I got fined? I got fined £10k and I missed six games.’

    He said he had to launch the bizarre attack as the referee had not been booking him for tackling. The reporters also claim to have met with Cristian Montano, who was allegedly supposed to get booked in a game against Wolves in the first half – but failed.

  • Sodje happy to be back

    Sodje happy to be back

    Sam Sodje could be forgiven for a little rustiness against Tranmere.

    The centre-back was playing for the first time since he was sent off at Oldham in February.

    But he produced a commanding display alongside Gabor Gyepes at the heart of the Blues defence.

    Sodje lasted 81 minutes of the 1-0 victory before being replaced by Ricardo Rocha and was delighted to be able to celebrate the first win of his Pompey career.

    He said: “Slotting into a winning team isn’t too difficult and it felt great to come back into the side.

    “As an experienced player I tried to keep my game simple and make sure I helped the team – after watching from the sidelines for a while I was happy to be back.

    “Anyone who knows my game will understand that I just want to defend – it was tough, but the boys stood up to the challenge.

    “Once we got in front we knew that Tranmere would do everything possible to get back on level terms, especially against a team chasing promotion.

    “We expected that, but we did enough to hold on, which was such a great feeling.

    “You don’t want to be losing – when I first came we struggled to get results and it wasn’t a happy place.

    “Now I’m so pleased to be part of a fighting team that wants to win every single time we step onto the pitch.”

    Pompey’s performance was full of fight, but Sodje is pleased to see the side’s quality also starting to shine through.

    He said: “When I first started training with the players, I was surprised that we weren’t winning games.

    “It really irritated me and we worked so hard in training to put it right – now you can see that quality.

    “We have many good players all over the pitch who are in really good form at the moment.

    “Patrick Agyemang and David Connolly always perform well in training – they work well as a pairing and are extremely dedicated professionals.

    “We also have a great spine in midfield, thanks to Johnny Ertl and Therry Racon.

    “Therry is a typical continental footballer in the way he likes to get on the ball. It makes it a lot easier for us defenders as he always wants possession.

    “Johnny just never stops running and is a great presence in the centre of midfield, so we have a good mixture there.”

  • Why I left Preston — Sodje

    Akpo Sodje has revealed he decided to leave League One side Preston North End in search of a longer contract elsewhere.

    The striker, 32, had been on a month-to-month contract with the Lilywhites since the summer and was offered another deal by boss Graham Westley until the middle of January.

    But the player, who scored seven times in 17 appearances for the Lancashire club, decided to reject the terms because he felt his performances had merited a lengthier commitment from Preston.

    He will not be able to sign elsewhere until the transfer window reopens next month.

    “I was not released by Preston, I actually turned down the club’s offer of another month to month deal,” Sodje told Sky Sports.

    “I wanted something a bit more long-term and I think I have done enough at Preston to deserve that.

    “I hope to fix myself up somewhere when the transfer window reopens in January.”