Tag: Villarreal

  • Sports is serious business

    IS sports truly “play play” as one governor once described it? Who will challenge us to see sports as a  platform to bolster the country’s revenue? Doesn’t the government know that sports is the best vehicle for massive employment?

    Spain’s economy, a growing one like Nigeria’s, relies greatly on the volume of cash generated from the sports sector. FC Barcelona, Real Madrid, Atletico Madrid, Sevilla, Villarreal, Valencia are not all about football. They have basketball clubs, volleyball clubs, athletics clubs etc, which are professionally run. But football serves as the fountain where others seek succour, considering its followership as the king of sports.

    Little wonder the hefty taxes on defaulting players and coaches, such as Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, Jose Mourinho et al, which enhance revenue for the Spanish economy. Of course, without taxes, countries will suffer as they need to further develop. Consider Ronaldo’s $20m fine (avoided two-year jail term), Messi’s $2.2m fine (avoided two-year jail term), Xabi Alonso’s $2.8m fine, Mascherano’s £611,000 fine and Jose Mourinho’s €2.2m  and a one-year suspended prison sentence, Radamel Falcao’s €9m fine and Neymar Jr’s  £1.9 million to Brazil tax authorities.

    La Liga’s contribution in Spain’s national economy is no less than any other top-run industry in the country. The two elite division football leagues in Spain generate 185,000 jobs, €4.1 billion ($4.66 bn) in taxes and a turnover equal to 1.37% of the national GDP. This is one sport – football. Others are also run as businesses. Sample: Vuelta a España, a race around Spain and one of cycling’s biggest events.

    Europe’s ‘big five’ leagues spent a record £5billion on players this summer despite Premier League clubs, usually the continent’s most active shoppers, slightly reining in their spending, Deloitte has revealed.

    According to analysis from the professional services company’s Sports Business Group, Spanish clubs spent £1.24billion, breaking the 1bn-euros mark for the first time and more than doubling their expenditure from just two years ago. But there were also summer spending records set in Italy (£1.06billion), Germany (£670million) and France (£605million).

    Premier League clubs still led the way, though, with £1.41billion, although the net spent was only £575million, the lowest since 2015. That net-spend figure also fell by £50million since the league shut its transfer window on August 8, more than three weeks earlier than many of its European peers. Guess what, the English teams, having learned from their folly, are moving to revert to the old order in the transfer market by November, having seen what they lost as revenue to the early closure of the transfer market on August 8.

    I’ve chosen Spain, being a developing economy like ours, to illustrate how the citizenry’s passion for soccer can be exploited to fund other sports without ‘killing’ football, which provides a big chunk of the cash. Nigerians love soccer as much as the Spaniards, but their administrators are driven by the landmarks for growth they put in place than what comes into their pockets, the bane of Nigerian administrators.

    In Spain, the government’s role is purely advisory, ensuring that nobody is above the law, as we have seen with high profile players and coaches being made to face the law. The Sports minister should persuade the National Assembly’s leadership to prioritise the enactment of the National Sports Commission (NSC) Bill and the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) Bill, if we hope to have the Spanish template, which isn’t necessarily the best, but a starting point. No corporate body will fund sports, if the government continues to dictate what happens there. But with the NSC Bill and the NFF Bill, the two parastatals can sue and be sued in the law court in the event of breaches in business transactions.

    The biggest and cheapest Public Relations (PR), tool which the country can use to change people’s perception of Nigeria, is sports. I always recall what happened in Atlanta in 1996, after Chioma Ajunwa won the women’s long jump event. An elated Ajunwa did the victory lap of honour ‘naked’ (not having the Nigerian flag around her neck as it is traditionally done on such an occasion). She saw a little American girl in the crowd holding Nigeria’s flag.

    Ajunwa ran towards the little girl, took the flag and completed the lap of honour – fulfilled. Nobody thought Ajunwa would win the triple jump, with football crazy officials opting to travel that day to watch the Dream Team I in training ahead of its next game. At that time, Nigeria was a pariah nation due to the jackboot era of the late Sani Abacha. Yet, American newspapers splashed Ajunwa on their cover the next day. Ajunwa dominated the airspace, granting interviews. Dream Team I, Nigeria’s soccer team at the Atlanta ’96 Olympic Games, shook Georgia the night it lifted the gold medal, beating Argentina 2-3 in the finals. I recall how security operatives reeled out the names of Nwankwo Kanu, Austin Jay Jay Okocha et al after the games when they realised we were Nigerians.

    Nigeria couldn’t build on the window of opportunities available to our winners, especially the football side because we had a minister who ruled that the team shouldn’t be beaten. What a reason. This minister ensured that all requests from the countries that we beat for a rematch were rejected on spurious grounds. Had Nigeria accepted those games, our football would have gained immensely. Such needless intervention by the minister deters sponsors from identifying their goods and services with the industry. Twenty- three years on, nothing has changed. I sincerely hope that the new minister’s tenure will be different.

    It is unethical to gauge the country’s soccer growth from the prism of our foreign legion, especially where a higher percentage of this foreign-based players are Nigeria-born lads – no disrespect to their contributions to our growth in the last three decades. The domestic league is lying prostrate, with those charged to run the place bereft of ideas. Minister Sunday Dare will need to meet with the real owners of the clubs – governors – to appeal to them to constitute their management bodies, which should be peopled by technocrats who are adept in football administration, not cronies who see the clubs as another avenue for the boys to “chop-and-clean-mouth”.

    At the meeting with the governors, the minister should appeal to them to see the clubs as business concerns capable of increasing their states’ GDP and creating jobs, if the administrators know their onions. A club, which is properly run, can be effectively used to mobilise the people and keep youths off social vices. Governors can use these clubs as their Public Relations (PR) tools to influence people’s perception of their administrations, just as they can be used as the rallying point for government to educate the people on their actions – and inaction.

    The European transfer season ended on September 2. Clubs from the five big leagues splashed five billion pounds on recruitment of players to strengthen their teams. This is just a pointer to how much some of these clubs are worth. No club or even the body running the leagues can tell us how much clubs are worth. This is why our clubs can’t be taken to the Nigeria Stock Exchange (NSE). The league’s organisers, I dare say, are full of sycophants who won’t tell the leadership the truth – that the game is dead.

    It is sickening to read that the domestic league cannot throw up good players, simply because we have a league body that is indifferent to what happens to the senior side. Football crazy countries celebrate the emergence of new kids on the bloc, not the recycling of aged or forgotten stars on the altar of giving the coaches free hand to do their jobs.

    It is tragic that our local league competition has not begun, making the clubs vunerable to mass exodus of players whenever the transfer windows of serious-minded leagues open in January. This explains why our teams fumble during continental assignments, since they wouldn’t have played enough matches to become formidable sides that can fight for honours. We need to invigorate the operations of the league body, beginning with fresh elections into the league board. Parameters for voting into offices should be adhered to. The chairman of the league board should be a club boss, not what we have now.

    The minister will need to meet with firms who have embraced sports to know what problems they have with the federations. At that meeting, the firms should be told what they stand to benefit from sports sponsorship. After that, a dinner with the President, essentially for sports friendly firms, preferably early January.

    All sports federations should inform the minister how much they get as grants from their continental and international bodies. And this should include the Nigeria Olympic Committee (NOC). The era when administrators did what pleased them is gone. Grants should be effectively utilised by those who bring us glory – athletes and coaches.

  • Cazorla breaks down in tears after late penalty miss

     

    Santi Cazorla was left inconsolable on Sunday night after missing a penalty that would have lifted Villarreal out of the relegation zone.

    Villarreal were narrowly defeated 2-1 away by Real Betis, leaving them 18th in La Liga with just seven matches remaining.

    However, the visitors had a chance to grab an equaliser in the 89th minute from the penalty spot, with Cazorla the man to step up

    But the former Arsenal man – the boyhood Villarreal star disappointingly saw his spot-kick saved, hitting his penalty straight down the throat of Betis goalkeeper Pau Lopez.

    A draw would have taken Villarreal up to 17th place, one point above relegation rivals Valladolid. But instead, they slipped back into the relegation zone at a crunch point in what has been a very tough season.

    And following the match, Cazorla was heartbreakingly left in floods of tears inside the stadium as one of Villarreal’s management staff tried to console the playmaker.

    The 34-year-old, who has made a remarkable comeback from an achilles injury after 668 days out which nearly saw him lose his leg, will be determined to reverse his fortunes when The Yellow Submarine step onto the pitch next.

    Villarreal take on Valencia in the Europa League quarter-finals on Thursday, with the winner over the two legs set to face either Arsenal – Cazorla’s former club – or Napoli in the last-four.

    After that, Villarreal face Girona away with three points a necessity against a team not out of the relegation battle just yet.

     

  • Villarreal 1-1 Levante: Chukwueze dazzles in La Liga debut

    Super Eagles invitee, Samuel Chukwueze made his La Liga debut for Villarreal as Levante held the Yellow Submarines to a 1-1 draw. His compartiot at Levante Moses Simon was not dressed for the match.

    The 19 year-old, who played for Nigeria at under-17 level, was called-up to the Super Eagles by Gernot Rohr for the games against South Africa and Uganda later in the month.

    Chukwueze joined Villarreal youth setup in 2017, from local side Diamond Academy. After being initially assigned to the club’s Juvenil A squad, he made his senior debut with the reserves on 15 April 2018, coming on as a second-half substitute for Sergio Lozano in a 1–1 Segunda División B away draw against CE Sabadell FC.

    Chukwueze scored his first senior goal on 20 May 2018, netting his team’s second in a 3–1 away defeat of Bilbao Athletic.

    He contributed with two goals in 11 appearances during his first season.

    Chukwueze made his first-team debut on 20 September 2018 in a 2–2 UEFA Europa League home draw against Scottish giants Rangers, coming in for Nicola Sansone in the 79th minute and has played five times for the Valencia based club’s first team.

  • Semedo denied bail over murder charge

     

    Villarreal defender Ruben Semedo had an appeal for bail rejected as he awaits trial on a number of charges, including attempted murder.

    Semedo was arrested last month and was also charged with “illegal detention, illegal possession of weapons and robbery with violence”. He denies the allegations.

    A judge at Valencia’s Superior Court of Justice turned down an appeal for bail made by the Portugal Under-21 international’s lawyer on Thursday due to “an obvious risk to the integrity” of the alleged victim, while casting doubt on the version of events presented by the accused via video conference from prison in Picasent.

    Villarreal have suspended Semedo without pay. They signed the defender from Sporting CP in a €14million deal last June but he has only made five appearances this season.

    Portugal qualified for the world cup in Russia where they will face Spain, Morocco and Iran in the group stage.

    Semedo who has only played for Portugal at Under 20 and 21 levels probably would have had the opportunity of being called to the senior team but all that will only remain a dream as he battles his current charge.  He marked his debut for Portugal U- 21 on the 24th march 2016 with a goal, scoring the opener in a 4-0 home win against Liechtenstein for the 2017 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualifiers played in Ponta Delgada

     

  • Villarreal suspend Semedo for attempted murder

    Villarreal suspend Semedo for attempted murder

     

    Villarreal have suspended defender Ruben Semedo and taken him off their payroll a day after he was charged with offences including attempted murder and held in custody without bail.

    The 23-year-old defender was arrested on Tuesday for alleged involvement with others in holding a man who they threatened with a gun, according to media reports.

    ‘While always respecting the notion that everyone is innocent until proven guilty, the club has decided to suspend the player from duties without pay until the ongoing case has been settled,’ Villarreal said in a statement on their website.

    ‘Villarreal would like to show its horror at the grave crimes the player Ruben Semedo was charged with.’

    Semedo’s agent Catio Balde told Portuguese television network TSF on Wednesday that his client had been tricked.

    On Thursday, a judge ordered that Semedo be held in custody without bail for charges also including robbery and illegal possession of weapons.

    Semedo was transferred to Villarreal CF for €14 million On 7 June 2017. He made his La Liga debut on 25 August, playing the entire 0–3 away loss against Real Sociedad. In January 2018, it was announced that Semedo would be subjected to trial for an altercation in a bar in Valencia the previous November where he allegedly brandished a pistol and produced threats, while the Sporting player was nursing an injury. He was arrested again for a separate incident on 20 February, this time for supposedly tying up and assaulting a man in his home alongside two others, then proceeding to go to the victim’s house to burgle it.

  • LA LIGA TOUR:Rivers Utd to tackle Malaga, Villarreal

    LA LIGA TOUR:Rivers Utd to tackle Malaga, Villarreal

    Rivers United coach, Stanley Eguma has said his team are scheduled to play friendlies against Malaga and Villarreal during a training tour of Spain.
    “We will play Malaga and Villarreal,” said Eguma shortly after the Nigeria league runners-up landed in Madrid.
    The Rivers United delegation departed Nigeria Monday night and are in Spain for 10 days.
    The trip to Spain was part of the promises Rivers United Governor and Real Madrid fan Nyesom Wike made to the team after they finished behind Rangers this past season.
    At the weekend, they won the pre-season NPFL Super 4 tournament in Enugu ahead of champions Rangers.
    Both teams will represent Nigeria in next year’s CAF Champions League.

  • FC Astana 0-3 Villarreal: Ike Uche plays for 63 mins

    FC Astana 0-3 Villarreal: Ike Uche plays for 63 mins

    Ikechukwu Uche  starred for 63 minutes as Villarreal’s romped to a comprehensive 3-0 away win against FC Astana in a Europa Cup tie yesterday.

    The player who was snubbed by national team selectors for the upcoming qualifiers against Congo Brazzaville on September 6 – put in a decent performance as he made the starting line up for the Spanish side.

    Uche did not score but his runs created space for the his teammates as it opened up the Kazakhstani team for Cani to register the first goal of the game in the 33rd minute and Mexican International Giovani dos Santos followed with a lovely second at the resumption of the second half.

    The game turned sour for the home side as Marin Anicic saw a red card for two bookable offenses in the 60th minute and three minutes later Ik Uche was replaced by Luciano Dario Vietto.

    Villarreal sealed victory in the 84th minute when Mario Gasper put his effort beyond Nenad Eric in goal for FC Astana to end it 3-0.

  • Uche equals Finidi’s La Liga record

    Uche equals Finidi’s La Liga record

    Ikechukwu Uche has equaled the 11-goal mark of Finidi George after scoring twice for Villarreal on Monday night, MTNFootball.com reports.

    Uche’s double helped his side beat Real Sociedad 5-1. He scored Villarreal’s second goal of the game in the 27th minute and completed his brace in the 55th minute to give his team 4-0 lead.

    He thus becomes only the second Nigerian to score 11 goals in a single season in La liga after Finidi’s exploits in 1998/1999 season when playing for Real Betis.

    Villarreal is currently placed fifth on the league table with 34 points from 19 matches.

    Uche has scored 18 goals in 44 games for Super Eagles and he is expected to be recalled for the World Cup in June.

     

  • Villarreal coach hails fantastic Ike Uche

    Villarreal coach hails fantastic Ike Uche

    Villarreal boss Marcelino said he was delighted with Super Eagles ace, Ikechukwu Uche as well as the other players after their display in the 5-2 thrashing of Rayo Vallecano.

    Uche scored a hat-trick while Jeremy Perbet netted a brace to ensure a comfortable Sunday evening for the Yellow Submarines, who moved back into the European places on their return to the top flight after last season’s relegation.

    “I thought we played with pace, accuracy and confidence, yet I didn’t expect a performance such as this,” Marcelino told Onda Cero’s Al Primer Toque programme afterwards.

    “I’m delighted to have won 5-2 away from home at a ground that is not considered easy to come to.

    “Rayo are a team that press a lot and impose a very high rhythm in their matches, but we go away having played really well.

    “Our idea beforehand was to be organised and make our opponents feel uncomfortable. Then, we wanted to take advantage of the spaces Rayo would leave at the back because they get a lot of men behind the ball.

    “Overall I think we combined very well but I did not believe we would be at this level, although I have great trust in this squad.

    “I hoped for a lot from them but to be rubbing shoulders with the best teams, including the top three who we gave some trouble, even I did not expect.”