Tag: W’Cup mishap

  • W’Cup Mishap: Green passes vote of no confidence in  administrators

    W’Cup Mishap: Green passes vote of no confidence in administrators

    stakeholders call for reforms at Big Sports Dialogue :

    Rivers State Commissioner for Sports, Barr. Chris Green,  has delivered  a damning verdict  on the state of Nigerian football , saying incompetence at the heart of Nigerian football administration.

    Green, a former chieftain of the Nigeria Football Federation(NFF) , said as much in Lagos yesterday at The Big Sports Dialogue-a high-level forum that examined the nation’s declining sports systems and proposed strategic reforms- where majority of the stakeholders  have called for total reforms.

    In  attendance  at the event  are some of the bigwigs  in  the society and sports  including former Minister of Works and Housing, Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN), the Chairman of the  National Sports Commission (NSC) Shehu Dikko  and the commission’s  Director General , Bukola Olopade, as well as the Chairman of  National Institute Sports , Comrade Philip Shaibu, NFF board member, Aisa Falode , immediate past NFF President  Amaju Pinnick, Sports marketing expert, Mike Itemuagbor, top basketball promoter,  Igoche Mark , Dr. Reuben Abati of Arise TV and a host of other personalities.

    Convened by  broadcast journalist , Aron Akerejola of Arise TV , the dialogue was described as a bold response to the painful realities exposed by the Super Eagles’ recent World Cup Playoff collapse — a moment that laid bare deep cracks in governance, structure, leadership and athlete welfare.

    Dwelling on the  shoddy state of Nigerian football, Green argued that the current leadership lacked  the technical depth required to drive progress, saying many administrators “do not have the capacity, that cannot perform, that cannot hold their own.”

    He noted  that  football development has been restricted to a small circle of individuals, preventing qualified professionals from contributing.

     “The space is not open, if you open the space, people that are competent, people that have capacity can come in and help salvage what we have remaining in our football,” he noted.

    Read Also: W’Cup 2026: Toro hails NFF, stakeholders for Super Eagles’   playoff spot

     He also condemned the continuous recycling of the same personnel in key technical roles, noting: “If you are doing the same thing the same way, you still get the same result.”

    Meanwhile, former Lagos State Governor, Mr, Fashola  urged sports administrators to return to intentional planning and structural coherence.

    He referenced a previous Lagos policy that linked sports participation to school enrolment, noting it helped monitor talent and curbed age-cheating.

    “If you are not in school, you don’t  do sports,” Fashola said, even as he  emphasised the need for upgraded infrastructure, integration of sports science and nutrition and a functional connection between physical education teachers, state sports commissions and national programmes.

    Over all, participants agreed that Nigerian sports require urgent restructuring guided by professionalism, competence and long-term planning. They emphasised that only deliberate reforms—free of political interference—can restore Nigeria’s competitive edge on the continental and global stage.

  • FCTFA Chairman seeks long-term football reforms after W’Cup mishap

    FCTFA Chairman seeks long-term football reforms after W’Cup mishap

    By Victor Oguntade

    The Chairman of the Federal Capital Territory Football Association (FCT FA), Alhaji Adam Mouktar Mohammed, has expressed deep disappointment over the Super Eagles’ loss to the Democratic Republic of Congo in the Africa World Cup playoff final on Sunday night.

    Nigeria fell 4–3 on penalties after a 1–1 draw in regulation time at the Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium in Rabat, Morocco — a result that ended the country’s hopes of securing a World Cup ticket.

    Reacting to the defeat, Mohammed said the loss was painful for both the team and the nation, noting that Nigeria’s passion for football makes the outcome even more difficult to accept.

    “That Sunday‘s loss by the Super Eagles hurts deeply, and as Chairman of the FCT Football Association, I share in the national disappointment. A football-loving nation like ours feels this frustration,” he said.

    He commended the players for putting up a fight despite the circumstances, stressing that setbacks are part of the sport but the response afterward is what truly matters.

    According to him, the defeat should serve as a wake-up call for Nigerian football administrators, stakeholders, and institutions to strengthen the country’s football system from the grassroots up.

    Read Also: CAF Awards: Ajibade, Nnadozie lead Nigeria’s charge for women honours

    “This result must be a catalyst for change. We must move beyond relying on moments of brilliance and build a sustainable football system with strong technical foundations and a long-term strategy,” he noted.

    Mohammed urged Nigerians to channel their frustrations constructively rather than resort to harsh criticisms, adding that the national team needs unity and support to rebuild.

    He also reaffirmed the FCT FA’s commitment to contributing to what he described as “Nigeria’s football renaissance.”

    “Our story is far bigger than one result, and our identity as a football powerhouse remains intact,” he added.

    The Super Eagles now shift focus to future international engagements as conversations around structural reforms in Nigerian football continue to gather momentum.