With
the 2017/18 football season now ended and attention now on the biggest
soccer fiesta – the FIFA World Cup in Russia, big money is already
chasing after players around the world as clubs are keen on fortifying
themselves. Kunle Adewale, in this report, asks when will
the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) produce players that
would attract global attention in terms of transfer fee?
At
the beginning of the ending season, the football world was agog with
the news of Brazilian football superstar Neymar’s £200 million transfer
move from FC Barcelona to Paris Saint-Germain, and to some, ‘football
had gone crazy’. This, however, raises questions on why Nigeria local
footballers could not also attract some reasonable transfer to big
European leagues and generate money to the Nigeria Football Federation
(NFF) vis-à-vis the country.
Up
till the mid-90s, soccer fans in Nigeria looked forward to weekends, so
as to watch their darling teams and favourite football stars, and the
stadiums were always jam packed. It would take a miracle for a fan to
get a seat at the UAC, as Teslim Balogun Stadium was then called, or the
Onikan Stadium if the fan were not seated by 2pm for a game billed for 4pm,
especially if the game involved clubs like Enugu Rangers, IICC Shooting
Stars, Bendel Insurance, Abiola Babes or Leventis United. But not
anymore.
Those
were the days when a player would play in the Nigerian league this
weekend and the following weekend he’s donning the colours of an
European league without going through trials.
It
is on record that former Super Eagles winger, Finidi George, played in
the colours of Ajax Amsterdam without going through trials, a week after
he played for Calabar Rovers in the local league.
Many
Nigerians were shocked at seeing Atlanta 1996 Olympic gold medalist,
Dosu Joseph, in the colours of Italian Serie A side, Reggina, two weeks
after staying between the sticks for Julius Berger in a league game in
Lagos.
But
for a Nigerian player to play for an average European club now, he must
go through series of trials, because Nigeria league is little or
nothing to write home about. Unlike before when it was at per with the
Belgian league and close to the Dutch league.
Proprietor
of second division side, AS Racine, Emmanuel Ibru, attributed lack of
security, poor officiating and nonexistence of local rivalries as the
bane of Nigerian league, which he said were also some of the reasons why
fans had decided to shun league matches in the country.
“For
fans to return to the stadium, their security must be guaranteed. They
must be sure of their safety such that one can bring his family to the
stadium without any molestation from Area Boys (miscreants). Until then
our league will still be in shambles.
“The
lack of local rivalries competing in league has also taken the shine
off the league. Those days in Lagos, there were rivalries among
Stationery Stores, NEPA, ACB and Julius Berger; in Ibadan, the city
stood still whenever IICC was taking on Water Corporation and later
Leventis United. So too in Benin, when Bendel Insurance and New Nigeria
Bank confronted each other. Rangers versus P&T Vasco Dagama was
always a cracker.
“All
these clubs had huge followership and therefore fans could not wait for
the weekend to come and watch their idols play,” Ibru noted.
The
bad state of our pitches has also not helped in developing the
country’s football. Most of the pitches are in terrible shape due to
lack of maintenance, which does not allow for free flow of football.
What would be the end products of these kinds of pitches are quite
obvious.
As
a matter of fact, some states even resorted to using synthetic pitches,
which analysts say are only good for television but not football.
In a chat with THISDAY, former Nigerian international Segun Odegbami berated the use of artificial field in various stadiums
“One
of the biggest problems confronting Nigerian football is the artificial
pitches everywhere now. They are only good for viewership and
television but they are not good enough for football and football
development.
“With
artificial pitches you cannot play attractive football and you pick
injuries very easily. If we don’t go back to the days when we had good
lush green pitches, which allowed for good football and go back to
secondary school football, which allowed administrators of football to
pick from the very best, I’m afraid Nigeria would continue to struggle
against small football nations.
“Look
at the best football nations in the world you don’t find artificial
pitches all over like you see here in Nigeria,” Odegbami said.
Another
major problem confronting Nigeria football is the issue of poor
officiating; teams could hardly go away and win. Home teams are almost
sure of winning. “When we all know that it is the host team that would
win, then why go to the stadium,” Ibru queried.
Nigeria
football also lacks good administrators that could really drive the
country’s football to where it’s supposed to be. Administrators had been
seen engaged in legal battles rather than concentrating on
administrative business.
According
to Odegbami, the foundation of Nigerian football was rock solid when he
(Odegbami) was an active participant in football in the country from
the early 70’s up till the turn of the ’80s.
“After
the Moscow Olympics in 1980, then arise some avoidable and unnecessary
developments which occurred that started to rock that solid foundation
and it all started with the unceremonious removal of Mr. Isaac Akioye as
the Director of Sports. He was the one with the training skills in
sports that established the solid foundation.
“He
also trained and hired people who were to sustain the development. So,
when he was removed in 1981 it set up a catalytic situation and those
who took over from him, though tried to sustain what was on ground but
the turnover of personnel in the administration of sports, especially
football, in Nigeria became accelerated and it became more watery.
“By
the time we got to the beginning of 1990 it was so watered down, though
the effect of that solid foundation was still strong to sustain sports
development but by the early 90’s it became less in terms of human
capacity.
“Though,
we were still winning laurels but the fact remains that the
administrators that came in thereafter did not have the original vision
of the initial founders. And by the time we got to the late 1990 the new
administrators that succeeded came in with their own shallow vision and
so the quality of the game started to drop, so much so that we no
longer could recognise the original foundation.
“There
is no longer any connection between the original foundation and where
we are now. We are just drifting; there is no clear vision and direction
again. All the things that were initially built are now lost,” Odegbami
lamented.
The NFF also have no record of the number of football academies that exist in the country, hence, no proper monitoring.
That
is why a player could leave an academy to be signed-on by a European
club without the football governing body having any knowledge of it and
therefore gets nothing on the player. All the financial gains go to the
football agents.
“We
don’t have football academies in Nigeria. The only academy I know in
Nigeria that is coming up is the Kwara Football Academy in Ilorin. That
is one of the reasons we are still behind in football today in this
country. We should stop deceiving ourselves. The truth is that there is
no football academy in country. Everybody is claiming to have an academy
and yet they cannot boast of ordinary camp. So you can see that we are
not there yet,” former Nigeria international, Friday Elaho, noted.
Top
North African clubs like Al Ally and Zamalek, both of Egypt, Raja
Casablanca, Morocco and the likes boast standard training grounds and
club houses, which are well maintained courtesy of money made from
players they ship to European clubs.
Enyimba
of Aba striker, Ezekiel Bassey, secured a loan move to the B-team of FC
Barcelona in January, though he was shipped back to Enyimba after
failing to make the cut at Barcelona. However, during the deal, nothing
was mentioned on how much was really involved, how much Enyimba was
going to get and how much would go the pause of the NFF.
Currently,
the most attractive player in the Nigeria League is Kano Pillars’
marksman; Junior Lokosa, with 18 goals in 20 league matches and has gone
off to Bulgaria to have his medical and fitness tests with Ludogorets.
But by the time he finally joins the club, nothing would be heard about
his sign-on fee, weekly earnings and how much accrues to his local club
viz-a-viz the football federation.
“You
should know the mentality of Nigerian players once they are contacted
by any European club. They and their agents will put pressure on you to
allow them to go,” Chairman of Kano Pillars Tukur Babangida said.
Unlike
when Neymar was leaving his boyhood club, Santos, for Barcelona for
£48.7m, all the cards were put on the table, viz-a-viz when he left the
Catalan club for PSG for a whooping sum of £200m.
It
is a shame that in this clime, sports is still seen as recreation
rather than big business. It is therefore not surprising that out of the
20 clubs in the Nigeria top division, 16 are owned by government.
State
governors see these clubs as a way of greasing their political
machinery and a way of compensating some of their supporters rather than
making the clubs vibrant and turn them into money making machines.
Until
football academies in the country are properly registered, managed and
monitored, talents would continue to leave Nigeria to Europe without the
federation getting a whiff of the money.
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