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Nigeria’s Super Eagles 1, South Korea 2

August 11, 2010 By: babalobi Category: nigeria news

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The Super Eagles of Nigeria lost 1-2 to the South Korean football team in an International friendly played this afternoon at Suwon World Cup Stadium
Debutant Yoon Bitgaram and Choi Hyo-jin gave South Korea the two goals victory over Nigeria  this Wednesday.

The 20-year-old Yoon struck after just 17 minutes in the friendly match, a repeat of the 2010 World Cup group game which ended 2-2, eliminating Nigeria and sending South Korea into the round of 16.

Yoon was one of four players to make his South Korean debut under new coach Cho Kwang-rae and justified his inclusion when flicking the ball past a defender and smashing in a shot from just inside the area.

Peter Odemwingie headed an equalizer for Nigeria shortly after but four minutes before the break, Manchester United star Park Ji-sung slipped the ball through for Choi to fire the winning goal.

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Nigerian Coach rejects new contract

August 09, 2010 By: babalobi Category: nigeria news

Swedish coach Lars Lagerback is not keen on continuing as the Coach of  the Nigerian Football Team and has turned down an offer for a renewal of  his contract

Lagerback led Nigeria to the World Cup, but despite managing just one point from three games, was offered a fresh four-year deal.

NFF spokesman Robinson Okosun said that the Swede sent in the letter early this week

“He said he was not keen on taking up the offer even though he enjoyed his time in Nigeria,” Okosun said.

Samson Siasia, who led the Under-23 team to silver medal placings at the 2008 Olympic Games and 2005 Under 20 World Cup tournaments, is the favourite to take over.

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Nigeria: Korean wants failed Super Eagles ’stars’

July 21, 2010 By: babalobi Category: nigeria news

The Korean Football Association has requested that the Nigerian national team bring at least half of their World Cup squad for a friendly in Seoul in August.

The ‘Super Eagles’ nickname of the Nigerian National Team, had a disastrous World cup outing losing two of their group matches and drawing the third with the South Korean National team (more…)

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Nigeria football: Way forward

July 18, 2010 By: Our Correspondent Category: Sports, nigeria, nigeria news

The proprietor of Bussdor United football club of Port Harcourt, Oscar Igbokwe, has called on the minister of sports, to convene a meeting of sponsors of private football clubs in the country.

Igbokwe,who is also the President of Bussdor group of companies, told sportswriters in Port Harcourt over the weekend that he had written a letter to the minister for an urgent action on the state of football in the country. (more…)

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2010 World cup: Nigeria may escape FIFA Ban

July 04, 2010 By: Olaleke Category: football, nigeria, nigeria news

THE Federation of International Football Association (FIFA) Executive Committee member, Nigeria’s Dr. Amos Adamu, yesterday declared that FIFA has been briefed by the committee to stay action on the imminent ban on Nigerian football following the political interference in the country’s football. (more…)

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Nigerian Football Federation impeaches President

July 04, 2010 By: babalobi Category: nigeria news

Sani Lulu

Ahead of an impeding ban by FIFA, the President of the country’s Football Federation, Sani Lulu Abdullahi has been impeached along with first Vice President Amanze Uchegbulam and Technical Committee Chairman Chief Taiwo Ogunjobi.

Nine of the 13 members of the NFF Executive Committee,  met and voted to impeach the leadership of the soccer house, sacked last week by President Goodluck Jonathan. (more…)

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Nigeria and implications of a FIFA ban

July 04, 2010 By: babalobi Category: nigeria news

These are the implications of a FIFA ban on Nigeria as compiled by MTNFootball.com

1) None of Nigeria’s teams or clubs will feature in international tournaments for the time the ban is in effect. These will be tournaments organised by FIFA, CAF and even the sub-regional WAFU of which Nigeria’s Amos Adamu is president.

This will also affect friendly matches versus other FIFA members as well as invitational tournaments involving international teams. The immediate competitions to be affected should the Nigerian government stick to its guns are the 2012 and 2013 Africa Cup of Nations, 2011 African youth Championship, 2011 African Junior Championship, 2010 African women’s Championship.

Also, to be affected will be the 2010 CAF Champions League which Heartland have qualified for the group phase, while Enyimba will forfeit their CAF Confederation Cup play-off with Zanaco of Zambia with the first leg due to be played on July 17.

2) Nigeria will be fined heavily for pulling out of competitions they have already qualified, that would be the FIFA Under-20 and Under-17 World Cups for women, as well as the CAF Champions League and Confederation Cup.

3) The suspension also means that transfers of players from the domestic league to the international leagues will be suspended.

4) FIFA-graded Nigerian referees will not handle matches outside the country even in next-door Cotonou.

5) Nigeria will be barred from attending coaching and administrative courses, seminars and workshops on account of this ban.

6) FIFA and CAF grants will be forfeited by Nigeria.

7) As a result of the country’s inactivity internationally, Nigeria’s FIFA ranking will plummet to an all-time low. The bigger implication is that when the country finally decide to the FIFA fold, they would have to do a lot more to get back to get within the top 30 in the world.

FIFA rankings are employed to seed teams for major competitions. A low FIFA ranking would work against Nigerian players in a league like the English Premier League because the granting or renewal of a work permit there is based on, among other things, a country’s FIFA ranking.

8) Frustrated Nigerian players will be forced to change nationality so as to play for other countries. Already, neighbouring countries like Togo and Benin have begun shopping for some promising Nigerian talent.

9) The sponsorship for national teams will equally be put on hold. These sponsorship agreements include those of adidas, Guinness, TomTom, Coca-Cola and Peak Milk.

10) FIFA Goal Project 2 will also be suspended.

11) Nigeria, who have been placed on standby to host the 2012 Nations Cup, will not step in to stage the tournament should Gabon and Equatorial Guinea be found unsuitable to host. South Africa could well replace Nigeria in this regard.

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Nigeria and 2010 World Cup

July 04, 2010 By: Olaleke Category: football, nigeria, nigeria news

Written by Joe Igbokwe

I remember precisely that when Nigeria qualified for the World Cup last year, the Governor of Lagos State, His Excellency Babatunde Raji Fashola took time off in our Monthly Physical Planning Meeting to say that he feared that things might go wrong because there were no preparations. The Governor, himself a football player, and an ardent lover of the world number one sporting event feared that Nigeria may go to South Africa to concede goals that will bring shame to the football loving nation and Africa. Governor Fashola understands that going to the World Cup is no tea party. (more…)

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Nigeria Government and World cup 2010

July 02, 2010 By: babalobi Category: football, nigeria, nigeria news, politics

In France and Nigeria, politicians have stepped out of line by acting as though their national teams’ World Cup disasters are major affairs of state that should divert them from other, truly vital issues of life. They are not. And pretending otherwise just smacks of political opportunism.

If soccer players need to apologize to anyone for on- and off-field performances, then it is to their longtime supporters — to the ordinary men, women and kids who root for them, not to politicians whose sudden interest in the misfortune of a national squad is suspiciously timed.

Yes, Nigeria had a poor World Cup. It hasn’t won a World Cup match since 1998 and again went without a victory this time.

But no, that doesn’t mean Nigerian players should now be made to sit in disgrace in a corner, banned from taking part in any international soccer for the next two years — which is what the West African nation’s president, Goodluck Jonathan, has decreed.

“The nation has been punished enough. Enough,” said Rotimi Amaechi, head of a presidential task force on the nation’s World Cup team. “People have had heart attacks, people have had all sorts of issues because of Nigerian football. We now want to reorganize and get back to what it used to be when it was the pride of the nation.”

Sounds serious. Way too serious, in fact. Losing is as much a part of sports as winning. Nigeria’s government should perhaps be explaining that simple fact to disappointed fans not whipping up emotions by taking an extreme view of defeat. The hundreds of death threats that were e-mailed to midfielder Sani Kaita after he collected a red card in Nigeria’s 2-1 loss to Greece showed how ugly things can get when soccer passions spill over.

Media reports out of Nigeria say the government will also be investigating allegations of soccer corruption there — there’s nothing wrong with that if the probe has no hidden political motives. And the government won’t be faulted if it catches soccer bosses with their hands in the till and misspending money that should have gone toward the sport.

But the best way to get the national team, dubbed the Super Eagles, to play better can hardly be by stopping it from playing at all. Two years out of international soccer, if it really comes to that, would mean Nigerian players missing the next African Cup of Nations and perhaps even the 2012 Olympic Games. That hardly seems likely to position them nicely for the next World Cup in Brazil in 2014, if they even qualify.

Whether the Nigerian president really does have the power to clip the wings of the Super Eagles, who are not meant to take their orders from government, remains to be seen. But the end result may be the same if soccer’s international governing body, FIFA, determines that Jonathan is sticking his nose into matters that shouldn’t concern him. FIFA takes a very dim, if at times also selective, view of political meddling in soccer and could respond by suspending Nigeria. That would mean no international soccer for all Nigerian teams, including clubs.

France’s government is also making a political mountain of the national team’s World Cup fiasco. France’s players made fools of themselves by rebelling against their coach Raymond Domenech and the French Football Federation at the World Cup, even refusing to practice one day. And French lawmakers have subsequently looked foolish, too, by acting as if this really is a major issue for France.

They grilled Domenech and outgoing federation president Jean-Pierre Escalettes on Wednesday. But they let the pair off the hook by holding the hearing behind closed doors. That was unfair to fans, because instead of speaking to lawmakers, to whom they owe no explanation, Domenech and Escalettes should have spoken to and apologized directly to the French public — which they still have not fully done.

None of this is to say that soccer players and officials shouldn’t be held accountable — to fans — when they play or act poorly. And politicians of course should have a say when matters in sports go beyond the field of play. That could be the case with doping, for example, which is both a sports and a public health issue.

But let’s not turn World Cup players into political footballs just because they disappoint.

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Nigeria: Haruna happy to be named Best player in World cup

July 01, 2010 By: Olaleke Category: nigeria news

AS Monaco of France youngster, Lukman Haruna is happy at being named Nigeria’s best player in the disbanded Super Eagles’ ill-fated appearance at the World Cup in South Africa.

The youngster is not carried away as he has said was capable of doing a lot more.

Following high ratings by FIFA and independent pundits, the former Golden Eaglets and ex-Flying Eagles skipper admitted that he is excited to be named best among Nigeria’s misfiring lot to the Mundial, but says he aims to put in more effort in order to improve with each passing outing in the green-and-white.

Haruna was one of the surprise inclusions in Nigeria’s 2010 World Cup squad, after three brilliant performances in pre-competition international friendlies, then went on to start against Argentina and Greece.

Using their Castrol Index, FIFA rated Haruna as Nigeria’s best player at the tournament and the youngster says going to the World Cup has made him a better player.

“It’s great for me to play at the highest level of football. Of course, it’s a dream come true and I’m ready to work hard to remain a key member of the Super Eagles for years to come,” he promised.

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