Saturday, August 18, 2012

London 2012: The flip sides of a sad story



Abdullahi...what is way out of the woods

The untold truth: Nigeria’s best outing so far at the Olympics was recorded in the United States at the Atlanta 1996 Games where the country won two gold, one silver and two bronze medals. We had started attending the Olympics in 1952 at the Helsinki Games. Of the 23 medals we had won (two gold, nine silver and 12 bronze), which one was deliberately planned and worked for as it is in other nations of the world.
There is no medal we had won that was deserved because we worked for it. Check the medals again one after the other.
Unproductive factory: Nigeria has not been developing good athletes over the years  (except in Basketball, which was why she had a reservoir of athletes that qualified us for London) despite the fact that many of them could still be found at the grassroots.
Ndanusa...failed in tennis, heads NOC
Liars, journeymen managing sports federations: The various sporting federations are peopled with journey men. Many of them don’t know the rules of the game they administer. Many lie that they are spending their personal funds to run the Federation whereas we know of one who a former athlete (Rosa Collins borrowed money at the inception. So where did he get the money he claims he’s using to fund the federation?)
Outside of basketball, Scrabble and Chess I want to be corrected which sports federations can be considered as working. These are the only three sports federations in the Nigerian firmament that was and is working. Others exist for sharing appropriated funds and attending competitions without developing the athletes. They take old women and fathers to championships meant for kids including the Maputo All African Games.
The state sports councils: This is where the athletes are supposed to be produced are all moribund and practically dead. How many of them have people you can actually call coaches? Their funding is better described does not take care more than the recurrent overheads. Mot of the governors have no single interest in sports.
Sports journalists as the problem: This is one fact many will hate to admit is that the sports journalists are the biggest other problems of sports. Many of them are worse than illiterates. How many are experts in any single sport? Very few. We have such in basketball. Here, Joe Apu, Bamidele Kayode, Pius Ayinor, Segun Ikuesan and probably a few others have and show a firm grip.
No such expertise exist even in football. Our analysis are so warped and fluid. Our reportage does not elicit mastery. Our database and expertise of athlete information is archeulian. Not too far, they are belonging to camps that can pay for their ink and thought even if what they report is not true and pedestrian.
Ekeji...will his resignation change anything?
Despite the ‘bad’ outing of Nigeria in London, how many Nigerian journalists saw and reported the ‘good’ of the Nigerian teams?
As an individual, I have my grouses about the colossal mismanagement of Blessing Okagbare. The unmanaged Regina George. The unattended ones and the absence of professionalism in the entire structure of for example the Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN).
Where are the reporters who report the AFN? They were blinder than the bat. Even when some of us either by virtue of havinf ran the tracks saw and reported what we know, they will call you and urge you to join evil. Now evil has taken over and wants to sustain itself in our athletics, where are the reporters?
Did anyone saw that Blessing Okagbare with her insolence (to Nigerian journalists and the national coach, Innocent Egbunike) was untouchable and it was running in her head like cocaine?
Why did we not make headline news that she finished with a Personal and Season’s Best of 10:92 secs in the semi-finals to qualify for the finals of the 100m? Why did we not raise the alarm when her mis-managers were making her run so many unnecessary pre-Games races? We had failed on this anvil before. We need to learn how to read and write history.
The second silent but remarkable event is that of Muizat Ajoke Odumosu who ran 54.40seconds to set a new national record in the 400m hurdles.
Amaechi...Govs not interested in sports?
Patrick Ekeji: Ordinarily, we have been shocked to believe that no one resigns in Nigeria. We have also been forced to feel if a person fails a task, he should repeat the class and task. Why are people calling for Ekeji’s resignation? Will his resignation change anything in the NSC? Why are we not asking why the National Assembly (a supermarket for buying laws) not passed the Act to make the NSC a Commission? Unconfirmed sources told me and I believe when I was told the National Assembly asked for N30m before they can put the laws in place.
The NSC does not have athletes. They have not been able to effect a project to make the states effective and efficient. If we get the whole budget of Nigeria from the private sector, and the Federations are doing well, without the sports councils, we are on square one.
Assuming Ekeji leaves today, who takes over? What differences will that person bring to bear on the system? The problems are essentially fundamental, structural and has made the pyramid to sit on the sharp cone.
With a National Olympic Committee (NOC) managed by people who have roundly failed at the Federation level, what do we expect from that quarter? They collected money from the IOC for the preparation of the nation’s athletes, the monies disappeared into private pockets. May the soul of Alhaji Raheem Adejumo rest in absolute peace. Can we have such wonderful and committed people again and not hungry but jobless people who needed to survive on funds meant for sports?

Team Nigeria in Diaspora
SN
ATHLETE
NATION
EVENT
REMARKS
1
Innocent Emeghara
 Switzerland
Football

2
Foluke Akinradewo
Usa
Volleyball

3
Danielle Alakija
Fiji
400m

4
Anthony Alozie
Australia
4X100m

5
Haynes Akeem
 Canada
4x100m

6
Saheed Idowu
 Congo
Table Tennis

7
Ayodele Ikuesan
 France
4x100m

8
Oluwasegun Makinde
 Canada
4x100m

9
Ezinne Okparaebo
 Norway
100/200m

10
Chinyere Pigot
 Suriname
Swimming

11
Oluseyi Smith
 Canada
4x100m

12
Anthony Oluwafemi Olaseni Joshua
Great Britain

Gold
13
Christine Ohuruogu
 Great Britain
400m, 4x400m
Silver
14
Peter Bakare
Great Britain
Volleyball

15
Ifeoma Dieke
Great Britain
Football

16
Temi Fagbenle
 Great Britain
Basketball

17
Phillips Idowu
 Great Britain
Triple Jump

18
Marilyn Okoro
 Great Britain
4x400m

19
Lawrence Okoye
 Great Britain
Discus

20
Anyika Onuora
 Great Britain
100/200m

21
Andrew Osagie
 Great Britain
800m

22
Abiodun Oyepitan
 Great Britain
100m

23
Abdul Buhari
Great Britain
Discus

24
Anthony Ogogo
Great Britain


25
Eniola Aluko
Great Britain
Football

  



1 comment:

  1. In my view and I hate to say it those "journalist" are too afraid to bite the hands they feed on. Think about public relation fees, I don't blame them...But am more astonished when no single journalist approached Solomon Ogba for his view on Nigeria's athletics death at the Olympics when Ogba was their darling prior to the Olympics. In fact this man went to Jerusalem supposedly on his own personal venture, the newspaper reported this trip as news and the Olympics is not news? I wonder O..

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