The subject of whether the Super
Eagles need a foreign hand in
tinkering them to success (relative to
the organisation’s goals) is not the
subject of this discourse.
But the position is that the Amaju
Pinnick-led Nigeria Football
Federation (NFF) does not have the
moral right to embark on picking a
manager for the
national team when
the person that held the post before
this selection process is currently
bickering with the federation over
unpaid emoluments.
It is not debatable that as a society
and a country, we must continuously
search for better answers for our
challenges, but Pinnick, and the head
of the technical committee, Chris
Green, going ahead to pick a new
manager for the national team is an
act so unjust and uncalled for; it is
odious!
NFF running without a
composite plan
We currently do not understand what
leadership model Pinnick is using to
run the federation but at this
moment, he must agree that things are
not going according to plan.
While some will claim that the
positives from the local league are as
a result of his positive leadership,
they would then ascribe the failures
of his tenure to a systemic
degeneration that has had a life span
of over 40 years.
My thought on leadership is that the
supposed leader must accept the rights
and the wrongs whilst formulating
policies to right the wrongs and
ensure that the right things get better.
The current leadership of the NFF has
created a maelstrom of discontent so
putrid that a simple breath of that
foul atmosphere could land one in the
emergency ward.
Borrowing from Greece [although
they are all borrowed out], where
their football has also alarmingly
nosedived is this quote by the country’s deputy
minister for sport, Stavros Kontonis. “The
maladministration problem, opacity and corruption
in Greek [Nigeria] soccer [football] are now well
known.”
That is as succinct as there can be a summarization
of the farce that Nigeria football has descended to.
Pinnick or Giwa? Who gives a damn?
At this point, I will desist from joining the debate on
who is right between Pinnick and Chris Giwa [he
supposedly said he could raise N20 billion for the
NFF] – the odium already generated is enough and
further dissection will seemingly lead us into
another cul-de-sac.
But what is the challenge?
A country with a passion for football so great that
betting and punting have reached astronomic levels
(about N2 billion a month) cannot get it right on
the pitch to harness this passion and the subsequent
Naira windfall is in very clear terms, a Joker!
There is so much for everyone to get a piece of but
greed and malice have so clouded eyes and minds
that partnership and teamwork have been jettisoned
for narrow-minded ambition.
But what is ambition without the sense of
community to build a strong football foundation in
Nigeria?
Here lies the carcass of the game called football and
the NFF would want us to believe that the problem
of football in Nigeria starts and stops with who
manages the national team?
Please spare us! There are greater issues and
challenges that have been left unshackled.
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