Kuwait Times

Nigerian bags World Scrabble title, in first for Africa

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Cowboy-hat wearing Wellington Jighere from Nigeria crushed his English opponent 4 - 0 at the World Scrabble Championsh­ip in Australia to become first African to bag the word game’s global title. Jighere was among more than 120 competitor­s who travelled to Perth for the World English-language Scrabble Players’ Associatio­n Championsh­ip, which culminated in Sunday’s best-of-seven final against England’s Lewis Mackay. “He had to battle for four days to emerge on top but once he got there-maybe he was a little fresher, or got a bit of luckeveryt­hing fell into place for him and he won four-nil,” Adam Kretschmer, one of the organizers of the event, told AFP of Jighere’s effort.

The Nigerian used such high-scoring words as “fahlores”, “avouched” and “mentored” as he puzzled his way to victory. “It is the first time that an African has won in these world championsh­ips,” Jighere told The Guardian after the win. But he conceded that: “Nigel is still the master. It just happens that today was my day.”

It was a reference to New Zealander Nigel Richards who dominates English-language Scrabble, with three world championsh­ips, five North American titles and 11 wins at the prestigiou­s King’s Cup in Thailand, sponsored by the Thai royal family. Richards stunned the francophon­e world in July when he also won the game’s French version even though he doesn’t speak the language and only spent nine weeks studying the official Scrabble dictionary. A trained engineer, Richards reportedly began playing Scrabble at 28 at the request of his mother, who was frustrated that his photograph­ic memory was making their card games too one-sided.

But he proved dazzling at the word game, even though he favored mathematic­s at school and was never much of an English student. A rival New Zealand Scrabbler once said Richards was “like a computer with a big ginger beard”, while Malaysian tournament organizer Michael Tang has called him “the Tiger Woods of Scrabble”. On Facebook, Jighere admitted that the Perth tournament-in which each player had played 32 games over four days before the finalists were decided-had been exhausting. “I really must endeavor to rest now,” he posted late Sunday. “I’ve not slept well in about a week. The fact that I was able to perform in spite of the sleeplessn­ess still baffles me. It only goes to prove that God was deeply involved in this matter.”— AFP

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