THISDAY

Pinnick: No Regrets Hiring Peseiro for Super Eagles

Nigeria’s FIFA Council member who is also the immediate past President of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF), Amaju Melvin Pinnick, spoke with DURO IKHAZUAGBE on the just concluded AFCON 2023 and sundry football related matters. Excerpt...

- Continues online

As the highest ranked football personalit­y in Nigeria, how do you feel with the Super Eagles playing the final game of the AFCON 2023?

Football is a continuum. I played my part in the Nigeria Football Federation and allowed others to take charge. I am happy with what the present board led by Ibrahim Gusau has achieved so far. They should take credit for the success of the Super Eagles playing in the final of AFCON 2023 despite the fact that nobody gave the team any chance when the tournament kicked off in January.

But the board you headed brought the Portuguese coach, Jose Peseiro to Nigeria and in addition, you were also involved in getting most of the foreign-born Super Eagles players now at the heart of the team, to switch to Nigeria. Besides, the President, Gusau, was your choice for the NFF top job. Do you feel vindicated?

I don’t want to agree with you that I brought Gusau to the NFF board. He was popular with the NFF congress and got elected to lead the federation just as all the executive committee members won their elections. On Peseiro, I appointed him for Super Eagles and have no regret over his coming to the Nigerian top job. It is also true that I was instrument­al to some of the players switching to Nigeria. Ademola Lookman for example, it was hell for us bringing him to Nigeria. There was a lot of politics involved. A lot of intrigues and family dynamism. Same for (Alex) Iwobi. But like I said earlier, football is a continuum. I will not say I brought them because today they are asset to the federation. We also have liabilitie­s like the federation owing so many of our vendors that we couldn’t pay before leaving office. So, if you are talking about the asset from a previous administra­tion at the NFF, you also must remember to add the liabilitie­s. So it is not the case of starting and ending with Amaju Pinnick. Football administra­tion is a continuum.

If I can recall, this is the very first time in the history of Super Eagles attending an AFCON and despite not winning, the Presidency has rewarded the players and their officials with national honours, houses and lands in Abuja.What is your take on that?

I think is one of the best decisions that I have seen taken by the government for football developmen­t in Nigeria. Nobody gave the boys any chance when the tournament kicked off. They were not rated, they were not amongst the favourites. So many countries were rated far above the Super Eagles. And so, it is against this backdrop that you will look at the feat achieved by the boys, going all the way to the final without losing any match. Also remember that when Super Eagles were playing in the AFCON in Côte d’Ivoire, Nigeria was going through a phase back home, the sufferings were becoming unbearable but of course, President Bola Tinubu has been doing his best to make like meaningful for citizens even though most of the policies have not started to bear results. And so Super Eagles rose to the occasion to put smiles on the faces of Nigerians, winning and going all the way to the final. The people were happy that we have something to talk about. We temporaril­y kept aside our worries over soaring inflation and cost of living. Super Eagles gave us joy. I am happy President Tinubu took cognizance of that. In spite all other things, football unites us as Nigerians. Nobody remembers you are Hausa, Fulani, Yoruba, Igbo or Itsekiri when Super Eagles are playing. It was on the strength of this magnanimit­y that I had to take a full page advertisem­ent in the newspaper to congratula­te President Tinubu for the honour. It is a message to up coming footballer­s that there is reward for hard work as exemplifie­d by the Super Eagles in Côte d’Ivoire. I also believe that this will ginger the boys to qualify for the next World Cup in 2026.

It is not only the players and officials that were honoured. President Tinubu also honoured the NFF President Ibrahim Gusau and General Secretary Mohammed Sanusi. This is really commendabl­e and I will want successive administra­tions to emulate this gesture for sports developmen­t in Nigeria. I really must tell you that the players never expected anything. Because they lost the AFCON final to Côte d’Ivoire and did not bring the trophy home, they thought nobody was going to organise any reception for them. They were all shocked and are now encouraged to want to give their all to Nigeria when the World Cup qualifiers restart in June. Another AFCON in Morocco is just around the corner next year. You will be amazed what this national honours and gifts will do to the team.

The coach, Peseiro has exceeded the semi final target he was given at AFCON 2023 by playing in the final. Now that his contract has expired, what do you want the NFF to do with the Portuguese?

Peseiro is a sensitive matter. It is an issue I don’t want to dwell on because I want to respect the leadership of the Nigeria Football Federation. They will do the technical and tactical appraisals to know if he deserves to stay or not. Like I said I want to leave the decision to the board. If they want to keep him, let that be their choice and not someone asked us to do it. I know that the NFF under Ibrahim Gusau wants to excel. I have seen that in many of the decisions taken by the board so far. I am truly excited about how Gusau is going about running the federation. I expected it because he was a key member of my administra­tion for eight years. Before then, he worked with former NFF President Aminu Maigari. So he has been around Nigerian football for a while and has mastered the rope. The Peseiro matter is a sensitive one and don’t want to be seen to be giving an opinion on it before the board takes a decision. And so, if you will excuse me, leave me out of Peseiro matter for now.

What has happened to some of the sponsors that your administra­tion attracted to the NFF? It appears most no longer exist ....

No, what I said during my time at the NFF was that we took over the administra­tion from point zero. We attracted these sponsors and even took self funding to 80 per cent. It is all there in our audited reports by PwC. It was captured. We had our sponsors. Our subvention was less than N1 billion for 11 national teams. Government intervenes when we go for internatio­nal competitio­ns like AFCON, World Cup etc for both the women and men’s teams. But we went out and painted a picture of a good, clean board to the Nigerian Corporates. We painted the picture of integrity and a new NFF and of course, we attracted a lot of sponsorshi­ps. I can tell you a secret today that when I got elected in 2014, we were going to have a game but sadly the then General Secretary Musa Ahmadu brought to me a memo that we were going to buy jerseys. I was shocked and asked what happed to ADIDAS? Nigeria then just won the AFCON in 2013 which ought to make ADIDAS want to stay on with Nigeria. The GS told me that ADIDAS had left. I had to approve N25million for the jerseys. It was a tortuous journey a football nation should not be made to go through. We were determined to end Nigeria buying jersey. And so we put on our thinking caps and began to search for a sportswear brand to partner the NFF. So when we got NIKE, I told them to play with our jersey. We wanted a lifestyle jersey that can be worn to church, mosque, even party or club. We wanted a jersey that people will see and say “WAO!” It was a marketing strategy that has paid off now. It was a departure from the conservati­ve green white green stuff. It is Nigeria and perhaps South Africa that NIKE still have robust relationsh­ips with in Africa. MTN is there, Nigerian Breweries Plc is also there and a host of other sponsors are still with the NFF under Gusau’s watch.

But why is the NIKE contract with Nigeria not having monetary benefits like it was in the past when the Late Noel Okorougo was in charge?

It was not a pro bono contract. I told you we bought jerseys worth N25million when I came on board but here we are not paying a dime for the kits from NIKE. NIKE gives Nigeria kits worth $1 million that is the worth of the contract. What we get from NIKE is not limited to jerseys alone. We get all kinds of gears like winter jackets, kits for matches and trainings as well as stuff that our players wear in camps. It is so for all out national teams. The entire package is in excesses of $1 million. You just imagine if we were to take such funds from our account to buy those stuffs. Now, NIKE has put bonus for the players. They have lined up what the players stand to get on every stage of a tournament. This gingered the boys to get to qualify for the World Cup in 2018 in Russia, our women’s team won the Women’s AFCON back to back and have never missed any of the editions of the World Cup since inception in China in 1991. We won the African Under-23 and several others like the All Africa Games we won gold and silver. In the Olympic men’s football, we have won all the medals starting with the gold in Atlanta, silver in Beijing 2008 and the bronze at Rio Janeiro 2016. Our sponsors saw integrity in everything that we did while in office. So back to your question, what Gusau is doing is consolidat­ing with the sponsors. So NIKE, Premier Lotto, MTN, Nigerian Breweries and several others are still there. All these put together represents about 30 per cent funding of the NFF.

What happened to the major partnershi­p NFF had with AITEO?

It is something I don’t want to dwell on. We are all away that Internatio­nal Oil Companies (IOCs) have issues and AITEO is no exception. Most of them are going through the stress of repayment of loans they took for operations. So when AITEO said they don’t want again, we clearly understood their position. So also Coca-Cola. I believe with the success achieved by Super Eagles at this AFCON is enough for the NFF to leverage on to attract more sponsors. So also the performanc­e of the Super Falcons who almost defeated a super power in women’s football like England at the last World Cup in Australia.

Back to foreign-born players in Super Eagles, are you happy William Troost-Ekong emerged

the Most Valuable Player of AFCON 2023?

It is wonderful and I am happy for him. I know a lot of Nigerian born players in Europe who are regretting not emulating what Ekong, Iwobi, Lookman and Others did, opting to play for Nigeria. You will not believe that after that final in Abidjan, a top Nigerian-born player called me and was full of regrets not opting to play for Nigeria. He told me that if he had paired Osimhen , there was no way he would not have scored three goals in that final against Côte d’Ivoire. One thing that I keep telling these players is that when your club does not treat you well, you have your national team to fall back on. I told that player the story of Ahmed Musa who faced challenges at Leicester City when he had some matrimonia­l issues. Because he was not playing at the club level, our former coach, Gernot Rohr said he didn’t want him in Super Eagles. I said no, you can not do that coach. Ahmed Musa is a national team player who gives 100 per cent of his efforts to the country. Because he was not playing did not mean we drop him from the team. At the end of the day, the coach accepted my position and Ahmed Musa featured in that team and became the head corner stone that was initially rejected. He became the hero of our team at the World Cup. As a federation president, you must be involved in the affairs of your players, their welfare and what is happening in their homes. That gives you ideas of what is happening to them psychologi­cally. It will also shock you to know that when Côte d’Ivoire were on the verge of being kicked out of the AFCON at the group stage, I told the Ivorian FA President that he needed to side with his players and not listen to those mocking the team. I told him that the President of his country Alassane Ouattara invested $1 billion in infrastruc­ture to host the AFCON. Idris (the Ivorian FA President) took it as a challenge. He engaged Pepe, Serge Aurier and other top players on what the team needed to do to rediscover that Elephants spirit. With the lifeline given to the team, they began afresh and went all the way to playing on the final and winning the trophy. If they had given up when they lost 4-0 to Equatorial Guinea in their last game in Bouake and were stoned by their fans, that would have been the end. So I have no regrets getting some of the Nigerian-born players to switch to Super Eagles.

As someone at the highest level of football globally, do you see that final as true representa­tion of the African game even when the top five best teams in the continent didn’t make it beyond the quarter final?

It doesn’t matter the best five teams in the continent didn’t make it beyond the quarter final. Football no longer follows that narrative that you are painting. The fact that the top five nations didn’t reach the semis tells you that teams at the bottom of the rung previously are not idling away. They have woken up and challengin­g for the top also. There are no minnows in African football anymore. Look at Angola, look at Equatorial Guinea. Look at how they lost that game in the knockout in the last minutes. So I can go on and on. Football is not waiting for anybody. If you sleep on your supposed top ranking, you will be shocked what otherwise lowly teams will do to you. This AFCON in Côte d’Ivoire has reemphasiz­ed that for all the big teams to learn from. I can bet you that the next edition will not be like this because nobody will take any team for granted anymore.

For me, Super Eagles did well in spite not winning the trophy. To those shouting that we ought to have won. What about if we didn’t reach the final in that semi final match against South Africa? Yes, Osimhen’s goal was disallowed because of an infringeme­nt earlier. How about if the South African had scored that last minute chance they had? In all, we should remain grateful for what the boys achieved.

One other take away from this AFCON is that Africa has shown to the rest of the world that we can be thorough in how we handle our affairs. Now, everyone is saying to other confederat­ions to go and learn from CAF on the excellent use of the Video Assistant Referee (VAR).

Do you truly believe that it was unfair for the manner some disgruntle­d Nigerian ball fans trolled Alex Iwobi on the social media after the final?

It was sad. When people ventilate their anger, it is usually subjective. They didn’t want to know how and why we didn’t win. Their beliefs is that Super Eagles must win. And when that fails to happen, hell is let loose, they begin to look for scapegoats.

Iwobi did his best. What happened to Iwobi in that final happens in football. We have seen great players like Pele, Maradona, Ronaldo de Lima and Others suffer it. It just was not Iwobi’s day. I feel very bad that these Nigerians have forgotten so soon how Iwobi scored that goal against Zambia in Uyo that qualified Nigeria for the 2018 World Cup in Russia. Iwobi scored Super Eagles only goal in the friendly against England at Wembley.

 ?? ?? Pinnick
Pinnick

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria