Daily Trust Saturday

Segun Odegbami:

A former captain of the then Green Eagles and IICC Shooting Stars of Ibadan legend, Chief Segun Odegbami has in this interview speaks on how he failed to become the Nigeria Football Federation president. The member of the 1980 AFCON winning Green Eagles a

- Olusola ‘Jide @jide_olusola hat was your most memorable moment as a footballer? You were a part of the team that won the 1976 first African football club trophy with IICC for Nigeria. How happy were you? Most times, ex-players accuse the government of a

WMy most memorable moment was when we won the African Cup of Nations in 1980 for the first time. The only thing that could have beaten that was to qualify for the World Cup but we didn’t. The rewards, the celebratio­ns made it more memorable.

Remember in 1976, Nigeria had not won any internatio­nal trophy except for the gold medal at the 2nd All African Games. As a country, we were becoming a little bit close through Rangers Internatio­nal. So to have won it for the first time gave us an opportunit­y to see and experience how Nigerians would celebrate a continenta­l trophy. It was well celebrated. We met the President at that time, General Olusegun Obasanjo in Dodan Barracks and we were given all manner of rewards. Small rewards but they were big in those days. It transforme­d our status from just ordinary footballer­s to well-known superstars in the continent. A year later, I became the first Nigerian to be listed in the top 10 players in Africa. I was actually made 3rd best footballer in Africa. That was the first time in our history that a Nigerian would get to that level.

My advice is a common sense advice. As far as we are a Third World country and as long as football is not a profitable sport as it is in Europe, that can get you enough money and fame to sustain yourself for the rest of your life, it makes absolute sense to combine football with education. Every child must have basic education and anything else you want to do makes that secondary. Football should be secondary.

We all know the politics in Nigeria and how it is not a demonstrat­ion of meritocrac­y or about who is the best. It is about who knows how to play the game of politics. So, I failed woefully in the game of politics. I never attempted for CAF presidency but I intended to be FIFA president but the support was so little here in Nigeria that my plane didn’t even leave the tarmac of Abeokuta. That was unfortunat­e.

If I am to assess the NFF presidents since my playing time, the one that was passionate, knowledgea­ble that kept the NFF on its toes, who was a great leader, it was Emeka Omeruah. Others have been good in their own ways. Most had good intentions but their capacity to turn the intentions into actual developmen­tal projects that will take Nigeria out of the doldrums was the problem.

Life is not a constant, it is very dynamic. Change occurs every day. So it is not impossible that one day I could decide I want to be NFF president again. That ambition must be there and I know I have a great vision that can help to transform Nigerian football and take it to the highest levels.

You will see globally that administra­tors don’t want star footballer­s to come into administra­tion. It is like the rich man should not contest for political office. You can see what is happening to Didier Drogba in Ivory Coast now. It is a challenge. We will not give up and we will continue to try.

The league is not profession­al yet. We know that as the clubs don’t follow the rules of the establishm­ent, the running of the league is not profession­al, the people running the league are too afraid to enforce the rules, the standard is low. We have a league that is not covered properly by the television and is not attractive.

We leave the basic and fundamenta­l things and we start at the top of the tree. It is not going to be possible. So we must go back and do those fundamenta­l things that would plant football as a beautiful good game that people want to watch and develop, that the private sector would see is attracting a lot of followers and put money into it.

It makes sense that the league was cancelled, not for any other reason other than the health considerat­ion, safety and wellbeing of our footballer­s, officials and spectators.

I don’t think any white coach should come and coach us anymore, not after the generation of Stephen Keshi, Sunday Oliseh, Jay Jay Okocha who played at every level. If they can get the basic qualificat­ion which is not essential in my own estimation, they should be saddled with the responsibi­lity. Finidi George, Sunday Oliseh, Emmanuel Anuneke and others have the qualificat­ions Gernot Rohr does not have. So a Nigerian should take Nigeria to the World Cup because a foreigner does not understand our football philosophy and psychology. He will just use his colour to bamboozle us. And these days when the black lives matter a lot, the black race should take charge of its own. The white man can’t love us more than ourselves. My belief is that anyone who will coach the Super Eagles must be a world-class coach. Gernot Rohr can’t deliver that. He is not a world-class coach that we are looking for.

 ??  ?? Ibrahim Olawoyin of Enugu Rangers tries to dribble Kabiru-Moshood of MFM of Lagos during their match at the Agege township stadium.
Ibrahim Olawoyin of Enugu Rangers tries to dribble Kabiru-Moshood of MFM of Lagos during their match at the Agege township stadium.
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