OPINION: The return of authentic sports development. By Segun Odegbami

Date: 2019-09-21

Ilorin, the capital city of Kwara State of Nigeria, has returned to normalcy after the frenzy of two whole weeks of a festival of sports that many stakeholders have described as the best sports development programme to have taken place in Nigeria in decades.

Over 4000 young athletes (all officially below the age of 15) and their officials from all the states of the country (including those that never used to send any representation in the past) assembled inside the campus of the University of Ilorin, for the 5th edition of the National Youth Games, an annual event established by the Federal Ministry of Sports (and/or the National Sports Commission) to kick-start a new era of talent discovery in Nigerian sports.

The greatest revelation is that there is an institution in Nigeria, a Tertiary institution for that matter (and there could be more wasting in the oasis of neglected abundance) with the facilities to host all the athletes and officials in single one environment with good enough facilities to host 34 different sports!

Once again, we are reminded that the problem with Nigeria is surely not a lack of resources and human capital but the right leadership and the spirit to accomplish great things for the common good of all.

So, Ilorin 2019 was a great success, a reminder of our history, a measure of our capacity and a compass into the future of our sports and administration.

At the end of the games, after the postmortems, the single item that stands out as missing from everything that happened is authenticity of the participants. Once again, the Nigerian factor comes into play, that ugly part of us that prefers the short cut to the long haul, that wants to cheat to win selfishly instead of making everyone a winner in the end.

My simple solution is to introduce ‘school’ into the requirements for participation by the athletes. At 15 all the participants ought to be in secondary school, an essential need in the country, even made mandatory by the constitution.

My testimony
I am a product of the Nigerian school’s sports system when it existed many decades ago.

Sports were an integral part of my early childhood.

My primary school experiences are a blur as I hardly remember most of them.

My true development and life since I left Jos in 1970 have been anchored mostly to everything school taught me in the 5 years of secondary education in the Tin city.

These days, when I write and quote from William Shakespeare and Thomas Hardy, write for several media, consult for several organisations, and display uncommon skills and knowledge about several subjects and vocations, it is almost entirely the result of a life cultivated and nurtured at St. Murumba College, Jos. So, I am a proud handiwork of Rev. Fathers O’Connel, O’Connor, Murphy, Mrs. Williams, Ms. Graeves and so on.

When I ran like a gazelle along the touchline on the football field during the years of my football career in the 1970s and 1980s it was also the result of a foundation laid by Rev. Father O’Connor, my games master at St. Murumba in the 1960s.

My story is similar to that of many other persons in the country that grew up in the years up till the 1980s, when school was the bed rock of sports foundation and early development.

In short, as I was passing through secondary school, all the benefits derivable from secondary school were also passing through me.

As a result, I was very active and very successful, both as an athlete and a scholar, representing my secondary school in academic and football competitions throughout my 5 years as a student.

So, as a result of my experience, I am dedicating a large chunk of my life presently to promoting the message of the combination of sports and academics for the benefit of children whose passion for sports must be engaged and combined with their essential need for education in order for them to have better chances of succeeding in life through the sports industry in an increasingly challenging world of acute competitions.

We must do everything to re-direct the attention of the teeming millions of our young boys and girls wandering in the wilderness of illiteracy, unemployment, poverty, and disease, and wasting in the midst of huge opportunities in a global sports industry that can change their lives and change the world.

That’s why we must make our governments, States and Federal, look more closely at sport as a major contributor to the development of the country, and take simple steps that will fertilise the sector.

One such step is making the National Youth Games exclusive to students in secondary schools. That will put Nigerian sports back on the track of authentic sports development.

The greatest challenge is authenticity, defeating the disease that has afflicted every aspect of our lives.

From what is going on, even with the success in Ilorin, despite all previous attempts to screen participants for age and documentation, too many of the athletes still pass through the web of scrutiny undetected. Officials know this, don’t do anything, and the cheating, with its consequential retardation of the growth of genuine Nigerian young athletes, still goes on, the lure of winning and to be numbered higher up the medals’ table, too strong, the spirit of winning at all costs provided you are not caught, too tempting and pervasive.

Knowing Nigeria and our history in age-group competitions, I am afraid we will only open up the Youth festival to the ‘rats’ that infested age-grade competitions in the country before now if we do not isolate those outside the school’s system and bring them in only through enrolment into school.

Nigeria is not a place to take lightly the enforcement of rules and close monitoring. Given a yard of a leg-room, the Nigerian will expand it to a bed room. Age-cheats and document falsifiers fill every crevice of Nigerian sport.

The simple introduction of ‘school’ as a qualifying condition for participation will significantly reduce the tendency to cheat. Even the genuine students, disallowed from participation by those who are not students, will become the eventual watch dogs of the festival from State to State.

The competition is of such importance and magnitude that commissioners of education and of sports in all the States will work together, stake their reputations and even put their jobs at stake if caught for supporting cheating, falsification and manipulations in their respective States.

There is something about the word ‘school’ that creates the psychology of a level playing field. It is reassuring and provides an immediate red line that must not be crossed by participating States.

This will become the catalyst and the motivation for all schools to improve their sports activities and facilities, and for all student-athletes to work hard and become champions within the environment of an established institution.

Furthermore, just as I witnessed at the International Schools Federation Games in Spain and at the World Scholar Athletes Games in the USA some years ago, the National Youth Games might also consider the idea of rewarding individual athletes that win during the games with medals without drawing up a table of medals won or lost for States.

It requires careful examination. Using medals table to measure the performances of Commissioners and Directors of Sports in the States is a wrong barometer for sports development. Mass participation and the discovery of the most talented athletes, although a thing of pride for the States they come from, should be an abiding collective nationalistic desire. Overall good of the country should come first.

That was the essence of the National Sports Festival when it was started in 1973. That should also be the essence of the National Youth Games into the future.

I commend the Federal Ministry of Sports for the success of the 2019 National Youth Games that just ended. More work needs to be done to take it to highest levels and set Nigeria back on course to proper and authentic sports development.

My life is a testimony to that possibility!

 

Cloud Tag: What's trending

Click on a word/phrase to read more about it.

Ibrahim Jawondo     Kupchi Hosea Maxwell     AbdulFatai Adeniyi Dan-Kazeem     Aishat Sulu-Gambari     Awodun     VADA     CLAY POT     Oya State     Savannah Centre For Diplomacy, Democracy And Development     Abdulrahman Abdulrasaq     Elewu     Yusuf AbdulRasheed     Samari     KWTV     Basic Education Certificate Examination     Wahab Isa     Adama Isa     Obasanjo     Aliyu Salihu     Peculiar Allowance     Abdulwahab Ololele     Abdulazeez Uthman     Ayobami Akanbi     Isaac Aderemi Kolawole     Moshood Kashimawo Abiola     Memunat Monsuma     Jumoke Monsura Gafar     KFA     Dogara     Haashim Initiative For Community Advancement     Ajeigbe     Sabo-Oke     Timothy Akangbe     Alumni Association Of The Federal Polytechnic Offa     Agboola Abdulraheem     Mustapha Akanbi     Rotimi Atere     Ajibike Katibi     Jide Ashonibare     Abubakar Aliagan     Federal College Of Education (Special), Afon     IYA YUSUF     Oluwatoyin Lukman     Al-Hikmah University     Samuel Olusegun Adedayo     KWIRS     Abegunde Goke     Government House     Shola Odetundun     Oke-opin     Quareeb Islamic Association     Ella Supreme Tissue Paper     Isiaq Khadeejah     Park     Ilofa     Tunde Saad     Yusuf Ali     Minister     Tescom.kwarastate.gov.ng     Raji AbdulRasaq     Oba Mogaji Abdulkadir     Sunday Otokiti     Suleiman Rotimi Iliasu     Sabi     Musa Abdullahi     Okala Baba     Abdulrasheed Na\'Allah     Rotimi Oyedepo     Olusegun Adeniyi     Mustapha AbdulGaniyu     Pakata     Plat Technologies Limited     National Broadcasting Commission     Anilelerin     Gabriel Fashanu     Raji Ayodele Kamaldeen     Oye Tinuoye    

Cloud Tag: What's trending

Click on a word/phrase to read more about it.

Abdullahi AbdulMajeed     TIC     ER-KANG Mining     Lawal Olohungbebe     Wahab Agbaje     Abiodun Oyedepo     Atunwa     Oluwarotimi Boluwatife Adenike     Olanrewju Okanlawon Musa     Shuaib Boni Aliyu     Mohammed Abdulahi     Akande Idowu Ayoola Muhammed     Principal Private Secretary     Valsolar Consultoria     Rebecca Olanrewaju     Hausa     Saka Isau     Moses Adekanye     Y.A. Abdulkareem     Tescom.kwarastate.gov.ng     Lanre Badmus     Prince Bola Ajibola     Musa Yeketi     UITH     Toyin Falola     Ayedun     Peter Amogbonjaye     Bolakale Ayo     Suleiman Mora Omar     Adebayo Salami     Tosho Yaqub     Patience Jonathan     Kumbi Titiloye     Wakilin Mata Lafiagi     Iyaloja-General     Oke-Kura     Tafida     Sulyman Tejidini     Ilorin International Airport     Mohammed Halidu     Kolade Solagberu     Yusuf Mubarak     Abdulmumini Jawondo     Muhammad Fawaz Abubakar     KSIRS     Oke Sunna     Mufutau Olatinwo     Funmilayo Oniwa     2023 Elections     Abdulkadir Orire     Pakata Patriots     Fatimoh Lawal     Tunji Ajanaku     Babatunde Ajeigbe     Yusuf Badmus     Local Government     Col. Ibrahim Taiwo     Iyabo Dupe Adekeye     SWAN     Unicontinental Construction Company     Kwara Liberation Group     Shehu Raheem Adaramaja     Peculiar Allowance     Adedeji Onimago     Jumoke Monsura Gafar     Raji AbdulRasaq     Malete     CACOVID     Ahmed Mohammed Rifun     CUTI     Elerin Of Adanla     Budo Egba     Monthly Sanitation Exercise     Jamila Bio Ibrahim     Raliat AbdulRazaq     Paul Odama     Mutawalle