Wednesday, 27 May 2015
Real Madrid: Immaculate and Shameless.
Sometimes, a critical look at the modus operandi of football clubs makes one want to weep. Real Madrid have been in the news in the last couple of weeks before and after their eventual elimination from the UEFA Champions League. The talk was about the looming sack of the Real Madrid Manager, Carlo Ancelotti. When the rumour surfaced initially, I dismissed it and said O di egwu. E no go happen. But then you remember the club in question and their penchant for sacking coaches and you home in on a possible truth.
The fifty five year old Carlo Ancelotti joined Real Madrid from PSG in 2013. He guided Madrid through 119 matches from which he won 89, drew 14, lost 16 and came off with a percentage win of 74.7%. Above all, he brought the elusive 10th UEFA Champions league trophy to the Bernabeau. Yet, he was sacked. The list of Real Madrid Managers in the last 15 years:
1. Vincent Del Bosque Nov 1999 - June 2003
2. Carlos Queiroz June 2003 - May 2004
3. Jose Camacho May 2004 - Sept 2004
4. Marino RemΓ³n Sept 2004 - Dec 2004
5. Vande Luxemburgo Dec 2004 - Dec 2005
6. Juan Ramon Caro Dec 2005 - June 2006
7. Fabio Capello July 2006 - June 2007
8. Bernd Schuster July 2007 - Dec 2008
9. Juande Ramos Dec 2008 - June 2009
10. Manuel Pellegrini June 2009 - May 2010
11. JosΓ© Mourinho May 2010 - June 2013
12. Carlo Ancelotti June 2013 - May 2015.
Ladies and gentlemen, above are managers that Real Madrid have employed and sacked in the last 15 years! Real Madrid is the most valuable club in the world, no doubt. Sales from Cristiano Ronaldo's shirts is higher than the annual budget of 10 top teams in Africa. They are the richest and most glamorous. Their obsession with Barcelona is crazy. Fiorentino Perez not helping matters too. Sometimes I wonder what Real Madrid as a club actually want from football. Perez in his statement thanked Carletto for his time and said that in a club like Real Madrid "...expectations are high". Serious? Higher than the fact that the man handed your club the Champions League trophy that has eluded Madrid for over a decade? Crazy!
Truth is that there is no manager Real Madrid will not sack at most 3 years into his contract no matter how good you are or you deliver the head of John The Baptist. They already sacked Mourinho. Who then is left? It is really a shame. I have tried to dig out from this my mango head what the problem of this beautiful club is. The reason I went the extra mile to watch Madrid games in the just concluded season was Toni Kroos. That guy for me is the best midfielder in the world. He plays with such elegance and vision that reminds me of Zinedine Zidane. How that calibre of player found himself in the heap of drama and shame called Madrid beats my imagination.
I have come to a personal conclusion that every Real Madrid action in the last 10 years was taken with Barcelona in mind. So long as their obsession with Barcelona FC remains, their present craze of sacking performing managers will never stop. It's a shame. A pity.
Photo credit: zeenews.india.com
Follow Ikenna Enenta on Twitter: @ikenna005
Friday, 22 May 2015
Nigerian Football Comedy turning to Football again.
"Kenneth Ilodigwe and Achebe! The only other partnership you can imagine in central defence that will compare to that pairing is if Rio Ferdinand and Paolo Maldini ever played together". Those were the words of my father. Growing up, before my father started taking me to matches, he always came back and told me stories of the games. Those stories were never complete without Ilodigwe, Achebe, Amasiemeka, Okosieme and Okala from Rangers International of Enugu and Patrick Ekeji of Vasco Da Gama. In his excitement, one of his favorite lines was delivered in conc Udi language..." Dominic Nwobodo na e nye goal k nd'ma! (Dominic Nwobodo scores like a ghost). He was and indeed remains a die hard fan of Rangers. He would drive to Enugu every weekend to see a Rangers game. My father is like the average fan of Liverpool; based on past successes, he doesn't understand why Rangers is struggling today. He doesn't also understand the empty stands at the stadia during Nigerian football league matches.
For many years, the Nigerian football league would best be described as a comedy show. I maintain that the footballers themselves are not to be blamed. At all. One might mention rascality among the players. Don't we see such rascality amongst players in the EPL, La Liga and Serie A? That's why there are rules guiding the game. I played a game in the league where on entrance to the field, the referee told me that no matter what we do, we will loose the game. We scored in the first five minutes and he upheld the goal believing himself to wreck us. When it dawned on him that he, the referee was loosing the game to us, he awarded a penalty kick to our opponents. The penalty taker calmly blew the ball over the bar. He called for a retake, our goalkeeper caught it. He called for another retake, over the bar!!! Three successive penalty kicks! Long story cut short, we played out a draw. Point being that the bane of the Nigerian football league for more than two decades have been officiating.
Before two years ago, the home team had the responsibility to cater for the officials assigned to a game. Feeding, accommodation, transportation and other logistics. Now, tell me how a referee that knows a host team is in charge of his pay will go on to the field and be fair to both teams. The referee is human. Probably with a family to cater for and a life to live. In a league game between Sharks and NPA, 2003, the center referee was beaten black and blue at the end of the game by the home fans. 2012/2013 season game between Ocean Boys and Enyimba at the Samson Siasia stadium Yenagoa. The game ended abruptly in the first half when Enyimba scored the second goal. Walahi Enyimba use tip tap finish Ocean Boys. The players of Ocean Boys were literally breathing from every known and available hole on their bodies. Enyimba was balling and I was enjoying the game. All of a sudden, fans invaded the pitch in pursuit of Enyimba boys who ran for dear lives. Game over. I noticed something later though; the referee was not spared by the crowd. The home fans expected the referee to be on their side but the referee was obviously a fan of good football.
The importance of beautiful officiating can never be over emphasised. The number of games that can be fixed without a referee is negligible. For a game to be fixed without qualms the referee has to be involved. When the Nduka Irabor led League Management Company was formed in 2012, we didn't expect much from them. Today, the LMC have turned around the fortunes of the Nigerian Football League around for good. Presently, the officials that officiated week 9 games between Gabros/ Sharks and Wikki/ Lobi are under investigation based on a submission by LMC to the NFF. Such measures can only enhance discipline among officials and players. The LMC is doing a very beautiful work with the league organisation. The league is returning to football again after many years of being pure comedy.
Also, attendance to games have improved. Aba Township Stadium, home to Enyimba, deserve a special mention for the near full capacity in games, week in week out. The Glo Nigeria Premier Football League is on the rise. With the passion the current NFF President Amaju Pinnick has for the game, we can only expect better. As for my darling Rangers in whom my septuagenarian father is well disappointed in, a change in fortune is needed. ASAP. The team should quit being the Arsenal of Nigerian League. Win league una no go win. Go relegation una no go go! Unu a ga a buzi ogbenye buru amosu?
Photo Credit; @LMCNPFL
Follow Ikenna Enenta on Twitter; @ikenna005
Thursday, 14 May 2015
Musings on growing up and football. Tale from the South East.
"I challenge you take one post". If you grew up in South Eastern Nigeria and you as much as played any form of football as a kid, the above won't sound strange to you. First of all, it's not just anybody that is involved in that initial process of selecting players for the various sides. It's either the best players or the owner of the ball. The later, is however higher in ranking than the former. The selection process cannot exclude the owner of the ball otherwise the selected players will make do with playing stones instead of football. He is a small god. If he hates you for any reason, forget it. You won't play. I don't know if it's coincidence but 80% of ball owner were not good ballers. And mostly very fat.
On several occasions my mother will send me on an errand to buy something for her at the market. Maybe pepper, onions or whatever. We lived in a part of the University community close to an apiam way to the market. Some group of boys normally play the rubber coloured ball popularly called felele because of its producer given ability to follow the wind wherever it pleases. Once I get there and they have started playing, au revoir to the pepper I was asked to go and buy. I will join a side and then...game on! Once I hear women chattering and look up to see market women passing by from the direction of the market, it dawns on me that I have goofed. Again. Market don close! I'll grab my slippers and polythene bag, touch my pocket to ensure the money is still there and zoom off without telling a word to my playing mates. And of course, market has closed. No where to buy anything from. From the market to our house normally takes between eight and ten minutes walk. But on such days, thirty minutes I never reash house. I get home and go to the back of the house and listen in on my mother's gist to know when it is convenient to enter the house. However, any time I choose to enter the house, I go collect beta beating. My mother's magic entails cooking the food with the NO pepper from me but the food will still have adequate pepper. Victoria Magic.
I was born in the University town of Nsukka. Quiet and peaceful town. Growing up, we used every available thing as football. Oranges, polythene bags tied with strings into an almost circular shape and even unripe mangoes served. We played everywhere we found an enabling space. I loved going on holidays to Enugu. The major reason was football. In Enugu, my grandmother didn't mind me playing football from morning till night. Or better put, from morning till whenever hunger strikes. In Enugu, nobody bothered me about studying. In Nsukka, studying was the principal thing. Playing football in Enugu was much different from playing in Nsukka. There were a greater number of excellent players in Enugu. Malaika, Mampo, Buddha, Arinze were my mates whom I played with there. Good ballers. Mampo was very good then. Little wonder he went on to play for the Super Eagles. Competition was higher as against Nsukka, especially in the campus where most of my mates preferred playing video games to playing real football. That accounted for why I had more friends off campus than inside the campus. Chidubem Obio, Osinachi Enekwe, Chukwuemeka Okoli, Uchenna Igbo (blessed memory) and Chike Nwaozuzu were few of my friends who were interested in football and lived on campus. The rest were off campus, that's why I spent more of my outside school active hours off campus than on campus. Central School Odenigbo was our San Siro. The field was hard ground. Rock solid, with little patches of grass on one end. It was however better you fall on the hard surface than your fall on the grass. Dat grass na barb wire. God bless that field and the school that houses it. In Enugu, we played on tarred roads mostly. But at other times, we went up to St. Peters field, Eke Street, Coal Camp tonplay. One could go out to play in the morning and return in the evening with his two big toes open and bleeding. Painful, but doesn't stop him from going out again to play the very next morning! We loved football. In Enugu, nobody was interested in video games. We preferred the real deal. The game outside.
Following my father to the village occasionally was fun too. I get to play with friends there. We played on sand. There,after playing, you go back to your house in the evening looking like willie willie. White all over. My father, like my grandmother, didn't mind. For him, so long as my academics weren't suffering, he didn't mind. Being an academic person himself, his disposition towards me and football was surprising to my siblings. For my mother, studying is never enough. She kept me on my toes. Having academically very sharp sisters didn't help me one bit. My brother? I dreaded his coming home. Whenever I hear he is coming home I get depressed automatically. I quickly come up with a time table. Growing up, I didn't like him. He was a barrier between me and my first love, football. I remember learning BODMAS with tears. That guy was good with the cane mehn π π π .
In my University years, we had a team of football machi. Baggio, Odenyi, Plc, Ekete, Orjiakor and Agashi were some of my relaible mercenary team mates. We crossed the length and breath of Southern Nigeria playing as football mercenaries for one team/town or the other. For the money and the fun too. We never lost a game we went as mercenaries. We were business minded ballers. Money was the motivation. Leave am, we dey deliver. Academics? Akanu Ibiam Stadium is very close to my faculty, the Faculty of Arts. On many occasions, I asked to be substituted from games thirty minutes before an exam and I head to the examination hall straight from the field! π π π π
I watched Rangers, Stores, Iwuanyanwu National, Julius Berger and Co play in Nnamdi Azikiwe stadium. I grew in to the game. My seniors like Kalusha, Kabongo, Owen, Gboko, Rocky, Uyo, Uzo, Chike + Ogonna and Aja all played roles in endearing me to the game. God bless them wella.
I went to Enugu some time ago and in the evening the streets were empty. Children were all indoors playing video games. I went to Toscana same night and saw many 'children' swallowing Orijin. They drink more than my generation and my father's generation put together. They don't like football.
Biko I have always asked; people who don't like football, what do they like?
Leave am, I grew up well.
Photo credit: apesoughird.wordpress.com
Follow Ikenna Enenta on Twitter: @ikenna005
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