Favour Ofili to dump Nigeria for Turkey

 Favour Ofili, a Nigerian sprinter, is set to switch international allegiance to Turkey.

TheNewsGuru reports that Ofili’s decision followed years of alleged neglect and administrative failures by the Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN) and the Nigerian Olympic Committee (NOC).

A major turning point was her highly publicised exclusion from the 100m event at the Paris 2024 Olympics despite having met the qualifying standard.

Reports noted that the AFN and NOC failed to properly enter her name for the event, a devastating repeat of a similar administrative blunder that cost her a spot at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics (held in 2021) where inadequate anti-doping protocols affected 13 other Nigerian athletes.

Ms Ofili, who boasts impressive personal bests of 10.93s in the 100m and 21.96s in the 200m, formally notified the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) of her decision and its reasons. Her frustration was further solidified by the re-election of the same AFN leadership in June 2025, despite the repeated administrative lapses.

The former Louisiana State University (LSU) standout and Adidas-sponsored athlete expressed her disappointment publicly on social media following the Paris Olympics omission, questioning the accountability of national federations. While she later finished sixth in the 200m final in Paris, the overall experience appeared to be a tipping point.

Her switch to Turkey places her among a growing list of Nigerian athletes who have chosen to represent other countries due to perceived lack of support and chronic mismanagement at home. Past examples include Gloria Alozie (who later ran for Spain), Francis Obikwelu (Portugal), and Femi Ogunode (Qatar), who now enjoy considerable successes from their adopted nations.

This latest development serves as a reminder of the ongoing challenges facing Nigerian athletics and raises questions about the need for systemic reforms within the sporting federations. While World Athletics currently still lists Ofili as a Nigerian athlete, her official notification to the AIU marks a significant step in her new trajectory.

She is now expected to observe a mandatory waiting period before competing for Turkey in international competitions, though an exemption may be possible if her case for administrative negligence is strongly argued.