Tag: Nigerian Team

  • Team Nigeria lands In Trinidad And Tobago for Commonwealth Youth Games

    Team Nigeria lands In Trinidad And Tobago for Commonwealth Youth Games

     

    Nigerian  Contingent has landed in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, to participate in the 7th Commonwealth Youth Games taking place from August 4 to 11, 2023.

    According to the secretary-general, Tunde Popoola, Nigeria will participate in four disciplines – Athletics, Cycling, Swimming and Para Athletics.

    He added that the 25- Nigerian team contingent is a force to be reckoned with, is made up of 15 exceptional athletes and is accompanied by 10 Team Contingent officials, coaches, and other team members.

    The athletes, ranging from sprinters to long-distance runners, swimmers, cyclists, and Para athletes, were all brimming with enthusiasm.

    They have been eager to showcase their talents on the international stage and make their country proud.

    As the team landed in Trinidad and Tobago, it was greeted with warm hospitality and a vibrant atmosphere.

    The Commonwealth Youth Games Village buzzed with energy as athletes from not less than 69 different nations, countries and territories came together, united by their passion for sports.

    The Nigerian contingent would be expected to quickly find their rhythm and settle in, ready to take on the challenges that lay ahead.

    Led by their skilled coaches, the Team left a trail of victories in their wake. The sprinters outran their competitors effortlessly, while the long-distance runners exhibited incredible stamina and perseverance. Every athlete gave their all, pushing their limits and setting new personal bests.

    In the swimming pool, the Nigerian swimmers would make waves of their own.

  • My worst moment coaching the Nigerian team- Rohr

    Former Super Eagles coach, Gernot Rohr, has revealed his worst moment coaching the Nigerian team, Super Eagles.

     

    The German professional football manager said the highest governing body of football in the world, Fédération Internationale de Football Association, (FIFA) ordered the Nigerian government to pay him $377,879.46, after breaching the contract, yet it is still not done.

     

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) recalls that Rohr dragged the NFF before FIFA on a $1m compensation claim for unfair dismissal.

     

    Rohr pointed out that the President of the Nigeria Football Federation, NFF, Amaju Pinnick, at the World Cup, said to the players in the dressing room after the match, that he is a great coach, one of the best coaches and two months later, he sacked him.

     

    “The worst day was when we were supposed to celebrate that we had qualified for the play-offs and we were called to say that we are sacked, unfair and painful. When we came Nigeria was 67 in FIFA rankings and 13 in Africa. When I left, Nigeria was 32 in the world and fourth in Africa.” he said.

     

    Speaking on how he felt when Nigeria exited at the group stage at the World Cup in Russia, Rohr said; “I was disappointed, but it was the youngest team of the World Cup. We all must accept this lack of experience in the last minutes of games and also, there were regrets because of the penalty, there was a clear handball for us and unfortunately, no second penalty (was given to us). After our last World Cup game against Argentina, we got many congratulations for the performances of our team, the youngest in the competition.”

     

    The former Super Eagles coach noted that members of his staff are still waiting for the bonuses for the last game they won together.

     

    Explaining how he felt about the Super Eagles performances at the 2021 AFCON and 2022 World Cup playoffs, Rohr maintained that, “I think we built a really good team that could have done better if we carried on with the momentum we had. I was sad for the players because they deserved better.

     

    “We were getting the desired results and we were not sluggish. We played attacking football scoring a lot of goals and having good goals scorers all the time, you know them, (Odion) Ighalo, (Victor) Osimhen and others. We created chances in all the games, even in the ones we lost or maybe drew. The most important was to get results and also to allow young players to progress and to learn.

     

    “Football is not a game of small or big teams; you can lose to anyone at any time. It’s a part of the game. Argentina lost to us in the friendly, Iceland lost to us in the World Cup, Brazil drew with us, and we played with a very young team, and they still had to learn. The (African) champions Cameroon lost to us in World Cup qualifiers and AFCON. There are so many examples.”

  • $9.6bn P&ID Judgment: Nigerian team departs for London

    A Nigerian legal team has left for the United Kingdom to discuss with lawyers in the UK on strategies to adopt to stave off the $9.6bn judgment debt procured by the Irish company Process and Industrial Development (P&ID) against Nigeria, over a failed gas contract.

    The Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN), disclosed this Sunday night in an update on the nightmarish judgement given by a UK commercial court judge.

    ‘’All cards are on the table but it all depends on (which is) beneficial, that has potency for setting aside the award, having regards to the applicable law in the circumstances.”

    Malami said no possibility was ruled out including, “possibility of filing new case or using existing proceedings to seek relief of setting aside the award of the contract cannot be ruled out.’’

    The minister had earlier raised posers about the company and the contract:

    *Why the P&ID did not have its own office address at the time of signing the agreement but opted to use the contact address of a law firm.

    *Why the contract was not passed to the Ministry of Justice for vetting if there was record of any capital flow as a result of the contract and why the contract was not taken to the Federal Executive Council for approval.

    *In whose interest the gas contract was awarded and what it was meant to achieve

    *Why the centre of arbitration was taken to London, and not Nigeria, a sovereign nation,

    *Why the NNPC, NPDC and IOCs, who were to have supplied the gas component of the agreement were not made parties to it.

    Malami insisted that the Federal government would not compromise the interest of Nigeria and Nigerians under any guise.

    “I want to state clearly that the Nigerian government will not sell out the interest of the country and the Nigerian people in order to satisfy some elements who are consciously out to extort the Nigerian people for their selfish aggrandisement.

    “It is to be noted that while we are willing and ready to negotiate and meet the terms of agreements reached with all genuine investors which have done business or are still doing business with Nigeria on mutually beneficial terms, we will not allow fraudulent local and foreign collaborators to rip off the resources of Nigeria for no just cause in order to be seen as being nice or ‘investor-friendly,” he said.

    Last week a court in Abuja wound up the British Virgin Island registered P&ID, following its conviction for fraud and tax evasion.

    The court also ordered the winding-up of the firm’s affiliate, P&ID Nigeria Limited.

    Two Nigerian directors of the company Mohammed Kuchazi and Adamu Usman were also convicted by Justice I. E. Ekwo of Federal High Court, sitting in Maitama, Abuja.

    Kuchazi and Usman were arraigned on an 11-count charge, bordering on obtaining by false pretence; dealing in petroleum products without appropriate licence; money laundering and failure to register P&ID with the Special Control Unit against Money Laundering (SCUML) as required by law, amounting to economic sabotage against the Nigerian state.

    On Friday, Mrs. Grace Taiga, a female accomplice in the mega fraud, was remanded in Suleja Prison, on the orders of Justice O.A. Adeniyi of the Federal Capital Territory High Court, sitting in Apo, Abuja.

    Mrs.Taiga, a former director, Legal Services in the Ministry of Petroleum Resources was a key actor in the fraudulent Gas Supply and Processing Agreement (GSPA) between the federal government and P&ID. She is alleged to have used her position to administer undue favours to the company.

    She was arraigned on an eight-count amended charges, bordering on accepting bribes and other related crimes.