Tag: World cup

  • REVEALED: Why Deschamps demanded Benzema be cut from France squad

    REVEALED: Why Deschamps demanded Benzema be cut from France squad

    Spanish journalist Anton Meana has lifted the lid on the rift between Real Madrid striker Karim Benzema and France coach Didier Deschamps.

    Benzema was released from the France squad before the World Cup kicked off due to a thigh injury, though he was playing in a friendly for Real Madrid before last week’s semifinal.

    Meana told El Larguero: “What comes closest to a credible version when you ask France is that Benzema did not tell the truth to Deschamps. That he wasn’t as physically fit as he was trying to pretend. That the FFF sees him in training, sees that he is not well and Deschamps feels a relative betrayal. That’s why he sends him home.

    “The truth is that the medical report that Real Madrid received from the FFF does not appear to be too serious for a player to return home. France sends him back and does not envisage his return to Doha at any time. Benzema would have been ready to come back.

    “Furthermore, those around him say he would have recovered in Game 2 or 3, without returning to Madrid.”

  • Western hypocrisy loses in epic Qatar match – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Western hypocrisy loses in epic Qatar match – By Azu Ishiekwene

    The shenanigans were always there, but until FIFA president, Infantino Giovanni, called them out in his down-to-earth press conference in Qatar, they remained the elephant in the room.

    The hint of displeasure goes back 12 years ago when Qatar won the bid, defeating Australia, Japan, South Korea and the United States. That outcome was unexpected.

    The Persian Gulf is good news for Western oil and gas supply and tales of mysticism and Arabian opulence, but an Arab World Cup was a different matter altogether.

    European interests pounced. They immediately insinuated that the process had been compromised and later expressed discomfort that the timing could also disrupt major European league schedules and leave players too exhausted to finish the season. Of course, they conveniently forgot that Arab money sustains some of the best European leagues!

    When the excuse of disruption didn’t stick, they expanded the field of resentment, taking care to deploy, from the reserve bench, thorny issues of migrant labour and LGBT rights. Explanations by the Qataris that they were doing everything possible to improve their migrant labour records and FIFA pressure on Qatar to do even more did not satisfy the large sections of the press, the British being perhaps the most notable antagonists.

    They carried the LGBT matter on their heads, leaving their own domestic turmoil unattended. Their attitude seemed to suggest that since football started in England 159 years ago Europeans also have the responsibility of not only setting but also insisting on the cultural rules under which fans can relate and watch the game, regardless of the sensibilities of local communities.

    If Giovanni sounded angry and unsparing in calling out the West over its hypocrisy, he had good reasons to do so. And he was absolutely right that another 3,000 years of atonement would be insufficient to right the wrongs.

    Yet, hypocrisy is a flaw embedded not just in the West’s historical relationship of exploitation, slavery and a sense of entitlement, it remains the hallmark of a number of its current engagements with other parts of the world, especially Africa and the Arab world.

    A number of fairly recent sporting and social events organised in a number of Western countries bear the same marks of abuses and significant social displacements, over which Qatar was threatened at gunpoint, but which the Western press was very pleased to turn a blind eye to in its own backyard.

    During the Olympic Games in Atlanta in 1996, for example, an estimated 30,000 people were displaced by Olympic-related demolitions, while at least 6,000 residents were evicted from their public housing.

    A number of these displaced persons, mostly blacks, uprooted from their homes and community, never had their lives back again. They deserved as much protection and dignity to life as migrant workers in Qatar.

    And they also deserved to have their voices heard by the global press. But that was obviously too much to ask. Or perhaps the rights of the socially displaced paled into insignificance in comparison with benefits expected from the Olympics?

    As you read this piece, there are reports that many undocumented migrant workers are being illegally used by the French authorities to construct venues for the Paris 2024 Summer Olympics. A powerful network of contractors has been using hundreds of migrants as cheap labour and deployed them, without shame, to build the Athletics Village in the Parisian suburb of St. Denis.

    I’m not sure the Western press or human rights campaigners there can find their way to St. Denis yet or other locations in the West where such abuses are still prevalent. Perhaps after Qatar, they will take interest in the scores of migrant workers, mainly of African descent, pining away at these sites?

    But this hypocrisy is not only limited to sports. London had a flavour of it before the burial of Queen Elizabeth in September. Hundreds of “rough sleepers”, a psychedelic phrase for the homeless, were cleared from around Westminster and many parts of London and herded to isolation camps on the fringes.

    They suffered the same fate of forceful removal, during the Queen’s diamond and platinum jubilees, to prevent the nuisance that their presence might have constituted to the pomp and circumstance of the celebrations! Since such weak and vulnerable people obviously had no rights, standing up for them was, understandably, hardly a matter of interest for the British press.

    Let me be clear. No government, Qatari or not, should exploit the weak and the vulnerable and get a soft pass. Yet, as Thomas Sowell eloquently argued in his book, Migrations and Cultures, it is a reality of economic history that, quite often, out of the pool of migrant workers who may have otherwise been squashed by poverty, would emerge a generation of future entrepreneurs and innovators.

    And by the way, for those who think that migrant labour only comprises the deadly crossings of the Mediterranean by Africans, it may be useful to keep in mind that Giovanni’s parents were Italian immigrants to Switzerland, in the search for greener pastures!

    It is funny that while the press found it quite easy and convenient to scapegoat the Qatari government on migrant labour, it has maintained a hypocritical silence on Western companies in Qatar that are the main employers and beneficiaries of migrant labour.

    From FTSE-quoted contractors to well-heeled New York-based consultants, the monster of migrant workers is the product of a seed planted by Western greed and nourished by Qatari desperation to stage an event that is one-of-a-kind. And beyond the red-herring of migrant labour, LGBT arm-band and moaning over the ban on booze, what an event it turned out to be!

    Favourites, like Brazil, got beaten by Cameroun; Morocco, Africa’s best performing team, crushed Belgium, Spain and Portugal in a dizzying dance to the semifinal; while Tunisia spanked defending champions France in the opening round robin matches.

    And did you notice how maliciously confused the British press was as the tournament progressed – first calling the Moroccans Africans and then Arabs and then everything in between!

    Argentina redeemed themselves after the shock 2-0 defeat by Saudi Arabia, by winning the trophy in one of the most dramatic finals in World Cup history; but there would be a lot more to remember about Qatar 2022.

    With FIFA reporting a revenue turnover of $7.5billion, Qatar 2022 has set a new benchmark, compared to $4.6billion generated in Russia 2018. A report by the organizing committee for Russia 2018 indicates that the tournament added $14billion, about 1.1 percent of GDP, and about 315,000 jobs to Russia’s economy between 2013 and 2018.

    The tournament was projected to add $17billion to the oil-rich kingdom (despite the ban on alcohol which affected profits) in the next few years and billions more in tourism. Most importantly, the success has positioned Qatar, which has had more than a passing interest in landmark sporting events, to bid for the Olympic games in the near future.

    It’s quite a paradox that the tournament whose hosting by Qatar former FIFA boss, Sepp Blatter, had considered a mistake has turned out to be reckoned as the best ever in the history of the game.

    And despite starting with controversy over migrant labour and sundry issues and ending with a tiff over the bisht put on Lionel Messi by the emir, the Qataris can look back with pride and say it was truly one World Cup that left the press – the Western press – eating the humble pie!

     

    Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

  • World Cup hero, Messi to stay with PSG for another year

    World Cup hero, Messi to stay with PSG for another year

    Argentinian World Cup winner, Lionel Messi is planning to play another year for Paris Saint-Germain, French daily Le Parisien reported on Wednesday.

    The club reached a basic agreement with Jorge Messi, the superstar’s father, and agent, on an extension by at least one season of his current contract, set to expire in the summer of 2023.

    Messi moved to PSG from FC Barcelona in 2021. The Argentinian has repeatedly said he would decide on his future after the World Cup in Qatar.

    Messi has reportedly been in talks with MLS franchise Inter Miami and repeatedly linked with a return to Barcelona.

    Qatar-backed PSG however has the greatest financial resources.

    Messi helped Argentina win their third world title in Qatar, where on Sunday they defeated defending champions France 4-2 on penalties after a 3-3 deadlock.

  • Tribute to Lionel Messi – By Promise Adiele

    Tribute to Lionel Messi – By Promise Adiele

    By Promise Adiele

    His football dexterity is awesome – sleek, smooth, slippery, elegant, and sure-footed. He engineers the game with admiring ease and a dignifying refinement that underscores his modest demeanour. Some people ascribe supernatural qualities to him, arguing his celestial provenance which reminds us of the Biblical assertion in Acts 14:11 – “the gods have come down to us in the likeness of men”.

    People ask – is he human or is he from another planet? On the field, he does impossible things that his fellow footballers can only imagine. Not the tallest man in the world, but he accomplishes feats tall people can only dream about. His football wizardry unites heaven and hell in a momentary embrace, defies the law of gravity, disarms the satanic host, and synthesizes all opposites in humanity. His name is Lionel Andres Messi, the diminutive Argentine soccer god whose personality symbolizes a confluence of innumerable possibilities.

    Football commentators have run out of adjectives describing the little magician. There is no one like him in football. It is difficult to prognosticate if there will be another after him. He has defied all odds to emerge as football’s Greatest of All Times. Like the Shakespearean colossus that bestrides the entire world, Messi has majestically dominated the pinnacle of football hemisphere. He is incomparable and absolutely so.

    Born on the 24th of June 1987 in Rosario Sante Fe Argentina, Lionel Andres Messi is the third child among four children. His father worked in a steel factory as a manager, and his mother augmented the family’s income by working in a magnet manufacturing company.

    Both parents have Italian ancestry and are devout Catholics which is why Lionel Messi always makes a sign of the cross, looking up to heaven each time he scores a goal. Growing up for the little magician was not easy. He suffered birth defects which affected his growth and stature. At the age of ten, Lionel Messi was diagnosed with a growth hormone deficiency.

    It cost his parents about $1,000 to treat him every month and because his father’s insurance policy could only cover his treatment for two years, the family faced a serious dilemma. His club Newell Old Boys agreed to foot the bill but reneged on their promise. Then the Spanish club, Barcelona came to the rescue. The rest, they say, is history.

    Like the Biblical lamp that cannot be hidden when lit, he overcame all the initial difficulties of birth to emerge the greatest footballer of all time. There is no basis for argument. His story is inspiring and justifies the existence of God in humble beginnings.

    Lionel Messi has won everything on offer in the football menu. In 2005 in the Netherlands, he led the Argentine youth team to win the World Youth Championship, beating Nigeria’s Mikel Obi in the finals. He emerged top scorer in that competition with six goals.

    At the age of 18, he made his first senior international debut in a friendly match against Hungary. He scored his first senior international goal in a friendly against Croatia in 2006. During the 2006 world cup, he featured against Serbia and Montenegro and became the youngest Argentine player to play at the world cup. His goal in the 6-0 rout made him the youngest scorer in the tournament and the sixth youngest goal scorer of the World Cup.

    In 2008, he led his country to win the Beijing Olympic soccer gold. In 2021, he led his country’s national team to win the South American continental showpiece Copa America. In 2022, he also won the CONMEBOL – UEFA Cup of Champions with the national team. Everyone agreed that Lionel Messi would be the greatest footballer of all time if he could win one trophy that eluded him – the World Cup, the ultimate Holy Grail of football. In December 2022, in a classic final between Argentina and France, Messi, against all odds, led Argentina to glory, lifting the FIFA world cup in Qatar.

    At the club level with Barcelona, Messi won ten La Liga titles, seven Copa Del Rey titles, seven Super Copa de Espana, four UEFA Champions League titles and three FIFA Club World Cup. With his current club PSG, he has won the Lique 1 title once and the Trophee des Champions once. He has won the Ballon d’Or a record seven times and FIFA world player of the year once in 2009. In 2019, he emerged as the Best FIFA men’s player of the year. He has won the European Golden Shoe a record six times, FIFA World Cup Golden Ball twice in 2014 and 2022. He won the FIFA Club World Cup golden ball twice in 2009 and 2011. He has been La Liga’s best player six times and Argentina’s Footballer of the Year fourteen times.

    Lionel Andres Messi has been compared to many great footballers the world has witnessed but on a closer, impartial and unbiased scrutiny, all the footballers compared to him unceremoniously pale into insignificance. Shall I compare Messi with any footballer dead or alive? No, because on the ball, he quickens the spirit, energizes the sensibilities, and inspires the despairing soul.

    The Brazilian football legend Pele immediately comes to mind having won the world cup on three occasions. Pele is a great footballer no doubt but he doesn’t come close to Messi. He won the world cup three times, never won Copa America, never played in Europe or won the UEFA Champions League, and never won the Olympic soccer gold. Lionel Messi is the only footballer who has won everything in football.

    There was Kaka of Brazil, considered one of the greatest players of his generation, but he never won anything at the youth level, not the Olympic soccer gold or the South American continental showpiece. There was Diego Maradona. He won the World Cup but never won the Champions League or the Copa America. He didn’t win the Olympic soccer gold too. There was Ronaldo de Lima (The real Ronaldo) but he didn’t reach Messi’s height. There is Cristiano Ronaldo, a great player by every stretch of the imagination but can only dream of what Messi does with the ball.

    He has not won the World Cup, the Olympic football gold or any world youth championship. There is Neymar too who can only wish to be Messi. The new kid on the block is Kylian Mbappe, young with the potential to achieve much, yet, Messi currently stands out as the world’s greatest footballer.

    All hail Lionel Messi, king of football. All hail his womb of birth. His simplicity is disarming. His unassuming disposition is worth emulating. His humility transcends the understanding of mere mortals. He is Argentina’s finest footballer, and the world’s most decorated footballer, the quintessential soccer star who sacrifices personal glory for the collective good of his team.

    When will the world see another? When will the world witness another player with scintillating, crazy, snake-like dribbles? When will the world witness another footballer climb the podium to receive many awards? When will the oceans of the pacific roar in celebration of a football maestro? Will Argentina give us another or will another country produce the next soccer magician? The world awaits with crossed fingers and huge expectations. As Messi slowly glides into retirement, let the heavens continue to blaze his dominance. All hail King Leo.

     

    Promise Adiele PhD

    Mountain Top University

    Promee01@yahoo.com

  • Qatar 2022: A Moment In History For Football And Africa – By Magnus Onyibe

    Qatar 2022: A Moment In History For Football And Africa – By Magnus Onyibe

    The quote “It is time for Africa” captured the feelings of most Nigerians and indeed Africans during the just concluded football fiesta FlFA World Cup 2022 held in Qatar,a tiny gulf country in the Arab world from 20th November to 18 December.

    That comment was made after Morocco qualified to go beyond the quarterfinals by beating Spain on Tuesday,6 December.

    And those words of exhortation are credited to the Peoples Democratic Party,PDP flag bearer for the presidency of Nigeria in 2023,Waziri Atiku Abubakar who was inspired to make the tweet because Africa had never gone as far as featuring beyond the quarter finals of any FIFA World Cup match.

    And the comment took on a new meaning when on December 14,although France the defending champion defeated Morocco in a very gallantly fought contest, it did so with Africans as significant members of the squad.

    So, whereas Morocco,the African team could not advance further or proceed beyond the semi finals having been beaten by France,Africa remains a winner as earlier observed by the PDP presidential standard bearer,Atiku Abubakar.

    That is simply because members of the black race featured prominently in the finals held on Sunday 18 December which Argentina eventually won by defeating the hard fighting France powered by Africans.

    For obvious reasons,a lot of Africans were cheering France because although the French are supposed to be Europeans,the team comprised of more Africans/blacks than the Moroccan team which is supposed to be an African country,but dominated by players that did not have black color skin/pigmentation.

    That is why victory for France in the World Cup earlier played in Russia in 2018 that also involved significant number of blacks in the contestation on the side of France was already deemed as victory for Africa.

    Even though it was just mere symbolism,the affirmation of the African fusion or influence on the French team got consolidated with its emergence in the finals with Argentina in Qatar 2022.

    In fact,any which way one looks at it,Africa is somehow winners of Qatar 2022 FlFA World Cup,simply because Africans/blacks were predominantly featured in all the major countries teams from France to England,Spain,Germany, Switzerland, Brazil ,Portugal to USA and even Qatar the host country.

    It is therefore unsurprising that in a tournament that has been full of surprises,the African /Arab nation,Morocco carried the hope of estimated 1.2 million Africans and about 400 million members of the Arab world.

    That is a total of roughly 1.6 billion people on planet earth. Given that the world currently has a human population of about eight (8) billion,Morocco during the game became the only African/Arab country carrying the hope of at least twenty percent (20%) of members of the human race in the 2022 Football World Cup.

    Hence the defeat of Portugal by Morocco in the quarter finals was an African marvel or miracle.More so because the success was achieved even when the obviously biased referee from the Western world issued Walid Cheddira a second yellow card in quick succession that added up to a red card which compelled him to leave the field of play with only ten(10)Moroccan players left to play against Portugal’s eleven (11) men.

    Despite the rigging of the game against Morocco by the referee who maliciously issued the unwarranted yellow cards to the Moroccan player in the usual manner that the Western world constantly seeks to repress Africans,the hard fighting African country prevailed over the almighty Portugal featuring the super stars Ronaldo and Pepe in action against the underdog Moroccan team in the mundial.

    It is remarkable that the competition that commenced with thirty (32) countries teams comprising of super power or heavy weight football countries like Brazil, Germany,Portugal ended up having underdog countries teams like Croatia and Morocco playing in the semi finals against France and Argentina respectively.

    Given how how Saudi Arabia shocked Argentina with a defeat and Japan stung Germany by winning the duel with her and Cameroon wrecked Brazil by also beating that superpower country in their opening games in Qatar 2022,the world was put on notice that anything can happen in football as the erstwhile super power football countries no more have bragging rights.

    Personally,l was not surprised that an African team-Atlas Lions of Morocco ,which is one of the five that represented the continent- South Africa,Senegal,Ghana and Cameroon ,in the tournament became part of the final four(4).

    In my assessment,the success achieved by Morocco is somehow due to home advantage of also being an Arab country playing in Arab land,Qatar.

    It is a demonstration of how local home support by fans can boost the confidence of a team and drive it to victory.

    That is also why supporters clubs are so very critical to the success of any sporting event – ranging from boxing ,wrestling to basketball and football including track and field sports.

    A cheering crowd is always an asset, hence football in particular is always played both at home and away to evenly boost the confidence of the competing teams on equal basis.

    For example,if Nigeria is playing in qualifying matches for World Cup or Olympics against Ghana,it is required that the matches are played both in Nigeria and Ghana (home and away) before the finals are played in the host country.

    That is owing to the fact that sporting aficionados have figured out the psychological boost that home support could engender for athletes.

    And hence the farther away from our home base that we Africans and Arabs go to play in the World Cup like in Russia which hosted the last FIFA World Cup in 2018 before the Qatar tournament,the less likely the chances of our countries teams going far in the contest.

    As a testimony to the logic above,in 1996 Nigeria clinched the trophy in football during the Olympics held in Atlanta, Georgia which has one of the highest black population in the United States of America,USA.

    Apart from the superb talent of our players,with so many black people cheering them,the Sunday Oliseh led Nigerian team was definitively buoyed up,hence it was able to beat the whole world to emerge tops by being the winner of the Olympic cup in football in 1996.

    When in 2018 during the World Cup in Russia,Qatar was chosen to host the 2022 football World Cup,it seemed like an anathema.But FIFA World Cup 2022 to the surprise of those who thought it was a mistake turned out to be one of the best in recent history.

    At least that is the view of FIFA president,Gianni lnfantino and a critical mass of football commentators and spectators who share the excitement of being thoroughly thrilled by the matches in the tournament especially the final duel between France and Argentina.

    From the get-go,the gulf country that hosted the championship had promised to make it a memorable experience despite the concerns of its opponents,particularly the Western world and especially the US which was on cue to be the next host,having vigorously pitched for it.

    But it was to its greatest shock that it got supplanted by Qatar which is a country of a mere three (3m) million number of people and not a significant force in football compared to the US whose population is in excess of three hundred and thirty two (332) million and the richest and most powerful country in the world.

    It is even more striking that it is the first time that FIFA World Cup would be staged in an Arab country and in winter.

    In 2010,it had been the turn of Africa when South Africa became the first and only African country so far to host the global football fiesta that has its origins in Europe and Britain to be specific in the 19th century.

    Jonathan Guyer,a Vox news organization correspondent in the gulf reckons that Qatar spent an estimated three hundred ($300b) on stadium and ground work in hosting 2022 FIFA World Cup.
    He enthused in a recent report that:

    “That money totaled more than all previous World Cups and Olympics combined.”

    In light of the huge success that it has turned out to be,the investment of $300 billion to make the tournament happen and which is just about thirty five ($35b) less than the sovereign wealth fund of the country estimated at about ($335b),has been well worth it.

    That is given the fact that the global football fiesta has helped Qatar,a relatively small country covering a just 11,536 square meters of land space compared to its much bigger neighbors, Saudi Arabia (35.8m) and United Arab Emirates,UAE,(10m) to consolidate her preeminence in the gulf region in addition to the country’s cultural diplomacy which is quite notable.

    With a population of Qatari Arabs being only about 330,000 or a little over 11% of the population of the country of about three(3) million and spending an estimated one ($1b) billion dollars annually on museum and art,Qatar which is certainly punching far above its weight,has obviously gotten a lot of mileage from hosting 2022 FIFA World Cup.

    Even if Morocco did not eventually end up bringing the coveted trophy back home to Africa,in any case,the black race,in the reckoning of most football enthusiasts won.

    Which is basically because the black players that constitute a significant part of the French national squad with Kyliane Mbappe as the arrow head gave a good account of themselves before the loss to Argentina after the match Initially ended up in a 3-3 draw after full time.

    But unfortunately,the hard fighting French team finally lost by 4 -2 to Argentina in a penalty shoot out also known as sudden death.

    It was curios to me why Argentina that is located in South America like Brazil does not have blacks in its national team in the manner that Brazil features a lot of blacks.

    In fact,l was shell shocked to see that there were no blacks in the gallery from where Argentinian fans were cheering.

    So,I was determined to figure out why blacks did not feature in both the Argentinian team in the field of play and it’s boisterous supporters cheering from the gallery.

    That reality seemed like a mystery to me until a podcast by one Jude ldada resolved the puzzle for me.

    Now,the conspiracy theory (since l am yet to verify it) is that there used to be blacks in Argentina before they were systematically killed,eliminated or erased from that country after the obnoxious practice of slave trade ended.

    Without going into details,it is alleged that Argentinians compelled their blacks to fight in their war against Paraguay between 1864 to 1870 knowing fully well that the blacks who were ill equipped would be killed in the battle field.And they were indeed killed in large numbers. Then those that survived the atrocities of being sent to war as a death trap were later bunched up in a colony which had outbreaks of diseases that the authorities did nothing to curtail or control simply because it is part of their evil intensions to erase blacks in a race cleansing agenda.

    That is something akin to what happened in 1915 to Armenians who were for economic reasons and at the behest of the Rothschilds (French oil rich family in cahoots with the Rockyfellers,American oil merchant family) ‘removed’ by the Turkish Ottoman Empire in the modern day Baku region now tagged Armenian genocide during world war l.

    It is also a pattern that was repeated in Germany by the Nazis that eliminated the Jews in Europe during world war ll in 1945 now infamously known as Nazi Holocaust or Jewish genocide.

    Is it not amazing how Qatar 2022 FlFA World Cup has facilitated the shinning of light on that dastardly act of eliminating blacks in their country by Argentina?

    While one would like to encourage Africans/black race to forgive Argentinians of the inhumanity perpetrated by their forbears centuries ago by wishing them well and joining in celebrating their victory,they may never forget the atrocities committed against their forbears,lest it happens again.

    At another level,FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 has also been very disappointing to the English team and nation at large.

    They had adopted the slogan ‘football is coming home’ because they were hopeful that they would clinch the cup and take it home in light of the fact the tournament actually started in Europe in 1930.

    Nevertheless,l presume that they must have taken solace in the fact that they are in a similar boat as football greats like Brazil and Germany.

    Africa would have been equally disappointed since Morocco could not be in the finals.But as earlier stated,the black race is still considered to have been well represented in the finals in of the World Cup played between France and Argentina on Sunday 18 December.

    That is by virtue of the sheer number of black players in the the French team which Africa and the Arab would understandably preferred to cheer in the final match that saw France rising from behind twice to equalize with Argentina in goals scoring.

    By some account,over 50% of the French squad for Qatar 2022 FlFA World Cup are blacks and notably the super star Mbappe who is originally from the west African country,Cameroon.

    That remarkably implies that the continent of Africa won,even if Morocco crashed out in the last four nations stage and France gallantly lost to Argentina after a penalty shoot out and could not make history like Brazil and Italy by winning the trophy,back to back.

    Incidentally,Paris Saint Germain,PSG the France based football club side where both kyliane Mbappe – French national and Lionel Messi,an Argentinian ply their trade is owned by the state of Qatar.

    What Qatar affirms by making that strategic purchase over a decade ago is that investing in sports goes beyond mere recreation or entertainment value. It has proven to be a veritable tool or platform for local development(infrastructure wise) internationalization(in terms of opening up the economy of nations)and opportunity to make a statement of arrival as a global sociopolitical, economic and cultural power house by the host country.

    And it is worth pointing out that Qatar 2022 FIFA World Cup has been long in coming by virtue of the fact that the project started when the tiny natural gas rich country acquired the high premium European club side,PSG.

    Most critics might have likened Qatar’s initiative to host the World Cup to a tiny Cod fish trying to swallow a whale.

    And the Arab country might have been accused of nursing a halting ambition, when it first acquired interest in PSG in June 2011 after which it later attained whole ownership in March 2012.

    Although Qatar might have initially appeared to have punched above its weight,it has been well worth it.
    Is it not instructive that Qatar’s hosting of the FIFA World Cup is a dream that took over a decade (2011-2022) to evolve and manifest ? Unlike Nigeria that has been squandering it’s oil/gas wealth by not only subsidizing the pump price of petrol,but also borrowing against future incomes from oil resources to fund the present culture of unbridled consumption.

    Football,nay sports is certainly a socioeconomic development catalyst,hence countries around the world aspiring to open up to the global community,often host global sporting events -China,Russia,Qatar and those that are looking to consolidate their global outlook also covet hosting international sporting tournaments-German, USA, Brazil, UK etc.

    In fact the power of sports is so socially, politically and economically strategic that the next World Cup in 2026 is to be jointly hosted by some of the most illustrious countries in North America-US,Mexico and Canada with eleven(11) matches scheduled to be played in the US, three (3)in Mexico and two (2)in Canada.

    Without a scintilla of doubt,Qatar 2022 is an indisputable testimony to the fact that there is virtue in thinking big and meticulously and patiently implementing the ‘big thinking’.

    Arising from the above,l am recommending that Atiku Abubabar who l am projecting to be the next occupant of Aso Rock Villa -Nigeria’s presidential seat of power from May 29,2023 ,should start thinking big like Qatar by planning for Nigeria to host the FIFA World Cup,perhaps in the next decade, regardless of whether his tenure would have expired.

    And that is based on the hope that he prevails in the 2023 presidential contest.

    One baffling thing about sports and football in particular is the paradox that often springs from it.

    For instance,while Argentina that established its supremacy over all other football loving countries of the world is currently in economic dire straights with a heavy debt burden unpaid to the International Monetary Fund,IMF, conversely the rich countries exited Doha,Qata early,having been edged out by the poorer countries that have proven to be better in the mastery of the game.

    These include nations such as Saudi Arabia,the richest in the Arab world alongside the host Qatar that lost during the early stages and exited.So also did the US and Canada,the wealthiest in North America and indeed the world that failed to win and had to depart early.By the same token,China and Japan which are the most prosperous in Asia,also had to go home early.Just as Germany and Uk,the richest in Europe also did not do well enough and had to depart prematurely.

    But Argentina,a country under the yoke of socioeconomic malaise excelled by defeating the whole world,including the richest.

    Is it not such an irony that in celebration of the victory,an unprecedented number of the forty five (45)million populace of the financially challenged country,taking advantage of a public holiday declared in commemoration of the victory trooped out into the streets of the capital,Buenos Aires to celebrate their triumphant football team,and by so doing momentarily forgot their worries and the pangs of hunger that had been tormenting them?

    In the light of the above reality,an interesting food for thought is the question: ls football the new opium of the poor,as religion was famously dubbed the opium of the poor by the German sociologist and economist,Karl Marx?

    The FlFA president Gianni Infantino’s poignant statement below seems to answer the question:

    “Those fans and the billions watching on TV, they have their own problems. They just want to watch 90 or 120 minutes without having to think about anything, but just enjoying a little moment of pleasure and joy. We have to give them a moment when they can forget about their problems and enjoy football.”
    Having highlighted and underscored the salient points,my job is done and l therefore urge readers to draw their own conclusions.

     

    Magnus Onyibe, an entrepreneur,public policy analyst,author,development strategist,alumnus of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy,Tufts University, Massachusetts,USA and a former commissioner in Delta state government, sent this piece from lagos.

    To continue with this conversation,pls visit www.magnum.ng

  • Soccer pundit, Piers Morgan slams Messi for gloating over World Cup triumph

    Soccer pundit, Piers Morgan slams Messi for gloating over World Cup triumph

    English Soccer pundit, Piers Morgan, has aimed a dig at Lionel Messi over his actions and inactions since winning the FIFA World Cup On Sunday in Qatar.

    Morgan said Messi has been gloating after the Argentine made a post on his Instagram page recently.

    It’s believed that Morgan is a fan of Messi’s closest rival in World Football, Cristiano Ronaldo who got bundled out at the quarter-final of the Mundial.

    While his love for Ronaldo has never been hidden, the British media personality has also never shied away from taking digs at Messi whenever he can.

    Recall that Messi was pictured in one of his post sleeping with the World Cup resting by his side.

    “OK, Lionel.. we get it, you won the World Cup,” Morgan tweeted, along with a screenshot of Messi’s Instagram page, with the last six of his posts being about his World Cup triumph.

    “You’re slightly over-egging the gloating soufflé now…”

    Messi already hinted that the 2022 was his last World Cup and he capped it with a win.

  • Croatia could’ve done more at World Cup – Brozovic

    Croatia could’ve done more at World Cup – Brozovic

    Inter Milan midfielder Marcelo Brozovic felt Croatia could’ve achieved more at the just concluded FIFA World Cup in Qatar.

    They finished third after winning the playoff against Morocco on Saturday.

    Brozovic feels they now should focus on the Nations League.

    He said: “I have no regrets for the results that we achieved, even if we could’ve gone even further.

    “Now hopefully there will be a similar party if we win the Nations League in June.”

  • After World Cup historic performance, Davido wishes fans merry Christmas

    After World Cup historic performance, Davido wishes fans merry Christmas

    Nigerian music star, David Adeleke, popularly known by his stage name Davido, has wished his fans a merry Christmas and a new year, after performing at the closing ceremony of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

    Davido also appreciated his fans for their love and support.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) RecallS that Davido shared his first set of photos on social media ahead of his performance at the closing ceremony of the world cup on Sunday.

    Taking to his Instagram page to share several more photos of his historic performance at the closing ceremony of the world cup, Davido said: “Merry Christmas & Happy New Year. Thank you all I love you,” he wrote on his Instagram.

    Davido hit another milestone in his career, apart from winning awards, as his pictures with his lover Chioma at the Lusail Stadium in Qatar on Monday, became the most-liked picture on Instagram in Nigeria, with over 1.7 million likes.

    Davido performed at the closing ceremony of the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar on Sunday, and prior to his performance, the award-winning star shared pictures on Instagram with Chioma, who was seen dressing her man ahead of his performance.

    After World Cup historic performance, Davido wishes fans merry Christmas

    The post was the first social media post-David had made since the death of his son, Ifeanyi in October.

    Recall that the lovebirds had stayed off social media since the incident and at his return Nigerians and fans all over the world, in their millions, rushed to like their pictures.

    Davido performed at the world stage alongside other artists from around the world – Aisha, Ozun and GIMS.

    The singer and Aisha performed “Better Together,” while Ozuna and GIMS sang “Arhbo.”

    After his performance on Sunday night, excited Nigerians took to social media to express their love and support and hail the music star for a beautiful performance on the world stage, many saying Davido made Nigeria proud.

    Watch the video of Davido and Chioma sharing kiss in Qatar 

  • Hugo Lloris speaks on France retirement

    Hugo Lloris speaks on France retirement

    Tottenham captain Hugo Lloris says it’s too soon to consider international retirement.

    Lloris was asked about continuing with France immediately after the World Cup final defeat to Argentina.

    “Now is not the time to answer these questions,” he told TF1.

    “It’s a painful evening … even if we have achieved great things, there is this pain. These questions will be answered in a while.

    “It’s been almost a month of competition and even there on this final we believed it until the end. Then when it doesn’t smile … it’s football. We must congratulate the Argentines who have made a big tournament and a great final.”

  • Netherlands auction World Cup jerseys

    Netherlands auction World Cup jerseys

    An auction of match-worn World Cup jerseys of the Netherlands national team has raised €380,000 ($402,934).

    The proceeds will be used to help the situation of migrant workers in Qatar.

    To this end, the Dutch football federation KNVB said on Monday it plans to work with the international workers’ association BWI.

    The money is to be used to help in the protection of migrants’ rights, legal assistance, personal development and social activities, such as football.