Fred Edoreh
As we bend another circle in governance, the sports community can be assured of President Muhammadu Buhari’s passion and commitment to the stability and progress of Nigerian sports.
He demonstrated this early in his first tenure, when he called up the 1985 class of the Golden Eaglets who won the first ever FIFA U-16 World Championships (now U-17 World Cup), to redeem the pledge he made to them as then Head of State, which was abandoned while he was out.
In January 2016, not only did he go 30 years back to keep his word, he also assembled and rewarded other athletes who made Nigeria proud before his return as president. These included the 2015 World Wrestling Championship team, D’Tigers, who won the FIBA 2015 Male Afro-Basketball, 2015 FIBA Africa Under-16 Female Champions, medallists at the 2015 IPC Asian Open International Powerlifting Championships, the 2015 CAF U-23 Cup of Nations Champions and the victorious Golden Eaglets of the 2015 FIFA U-17 World Cup. Then followed series of Aso Rock receptions to reward, honour and inspire various national teams throughout his first tenure.
President Buhari dutifully encouraged our athletes, bearing in mind that “nothing unites Nigerians more than (sports)” and that they carry “the passions, emotions and feelings of (our) over 180 million people.”
Perhaps, the most profound demonstration of his commitment to the best interest of our sports was his intervention in the crisis that bogged the Nigeria Football Federation after the 2018 World Cup, when he stepped out as a true leader, distinguishing himself as a global citizen to reverse the impending ban on Nigeria, by taking a definite stand on respect for FIFA statutes.
The intervention brought stability which unfettered the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) to pursue its “vision of building a sustainable football culture” and the delivery of its “mandate of promoting sports in Nigeria as a key economic factor.”
A major objective of the NFF is to attain 100 percent self-financing, on which it presently has achieved 60 percent from the 20 percent it was before the current board. This is aimed at freeing up funds for the government to service critical areas like education, health and infrastructure. A number of brands and organisations, such as Aiteo Group, Coca-Cola, Zenith Bank, Nigeria Breweries, WAPIC, Bet9ja and others have come to play on this score.
The most critical intervention was Aiteo’s signing in 2016, of a five-year sponsorship worth $8.2 million (N2.9 billion) as Optimum Partner of the NFF. The partnership is enabling the NFF to pay the salaries of the Super Eagles coach and technical crew as well as that of all other national teams for the duration of the relationship, thus, putting paid to the, hitherto, recurrent headache about payment of coaches’ salaries.
Interestingly, the sponsorship also covered the outstanding of salaries owed coaches even before the entry of both the Pinnick board and Aiteo.
Aiteo’s offer of N50 million bonus per goal to the Super Eagles during the qualifiers and the 2018 World Cup proper was especially lifting for the team, as it not only became the first team to qualify, but did so with a match to spare, a sharp departure from the past.
It has, also, through its sponsorship package, revived the Aiteo Cup (formerly Challenge and FA Cup), bringing back the thickness and glamour of the competition, which provides a platform for thousands of youths across the country.
The company went further to bankroll both the NFF-Aiteo Football Awards, as well as the CAF-Aiteo Awards as a platform for the inspiration of both elite and budding stars. This, coming from another Nigerian company, after Glo, elicits a huge impression on the African and global community about the strength of our nation in world sports.
Its founder, Benedict Peters, explained this aptly during the signing ceremony: “It is important for Nigerian companies to share their success. As Nigerian companies grow, I believe the benefits should be spread as widely as possible. Aiteo Group is as passionate about leadership as Nigerians are about football…to reach a shared goal of a more prosperous Nigeria, increasingly seeing global success and competing with global players.”
It is remarkable that Benedict Peters shares with President Buhari the passion for Nigerian sports as a uniting factor for the citizenry and has chosen, therefore, to act as a matter of responsibility and patriotism to our nation.
The sustenance of relationships like Aiteo’s is necessary for the advancement of our sports and it makes strategic sense in nation building for President Buhari to help sustain the continued commitment of such notable supporters. This can be done through simple official commendations, a thank you visit, a Presidential Dinner and national honours.

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