English Premier League Vs Nigeria Premier League – Keshi to the rescue!

Categories: Football, General
Written By: Segun Odegbami

Supersport is doing a great deal to promote and support African football, particularly through its expanding television coverage of domestic football leagues across the continent. It goes without saying that television is the most powerful tool to promote the business of sport. Football without television is like tea without sugar. Supersport also transmits matches of the English Premiership League, EPL, with devastating effect on the followership of local domestic leagues including the Nigerian Premier League, NPL. Except, perhaps, in South Africa, every where else on the continent the situation with their domestic leagues is the same – empty seats, sparse crowds and poor fields.

Of course, nothing can be done to diminish public interest in the EPL. It is such a well-packaged, well-televised, well-promoted, well-marketed and well-publicised irresistible product that any effort to tamper with it is doomed to fail. The motivation should not be to compete with it or make it the standard to beat, but to use it as a compass to create our own local football league variant that must have its own uniqueness in colour and excitement, loaded fully with exceptionally gifted and celebrated stars playing a brand of football that will hold captive any one watching it at various venues or on television. Everyone knows that what needs to be done is to introduce some creative content around the NPL that will ensure that whilst the public still patronise the English Premiership, they follow, enjoy and support Nigeria’s own local premier league as well.

Of course, this means that football administrators must engage creative minds to develop concepts that must make the Nigerian football league very friendly, colourful, crime-free, hooliganism-free, family-friendly, corruption-free and very entertaining. There must also be a proper orientation program to drive the establishment of a culture of club-supportership at the grassroots level where the people shall see football as business as well as a celebration of talent, the clubs as their property and investment, match venues as their theatre for artistic expression, and the actual matches as unscripted drama! Today, in Nigeria, even with scanty crowds and low patronage, supporters have turned football grounds into theatres of war where ‘not to win is to die!’. Attitudes must change for football to find its feet again at domestic level in most African countries. Something is sprouting in the Nigerian football space that may interest other African countries. Stephen Keshi is indirectly taking on the EPL through the NPL. It interests me

Football is about the stars in the game. Stars are the exceptionally gifted players that do the exceptional and, sometimes, extra-ordinary things on the field of play. No league can thrive well and be marketable without them. Foreign leagues come to our local leagues, snatch away the best of our up-and-coming stars to burnish and colour their own leagues. Their clubs are passionately followed, matches are religiously watched, and the stadia are regular filled to capacity with fanatical fans, all due to the presence of the superstar players on parade. An Argentine national team visiting Nigeria will attract little spectatorship without the assured presence of Lionel Messi. Brazil without Pele was never the same team. In 1969 the warring armies of Nigeria and Biafra temporarily set aside their differences and halted their war just to be able to follow Pele’s performance against Nigeria’s national team in Lagos on radio! Late Haruna Ilerika, even as a student in secondary school, singlehandedly filled stadia across the South-West of Nigeria in his days. Everyone wanted to see his mesmerising dribbling skills. ‘Superbrat’ Etim John Esin attracted thousands of spectators to match venues like nectar to honey everywhere his club, Calabar Rovers FC, played. He was created by the media and promoted like no other player before, or since. They made him a god and every Nigerian, including those that knew nothing about the game, wanted to go to football grounds to see for themselves the wonder that was Etim. But it was Rashidi Yekini’s case that fully opened my eyes. Some 6 years ago, even when the debilitating effect of the English Premiership was well known and acknowledged, Rashidi Yekini, after a 5-year layoff from competitive football returned to the domestic league to play for Gateway FC for one season. Aged and rusty as he was he still filled every stadium around the country he played during the 10 months period. He was such a mystical star, a goal-scoring machine, that people thronged to the local fields to watch him control, turn, twist, race and shoot at goal. Rashidi split football fans between watching their irresistible Premiership matches and watching him at the local stadia. Thats the drawing power of an authentic football star!

So, how do you create football stars within the local leagues in an endless stream so that even when some are prematurely sold to other foreign leagues, as they inevitably would, there will still be enough gifted stars left to sustain interest in the domestic league and massive followership by the football fans. That is what is being planted now in Nigerian football. I am not so sure what Stephen Keshi’s motivation for his recent actions and rhetorics are, but I can see great prospects in his recognition, elevation and promotion of Nigerian players in the NPL, and his decision to raise a standing national team of home-based players. What a brilliant idea! When you look at the league the way it is now, one may not easily see and appreciate the budding stars in it as a result of poor coaching, poor pitches (including all those with artificial turfs), too much emphasis on technicalities at the expense of artistic expression and lack of financial incentives. But the opportunity to train under a coach of Keshi’s pedigree and experience, and to play in the Super Eagles without first moving to a European league provides invaluable motivation for the players. Stephen Keshi has been saying and doing the rights things so far. Rather than use the players’ movement to Europe as pre-condition for being a deserving Eagle, as has been the practise, Keshi proposes to use the psychological impetus of becoming internationals from the local league to give the players the essential physical, transformational lift that will make them instant stars locally. Once they become stars and continue to play in the local league, with the help of the media drawing attention and celebrating them, interest to watch them will heighten, fans will return to the grounds to watch the new kids, new names that will soon become a singsong will rent the air, and the empty terraces will start to fill slowly and steadily, once again!

One Response to “English Premier League Vs Nigeria Premier League – Keshi to the rescue!”

  1. Jaguar Says:

    Well done Keshi. That is surely the first tentative step in the right direction.

    Personally, I recall when on a few occasions I was the only player in the national team that was local. The unadulterated pride I used to be filled with when at training or running out to play amongst all our imports I can not describe. Having said that, our league then, though unbeknowest to us was a professional league in all respects apart from in name.

    What Keshi is trying to put in place now needs to be supported from all quarters, administratively and from business concerns (as partners and sponsors). First and foremost, football in Nigeria needs to be seen, managed and run as a business. That is what it is. Simple.

    The spectators and life-blood of football need to recognise that fact as well.

    At the moment though, borrowing from John Kennedy “Ask not what our football can do for you, but what you can do for our football”

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