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Muhammad Ali visited Bob Marley on his deathbed — Bob’s final words to the champion changed everything.

 

 

Miami, Florida. Cedars of Lebanon Hospital. May 9, 1981. 4:47 pm. Muhammad Ali walked slowly down the hospital corridor, more slowly than he usually moved. At 39, the greatest boxer of all time was beginning to feel that something was wrong with his body. A tremor in his hands, a slowness in his movements, something he couldn’t fight with his fists

 

But today wasn’t about Ali’s fight. Today was about saying goodbye to a friend. Bob Marley was dying in room 318. Ali had received the call two days ago. Rita Marley’s voice, calm, breaking: “Muhammad, if you want to see Bob, you need to come now. The doctors say days, maybe hours.”

 

Ali had canceled everything. He flew to Miami immediately because Bob Marley wasn’t just another musician to Ali. Bob was a brother in the struggle. The door to room 318 was partially open. Ali knocked softly. Rita appeared. Her eyes were red from crying.

 

—Muhammad. Uh, thanks for coming.

 

Ali hugged her gently.

 

“How is he?”

 

“Awake, weak. He’s been asking for you.”

 

Ali entered the room. Bob Marley lay on the bed, his body reduced to barely 80 pounds. The dreadlocks that had been his crown now looked thin against the pillow. His skin had taken on a grayish pallor. But when Bob saw Ali, his eyes lit up. A smile crossed his face

 

—Champ— Bob whispered. —You came.

 

Ali walked over to the bed and sat in the chair beside it. She gently took Bob’s hand.

 

—Of course I came, brother. Do you think I’d miss saying goodbye to the man who taught me about true courage?

 

Bob’s smile grew slightly.

 

—I didn’t teach you anything. You are Muhammad Ali. The greatest.

 

“The greatest boxer, perhaps,” Ali said. “But you, you were the greatest warrior. You fought with music, you fought with words, you fought with your whole spirit, and you never backed down.”

 

Bob’s breathing was labored. Every word required effort.

 

—Neither did you, champ. You gave up everything. Your title, your freedom, your best years, because you wouldn’t fight in Vietnam. Because you stood up for what you believed in.

 

Ali nodded.

 

It took me three and a half years. They took away my belt, they took away my license, they took away my ability to earn money, but I couldn’t fight in a war I didn’t believe in. I couldn’t kill people who never called me the N-word

 

“I know,” Bob said. “That’s why you changed my life.”

 

Ali looked surprised.

 

“I changed your life, brother. You’re the one who changed the world. Your music reached billions. You took reggae to every country. You united people across every divide.”

 

Bob shook his head weakly.

 

“But I learned courage from you. 1967. I was 22. I saw you refuse to go to Vietnam. I saw them take your title away. I saw the whole world turn against you. And you stood there and said, ‘I have no quarrel with those Viet Cong.’ You were willing to go to prison for your beliefs.” Bob paused, gathering his strength. “That taught me something, champ. It taught me that true courage isn’t fighting when the crowd is behind you. It’s standing alone when everyone thinks you’re wrong. That’s what I tried to do with my music. Stand up for something even when it cost me.”

 

Ali felt tears welling up in his eyes.

 

—Bob, you did more than defend. You changed hearts. You made people think. You made them feel. That’s bigger than anything I did in a ring.

 

“No,” Bob said firmly, with more strength than he’d had in days. “What you did in that ring changed everything. You weren’t just boxing. You were showing Black people that we didn’t have to accept what the world said about us. You were beautiful. You were proud. You were unapologetically yourself. That gave the rest of us permission to be ourselves, too.”

 

Ali squeezed Bob’s hand gently.

 

—We were fighting the same fight, only in different arenas.

 

“The same fight,” Bob agreed. “Freedom, dignity, the right to be who we are without apologizing.”

 

 

They sat in silence for a moment. Outside the window, Miami continued its noise. Cars, people, life moving on, while in this room time seemed suspended. Bob spoke again, his voice calmer now.

 

—Champ, can I tell you something?

 

—Anything, brother.

 

—I’m not afraid to die. I’ve made my peace with Jah. I’ve done what I came here to do, but I’m afraid of what I’m leaving behind

 

Ali leaned closer.

 

—What do you mean?

 

—I’m afraid people will remember the music but forget the message. I’m afraid they’ll dance to *One Love* but not live it. I’m afraid they’ll make me a legend and miss the point. —Bob’s eyes locked onto Ali’s—. Do you understand this? They made you a legend, too. Muhammad Ali, the greatest. But how many people remember why you were great? Not the boxing, the stance you took, the price you paid

 

Ali felt the weight of Bob’s words.

 

—You’re right. People remember the fights, the provocations, the spectacle, but they forget that I went to prison for my beliefs. They forget that I lost years I can never get back.

 

“Exactly,” Bob said. “So I need to ask you something, champ. When I’m gone, when they turn me into posters and T-shirts and nostalgia, will you tell them? Will you remind people what this was really about?”

 

Ali felt his throat close up.

 

—Tell them what, Bob?

 

Bob’s voice became urgent despite his weakness

 

“Tell them it cost something. Tell them courage always costs something. Tell them I didn’t die for the music. I died because I didn’t stop. I didn’t slow down. I didn’t compromise the message for my health. Tell them that’s what real commitment looks like.” Bob paused, breathing heavily. “Tell them about 1976. About the assassination attempt. About seven gunmen breaking into my house two days before the Smile Jamaica concert. About bullets hitting me, hitting Rita, hitting my manager. About how we still did that concert 48 hours later, performed for 80,000 people with bullets still in my body.”

 

Ali had heard the story, but never directly from Bob.

 

—Why did you do it? Why risk your life for a concert?

 

“Because the message was bigger than my life,” Bob said simply. “Because if I let fear stop me, then violence wins. Division wins, hate wins. I had to show that love is stronger than bullets, that music is more powerful than guns.” Bob looked intently at Ali. “Just like you showed the world that principles are more powerful than punishment. You could have gone to Vietnam. You could have kept your title, your money, your fame. But you chose principles over comfort. That’s what changed my life, champ. That’s what I tried to live by.”

 

Ali dried his eyes.

 

—Bob, you handled it better than I did. You never stopped, even when I was killing you.

 

“And that’s my regret,” Bob said quietly. “I should have stopped. I should have rested. I should have spent more time with my children, with Rita, with my mother. I thought the mission was more important than my life. But now, dying at 36, I realize the mission needed me to live. I could have done more if I had taken better care of myself.”

 

Ali felt something break inside him. Bob was telling him something important, something Ali needed to hear.

 

—Bob, are you telling me to slow down, to take care of myself?

 

Bob nodded weakly.

 

“Champ, I can sense something’s wrong with you. I see it in your movements. You’re fighting something.”

 

Ali’s hands trembled slightly. He’d been noticing it for months. The trembling, the slowness. He hadn’t told anyone yet.

 

—I don’t know what it is, but yes, something is wrong.

 

“Then learn from my mistake,” Bob said urgently. “Don’t sacrifice your life for your legacy. Take care of yourself. Rest. Allow yourself to be human. The world needs Muhammad Ali alive more than it needs another fight, another show, another performance.” Bob’s breathing became more labored. “Promise me, champ. Promise me you’ll take care of yourself. Promise me you’ll live because your children need you. Your wife needs you. The world needs you. And you can’t help anyone if you’re dead.”

 

Ali felt tears running down his face.

 

—I promise, Bob. I promise.

 

Bob smiled. Then he said something that would echo in Ali’s mind for the rest of his life.

 

—You taught me how to stand up. Now I’m teaching you how to rest. Both are courage, champ. Both matter.

 

Those words hung in the air between them. Two warriors. Two men who had given everything for their beliefs. One dying too young. One fighting to live longer. Bob’s voice grew even calmer.

 

—Muhammad, I need you to know something else.

 

—What, brother?

 

—Meeting you changed how I saw myself. You were a Black man who refused to be anything but proud, refused to be silent, refused to back down. You made me believe I could do the same with music. You made me believe one person standing up for the truth could change the world. —Bob paused— So everything I did, every song I wrote, every stage I stood on, that was partly because I saw you stand in that courtroom in 1967 and refuse to go to war. You inspired millions, champ, including me. And I just needed you to know that before I went

 

Ali completely collapsed. This man, this warrior, this voice of a generation was using his last breaths to thank Ali for the inspiration.

 

—Bob, I don’t know what to say.

 

—Don’t say anything. Just remember that when they ask you about Muhammad Ali, tell them about the cost. Tell them about the years you lost. Tell them it was worth it because you stayed true to yourself. And when they ask you about Bob Marley, tell them the same thing. Tell them I paid the price for the message and I would do it again.

 

Ali held Bob’s hand tighter.

 

—I’ll tell him, brother. I promise I’ll tell him.

 

They sat together for another hour, talking less, simply being present. Two champions who had fought different fights but bore the same scars. Finally, Bob grew too tired to stay awake. Ali got up to leave.

 

—Champ—Bob whispered, his eyes closed. —One more thing.

 

—Yes, Bob.

 

—It floats like a butterfly, stings like a bee, but also rests like a human. Promise?

 

Ali smiled through his tears.

 

—I promise.

 

Bob Marley died two days later, on May 11, 1981, at 11:45 a.m. He was 36 years old. Ali attended the memorial service in New York. He was asked to speak

 

“Bob Marley taught me something in our last conversation that I’ll carry with me for the rest of my life,” Ali told the crowd. “He taught me that courage has two forms: standing up when everyone tells you to sit down and resting when everyone tells you to act. Bob stood up his whole life. He stood up for justice, unity, love. And he paid the ultimate price. He worked himself to death for his message. That’s heroic. That’s dedication. But it’s also a warning. Don’t sacrifice your life for your legacy. Don’t give everything until there’s nothing left. Bob told me, ‘Take care of yourself. Rest. Live. Because the world needs you alive.’”

 

Ali paused, his voice breaking.

 

—Bob Marley changed my life twice. Once in 1967 when he saw me refuse to go to Vietnam and learned that courage means being alone. And once in 1981 when he was dying and taught me that courage also means knowing when to rest. Both lessons saved me. One gave me purpose. The other could buy me years.

 

For the next 15 years, as Muhammad Ali battled Parkinson’s disease, he often thought of that hospital room, of Bob’s trembling hand in his, of Bob’s final wisdom. Ali slowed down, stopped accepting every fight, every appearance, every demand. He rested. He spent time with his family. He took care of himself. And he outlived Bob by 35 years.

 

In 2016, when Muhammad Ali died at the age of 74, his daughter Laila spoke at his funeral.

 

“My father often spoke of Bob Marley, of their last conversation, of how Bob, as he was dying, told my father to live, to rest, to take care of himself. My father said that Bob gave him permission to be human, to stop performing and start living. That gift gave us decades more with him. He gave the world decades more of his wisdom, his presence, his love.” Laila continued, “Two warriors, two champions, two men who stood up when the world told them to bow. But in the end, Bob taught my father that the greatest fight isn’t always the one in the ring or on the stage. Sometimes the greatest fight is staying alive for the people who love you.”

 

Today at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, there’s a small exhibit about Ali’s friendship with Bob Marley. It includes a photo of them together from 1978. Two icons, two fighters, two men who changed the world. Below the photo is a quote from Ali’s last interview about Bob.

 

Bob Marley told me, “You taught me how to stand up. Now I’m teaching you how to rest. Both are courage.” Those words saved my life. I stood up for justice, but I also rested for my family. Both mattered. Bob died at 36 because he never stopped. I lived to 74 because he taught me that it’s okay to stop. That’s the gift he gave me, and I’m grateful every day.

 

Legacy isn’t just music or fights. Legacy is the wisdom passed down between warriors. The understanding that courage takes many forms. The knowledge that standing up for something is important, but living for someone is essential. Bob Marley stood until he was killed. Muhammad Ali learned to rest before he was killed. Both were heroes. Both were champions. But only one lived long enough to tell the tale.

 

If you’re reading this and you’re consumed by a cause, a career, a mission, listen to Bob Marley’s last words to Muhammad Ali. You can’t help anyone if you’re dead. Take care of yourself. Rest. Live. Stand up for what matters, but also rest for those who matter. Both are courageous. Both are necessary. Bob Marley taught Muhammad Ali that lesson with his last breath. And, Ali lived an extra 35 years because he listened.

Chelsea appoint Rosenior as new manager

 

 

Chelsea have confirmed the appointment of Liam Rosenior as their new coach to replace Enzo Maresca.

Chelsea announced his appointment with a statement on their website on Tuesday.

The 41-year-old will become Chelsea’s fourth permanent boss since BlueCo took control in 2022.

Rosenior leaves French Ligue 1 side Strasbourg to team up with the Club World Cup champions.

The British coach signed a contract until June 2032 on Tuesday.

The academy coach has confirmed that he will be in the dugout for Chelsea’s Premier League clash with their west London rivals Fulham on Wednesday.

“I am extremely humbled and honoured to be appointed Head Coach of Chelsea Football Club. This is a club with a unique spirit and a proud history of winning trophies,” Rosenior said in a statement.

“My job is to protect that identity and create a team that reflects these values in every game we play as we continue winning trophies. To be entrusted with this role means the world to me and I want to thank all involved for the opportunity and faith in undertaking this job. I will give everything to bring the success this club deserves.

“I believe deeply in teamwork, unity, togetherness and working for one another, and those values will be at the heart of everything we do. They will be the foundation of our success.”

Shortly before his move to Chelsea was announced, Rosenior gave a farewell news conference in France on Tuesday morning in which he said he was yet to sign a contract with the Premier League club.

“It looks like I’m going to be the next manager of [Chelsea],” he said.

“I haven’t signed yet, I have agreed verbally with Chelsea. It’s really important, this is different to anything anyone has ever done — nobody has made a statement before they have signed a contract.

“Everything is agreed and it will probably go through in the next few hours. I’m here because I care about this club and I felt it was right to answer your questions physically here today before I move on.”

Osimhen makes 10-man shortlist for 2025 CAF Men’s Player of the Year Award

 

 

Super Eagles star striker, Victor Osimhen, has once again earned recognition on the continental stage after being shortlisted for the 2025 CAF Men’s Player of the Year Award.

The Confederation of African Football (CAF) unveiled the 10-man shortlist on Wednesday, featuring some of Africa’s most outstanding football talents who have made remarkable contributions for both club and country over the past year.

Alongside Osimhen, the list includes Mohamed Salah of Egypt; Achraf Hakimi and Oussama Lamlioui of Morocco; Seydou Guirassy of Guinea; Fiston Mayele of Congo; Frank Anguissa of Cameroon; Denis Bouanga of Gabon; and Senegalese stars Ilimane Ndiaye and Pape Sarr.

Osimhen, who won the prestigious award in 2023, enjoyed another impressive season, leading Galatasaray to the Turkish Super Lig title with 26 league goals. His remarkable form earned him a record €75 million permanent transfer from Napoli to the Turkish champions.

In other categories, Nigeria’s Stanley Nwabali has been nominated for the Goalkeeper of the Year award, where he will face competition from Yassine Bounou, Ronwen Williams, and Andre Onana.

Also on the honours list is Daniel Bameyi, captain of Nigeria’s Flying Eagles, who is among the contenders for the Men’s Young Player of the Year award.

CAF is expected to announce the winners at its annual awards ceremony later in the year.

Afrobasket: D’Tigers eliminated, lose chance at Tinubu’s $100,000 cash reward

 

 

Nigeria’s men’s basketball team, D’Tigers, have bowed out of the 2025 FIBA Afrobasket Championship in Angola after falling 91-75 to Senegal in the quarter-finals on Wednesday night.

 

The game began on a promising note for the Nigerian side, who edged the first quarter 24-23. However, their momentum quickly slipped away in the second quarter as Senegal dominated with a 30-13 run, creating a gap D’Tigers could not recover from.

 

The five-time Afrobasket champions, Senegal, further tightened their grip in the third quarter, outscoring Nigeria 23-13 and effectively sealing the contest before the final buzzer.

 

Despite a spirited effort in the final quarter, where D’Tigers managed to outscore their female counterparts who recently claimed the women’s version of the competition for the fifth consecutive time, will miss out on the $100,000 reward offered by President Bola Tinubu.

Lionel Messi and Wife Antonela Capture Hearts on Kiss Cam at Coldplay Concert in Miami

 

 

Football icon Lionel Messi and his wife Antonela Roccuzzo made a brief but memorable appearance on the stadium’s Kiss Cam during Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres tour stop in Miami on Sunday, July 27.

 

The couple, seated in a reserved VIP section, appeared on the big screen to cheers and excitement from the crowd. As the camera focused on them, Messi smiled warmly and waved in response, prompting fans across the venue to break into a passionate chant of “Messi! Messi! Messi!”

 

While the couple didn’t share a kiss or react dramatically to the spotlight, the understated moment quickly captured fans’ attention online. The clip went viral, with many admiring the quiet charm of the football star and his long-time partner amid the energy of the concert.

 

 

The sighting added a touch of celebrity excitement to an already electric evening, blending global music and sports fandom in one unforgettable moment.

CHANGING ORIENTATION OF OUR FORMER STARS

By Tunde Olusunle

Several years after he retired from his illustrious career as a professional footballer, Peter Osaze Odemwingie was in the news a few weeks back. Very thankfully, his rebound was not a worrying piece of news. It has become customary for the medical plight of many of our former sportsmen to jump into our faces from the pages of tabloids. Often times, such unsavoury appearances, come with alms-solicitation bowls, foregrounding the dire situations of the subjects at those points in time. Odemwingie’s narrative, however, is a very heartening piece of news. He belongs to a new breed of our sports greats who are able to reinvent themselves after they cease to feature in big leagues across the world, even as we view them regularly on our television screens. Odemwingie’s example is one which should inspire our sports professionals, serving and upcoming.

Osaze Odemwingie by the way, played professional football for nearly two decades, specifically between year 2000 and 2018. A broad-based study of the careers of most footballers across the world is that their years of top, on-field performance averages 15 to 20 years. They sign their first professional contracts when they are about 18 years of age and will be fortunate to keep playing at optimum levels two decades after. Not every football player can be Roger Miller of Cameroon; Cristiano Ronaldo and Pepe of Portugal; Sergio Ramos of Spain, James Milner of England, or our own Kanu Nwankwo and John Utaka. These outfield players grossed or overshot two full decades on the turf for their respective clubs and countries in many instances. Goalkeepers in football have been known to enjoy careers well beyond two decades. They burn less calories within the space of their goal area, than defenders, midfielders, wingers and strikers. The latter are almost ever in motion snuffing out potential encroachments in their space and also shopping upfront for opportunities to unsettle their opponents.

Odemwingie was born in Tashkent, in the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, (USSR), which is now in the country Uzbekistan. He began a professional career in football, however, with Bendel Insurance Football Club of Benin City, Edo State, home state of his father, in year 2000. He went on to play for nearly 10 other clubs in Belgium, France, England, Russia and Indonesia before retiring in 2018. He played over 400 games and scored 125 goals for his various employers. He also played for Nigeria’s senior men’s soccer team, the Super Eagles, 65 times over a 12-year period, between 2002 and 2014. Odemwingie scored 11 goals, earning personal and group laurels. He played in four African Cup of Nations, (AFCON) tournaments; two World Cups and earned an Olympic medal in 2018, playing for Nigeria. Odemwingie was not reputed for the kind of tantrums typical of some of his teammates who had spats with the nation’s sports governing body, the Nigeria Football Federation, (NFF) or his managers. He was a remarkably temperate professional.

Much as he took a backstage from club and national footballing, however, he decided to explore other career options. He was just about 37 years old at the time and considered himself still productive. He thus conscientiously pursued a new vocation in the game of golf. He subjected himself to a three-year programme culminating in the receipt of a bachelors degree certificate in one of the courses within the gamut of golf education. June 25, 2024, Odemwingie graduated from the Professional Golfers Association, (PGA) academy. He spoke of the pain of adjustment from the group sports of his footballing career, as against the individuality of golf where one’s only company could be his caddie, for those who could afford one that is. Nonetheless, he is excitedly looking forward to his first PGA tour as a professional as he looks to leave his imprimatur on his new vocation.

Odemwingie is not the only Nigerian, nay African player to have sought new vocational vistas in sports-related concerns after retirement. Some ex-internationals have explored coaching, player management, scouting, punditry and similar possibilities. Super Eagles supremo in the years the team was known as Green Eagles, Segun Odegbami, multi-tasks as broadcast media proprietor, brand ambassador and newspaper columnist among others. Moses Kpakor a very uncompromising defensive midfielder who was particularly outstanding in the 1990 AFCON in Algeria, returned to the classroom, earned a masters degree in sports administration and is Director of Sports at the Benue State University, (BSU), Makurdi.

Retiring after a professional career of over 15 years, Augustine Cerezo Eguavoen, arguably one of Nigeria’s most rugged defenders in his time, managed clubsides in South Africa, Malta, Mali and Greece. He has been the Technical Director of the NFF since 2020. His teammate at Nigeria’s first participation in the FIFA Senior World Cup, “USA ’94,” Michael Emenalo a very effective left back, blossomed beyond his teething years in “Enugu Rangers Football Club,” to global football management. He has been Director of Player Development; Chief Scout; Technical Director and Sporting Director across clubsides in the US, England and France. More currently, Emenalo is Director of Football in the growing Saudi Arabia Professional Football League.

After what may pass as perhaps the briefest stint ever by any coach of the Super Eagles, Finidi George has taken up an appointment as Technical Adviser of Sharks of Port Harcourt Football Club. Sunday Oliseh has been manager of a number of clubs in Belgium and Germany. He also managed Nigeria for a few months. He has been severally appointed by the Federation of International Football Associations, (FIFA) as a technical expert for many FIFA-organised competitions. Emmanuel Amunike who is also a member of that generation of Nigerian players has had coaching spells in Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Tanzania and Zambia. He was an assistant coach under Eguavoen and presently serves in the same capacity with the national team. Austin Jay-Jay Okocha the skillfully admirable baller is involved in production and the entertainment industry. Nwankwo Kanu famously known as Papillo is the Chairman of Enyimba Football Club and is said to be involved with real estate, hospitality as well as oil and gas.

Victor Ikpeba who was nicknamed the “Prince of Monaco” in his active playing years as a forward in the French club by the same name, is a familiar face on satellite television football discussion programmes. Yakubu Aiyegbeni is reported to be active in the property market in England and owns a number of gas stations in Nigeria. Emmanuel Emenike is said to own one of the most modern hospitals named Emenike Hospital in Owerri, Imo State. The ex-international reportedly conceived of it to be the “go to” medical facility in Nigeria’s South East. Erstwhile defensive midfielder, Seyi Olofinjana, 36, was recently appointed Director of Talent Management for Africa at Chelsea Football Club. His compatriot Sone Aluko, 35, has been appointed First Team Coach at Ipswich Town Football Club, which has been newly promoted to the English Premier League, (EPL), while little-known Lukas Babalola, 27, is the new Assistant Manager at Feyenord Football Club in the Dutch first division.

This preceding narrative is an improvement over what has become the norm, rather than the exception with regards to our ex-internationals. Hitherto, it had almost, always been unsavoury news filtering from the homesteads of many of our former stars. The septuagenarian Christian Chukwu who led Nigeria to her first AFCON success in 1980, had to be rescued by billionaire Femi Otedola who paid for his medical evacuation and treatment abroad 2019. Charles Bassey, a marginal former player also has Otedola to thank for showing up for him when he was all but grounded with a protracted ailment in 2021. Henry Nwosu the youngest member of the 1980 AFCON team came down with a stroke two years ago, is a beneficiary of the kindness of the Lagos State governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu. Nigeria’s mobile telecommunications giant, Globacom on the directives of its billionaire owner, Mike Adenuga, intervened last year to keep the folkloric national team goalkeeper, Peter Fregene, on this side of the divide.

Newer ex-internationals it would seem, have learnt from the experiences of their predecessors and have largely become more cautious in the management of their resources. Who would have imagined that a successful former player like Wilson Oruma would become a virtual tramp on the streets? He reportedly lost his life savings in excess of one billion naira to a self-styled fraud posturing as a clergyman who designed all manner fake investment prototypes for him. Another player, Femi Opabunmi also reportedly fell to the designs of a false prophet who fleeced him massively, under the pretext of helping to cure him of glaucoma-induced blindness. Misled by youthful exuberance, some Emeritus players have also frittered their savings on ostentatious and glamorous living. Wasn’t Dan Amokachi reported to own a jet which serviced his frolics in his heydays? Celestine Babayaro, Etim Esin and Ifeanyi Udeze, have been grouped in this category of sportsmen who “ate with all their fingers” to borrow from a Yoruba wise saying. Babayaro and Udeze are said to be gradually finding their feet.

Kanu and John Utaka are examples of ex-players who are giving back to society. Kanu, generally regarded as the most decorated African footballer, established the Kanu Heart Foundation to provide relief for indigent Africans and support people born with congenital heart defects, a health condition he once managed. He overcame this impairment to become one of Africa’s greatest of all time. Utaka established a football academy in Minna, Niger State, far away from his home community in Enugu State. Let’s hope that our former stars will ruminate deeply about the infinite possibilities available to them as they prepare for certain retirement. Let’s hope our erstwhile idols put a stop to hanging around the secretariat of the NFF and the Sports Ministry, desperately craving coaching engagements as sole panacea for their obvious apparent lack of planning.

Tunde Olusunle, PhD, is a Fellow of the Association of Nigerian Authors, (FANA)

Satguru Maharaj Ji Wants Dissolution Of NFF Board 

The Living Perfect Master and founder of One Love Family, Satguru Maharaj Ji, has called for the immediate dissolution of the present board of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF).

The call came in the wake of the country’s poor 2026 Fifa World Cup qualifying campaign, labelling it “unacceptable” after a 2-1 defeat by Benin left the Super Eagles winless from their opening four games.

Following draws with Lesotho, Zimbabwe and South Africa, Nigeria sit fifth in Group C with three points from a possible 12.

Only the group winners are guaranteed a place at the World Cup finals, which will be jointly hosted by the USA, Canada, and Mexico.

In addition to the call for the mass resignation of the NFF board, Maharaj Ji also advocated for a comprehensive overhaul of the nation’s football structure to arrest the current drift.

“The country had not witnessed such inept football administration in its entire history as the current board is made up of self-seeking individuals who have no inkling on how to develop the game.

“This time around, the ineptitude of the team and the mediocre nature of football administration, was bared for all to see, unlike in the past when we would have attributed the blame for the loss on poor officiating by the match officials.

“We now have a Technical Committee, whose head was more concerned about inconsequential things to the detriment of our football,” he said.

Meanwhile, Maharaj Ji has called for the prosecution of the politicians who imposed the Alhaji Ibrahim Musa Gusau – led board on Nigerians.

“It is clear that Gusau and his team have no pedigree in football administration, as they were appointed to achieve cheap political patronage.

“Their predecessors qualified for major competitions but these people cannot pass the simple test of adequately preparing teams; much less qualifying for competitions.

“The country will only get a sound set of football administrators only if it adheres to the rules and regulations pertaining to electoral matters, to guard against the foisting of mediocre individuals on football administration in the country,” Maharaj Ji posited.

“If it were in other climes where integrity is the watch word in every public office, the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) board, led by Alhaji Ibrahim Musa Gusau, ought to have resigned en-mass with an unreserved apology to Nigerians. The board goes down in history with the worst performance record since the creation of the Football Association in 1945.

“Imagine how the NFF treated one of the technical assistants before and during training just to discourage the whole team to failure.

“We are unreliably informed that 50% FIFA support fund for the upliftment of soccer has been used by one of the chairmen to build an Estate and that they the NFF management have now commenced negotiation to spare the football team and coaches twenty percent (20%), if so, how can we ever move forward in football sports in Nigeria.

“We would recommend that Coach Finidi George, Daniel Amokachi and co. should be recalled and Austin Jay Jay Okocha and Kanu Nwankwo be made Chairman and Vice Chairman respectively of NFF while Fani Amun and all the Atlantis brothers who defeated Brazil (Bebeto and Co.) in USA be made ex officio members of the board.

“A situation where hard-working people are treated as monkeys in the name of “sin and repent for the Baboon to chop” should stop now, for Nigeria is neither a pariah state or colonial territory.

“As reported earlier, and/or in the past, the black man has now connected with the Creator to enable constant pure positive and magnetic vibration flow within us now to prove that the Creator  loves all and therefore the black people have the Grace to compare favourably, comparatively with the Oyinbo to prove that we are the origin of man to lead the human race from the dreg of failures, scarcity, wars and disappointed hence hiring of Oyinbo Coach becomes a taboo if not sacrilege and recolonization.

“Sack the NFF now. Also sack and replace all the Senior Oyinbo coaches now. They are unfit to manage soccer in the present circumstances, if we want to win.

Liverpool battle Man Utd for Lookman

English Premier League clubs Liverpool and Manchester United are set to slug it out for Super Eagles forward Ademola Lookman this summer.

Lookman has been impressive at Atalanta since he joined two seasons ago. The Nigeria international has registered 32 goals and 18 assists in 78 appearances for La Dea.

However, he raised eyebrows after his superb end to last season, when he scored a hattrick for Atalanta to help them to a resounding 3-0 victory over Bayer Leverkusen in the UEFA Europa League final.

Recently, there have been talks that Lookman is eyeing a return to the English Premier League, two years after he left Leicester City. And in a new development, per Caught Offside, Manchester United and Liverpool are interested in signing Lookman this summer.

Liverpool are looking to add to their firepower going into next season with new coach Arne Slot.

Meanwhile, Manchester United do not have enough quality on the wings, and Lookman could add a lot to the team with his experience and talent.

Lookman is valued at €40 million according to Transfermarkt. But Atalanta could demand up to €51 million for the deal to happen.

Premier League experience

Lookman already has Premier League experience and would be a good addition to any team he joins. But Liverpool and Manchester United are both in delicate situations. Slot just took over at Anfield and is under pressure to perform as well as Jurgen Klopp did.

Also, Manchester United are desperate to start churning out the results after a disappointing campaign that saw them finish eighth.

If Lookman joins Liverpool, he would get stability-something he has experienced in his career. The former Everton man had hardly spent more than two consecutive seasons at any club. But if he joins Liverpool, he could stay there for a while.

The downside to the Liverpool deal is that Lookman’s playing time will be reduced drastically because the Reds have a stocked squad.

On the other hand, the 26-year-old could enjoy playing time at Manchester United because of the inconsistencies of players like Marcus Rashford and Alejandro Garnacho.

But United are also quite inconsistent at the moment, and the club has witnessed a lot of failed transfers in recent years. Soccernet

Super Eagles coach: NFFdenies contacting Renard

The Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) has dispelled reports it has established contact with Herve Renard for the vacant Super Eagles coaching job.

Reports emerged on Monday that the NFF has opened talks with the Frenchman to take charge of the Super Eagles.A top official of the soccer house has now denied the claim.

“This report is inaccurate. We’ve not contacted Renard or his representatives,” the official told BBC Africa.

Renard is expected to quit his role as head coach of the French women’s national team at the end of the 2024 Olympic Games.

The 55-year-old is eager to return to Africa, where he has achieved great success.

Renard led Zambia to win the 2012 Africa Cup of Nations and also repeated the same feat with Cote d’Ivoire in 2015.

The NFF is looking for a new coach for the Super Eagles following Finidi George’s resignation from the post.

A new coach is expected to be in place before the Super Eagles begin the qualifiers for the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations in September.

Ukraine out of Euro 2024 after 0-0 draw with Belgium

Belgium qualified for the last 16 of Euro 2024 on Wednesday after a 0-0 draw with Ukraine, who exited the tournament despite all four teams in Group E finishing level on four points.

Romania took top spot ahead of Belgium after scoring more goals in the group following their 1-1 draw with Slovakia, who also go through as one of the four best third-placed sides.

Belgium supporters reacted furiously at the final whistle in Stuttgart, with captain Kevin De Bruyne appearing to tell his team-mates not to go over to acknowledge them as the whistles and jeers grew louder.

They will play France in the next round and have landed themselves on the tougher side of the draw which also features hosts Germany, Spain and Portugal.

Ukraine’s brave run came to an agonising end as they became the first team since the tournament increased to 24 teams not to progress with four points.

It had been the first time ever at the European Championship all four teams in the same group had gone into the final round of games locked on the same number of points.

Leandro Trossard replaced the suspended Dodi Lukebakio for Belgium, wearing their kit which pays to the comic book hero Tintin, with pale blue shirts, brown shirts and white socks.

Ukraine were without wingers Mykhailo Mudryk and Viktor Tsygankov because of injury, switching to three at the back with Oleksandr Zinchenko dropping out and Roman Yaremchuk starting after scoring the winner as a substitute against Slovakia.

– Ukraine fans honour fallen comrades –

Ukrainian fans unveiled a banner displaying the portrait of a 21-year-old soldier who died in battle last month, an image generated by artificial intelligence using the photos of 182 football fans also killed in combat.

“Peace has a price. Thousands of football fans have been killed in the war since February 2022,” read an accompanying message, referring to the Russian invasion of Ukraine that started two years ago.

Romelu Lukaku, who had three goals ruled out in his team’s first two games of the tournament, scuffed straight at Anatoliy Trubin when well placed after a slick through ball from De Bruyne.

Yaremchuk tested Koen Casteels and he might have given his team the lead if Artem Dovbyk had found him in the area after getting the better of Arthur Theate.

Twice De Bruyne was unhappy with a laser being pointed at his face as he took free-kicks, nearly catching Trubin out at the near post on one occasion.

He had another curling attempt held shortly after Yaremchuk fizzed a pass across the Belgium area while trying to pick out Dovbyk.

Lukaku saw a weak shot smothered by Trubin, who then beat away a much firmer strike from Yannick Carrasco as Belgium chased the goal that would have clinched first place in the group.

Ruslan Malinovskyi’s corner left Casteels frantically scooping the ball to safety at his near post as a nervy finish ensued, Ukraine desperately needing a goal that Belgium knew would spell disaster for them.

Johan Bakayoko curled wide for Belgium and Malinovskyi’s piledriver was blocked by Timothy Castagne, with Georgiy Sudakov unable to find a way past Casteels in stoppage time as Ukraine’s adventure came to an emotional conclusion.