Showing posts with label Team Nigeria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Team Nigeria. Show all posts

Thursday, 15 September 2016

Team Nigeria Wins 7th Gold in Paralympics


Flora Ugwunwa set a new world record in the women's javelin - F54 event on Tuesday at the Rio Paralympics to give Nigeria its seventh gold medal.
She recorded a throw of 20.25 metres after six attempts to win the gold medal and take Nigeria's tally to seven gold, two silver and one bronze medals.
On a day when Nigeria's medals search was looking to be futile after some failure in the favourite hunting ground of power-lifting, the athletics event provided succour.
Ugwunwa beat a field of nine to set new Paralympic and world records, while Tunisia's Hania Aidi won the silver medal with a throw of 18.88m.
South Africa's Ntombizanele Situ completed the African sweep of the event's medals by winning the bronze medal with a heave of 17.90m.
Earlier in the day, Nigeria had been so close but still far from winning any medal on the day after some unsuccessful outings.
In power-lifting men's -88kg, Opeyemi Jegede could only place fifth, while Abdulazeez Ibrahim placed sixth in power-lifting men's -97 kg
The Games will come to an end on Sunday.
(NAN)

Monday, 22 August 2016

(photo) Nigeria come 78th on Rio Olympics medal table, after getting one medal


Team Nigeria has been placed 78th in the rankings published by the organizing committee of Rio 2016 Olympic games. USA is first with 46 Gold, Great Britain second with 27 Gold while China is third with 26 Gold.
 
USA won a total of 121 medals, while Usain Bolt's Jamaica came 16th after winning 6 Gold medals, 3 Silver medals and 2 Bronze medals. Kenya is the highest placed African team after winning 6 Gold medals, 6 Silver medals and 1 Bronze medal.

Sunday, 21 August 2016

Did NFF hijack Japanese donation of about $390,000 to Dream Team Vi?

Katsuya Takasu

There are reports that officials of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) have hijacked the donation of wealthy Japanese man Katsuya Takasu to the Dream team Vi totalling $390,000.
Former Super Eagles goalkeeper and SuperSports football analyst Peterside Idah posted on his Twitter handle that the officials of the football house want to use the money to pay coaches’ salaries.
Katsuya Takasu
“More trouble in the dream team camp….the money from the Japanese man to the dream team.has been hijacked by the NFA .they want to use,” Idah tweeted.
“The money to pay the coaches as salaries/ Bitrus Bewarang was sent to get the money from the Japanese, but the players say it’s their money,” he added.
More trouble in the dream team camp….the money from the Japanese man to the dream team.has been hijacked by the NFA .they want to use
— idah pee (@IdahPeterside) August 20, 2016
THE money to pay the coaches as salaries/ Bitrus Bewarang was sent to get the money from the Japanese ,but the players say it’s there money
— idah pee (@IdahPeterside) August 20, 2016
Meanwhile, the Nigeria Football Federation president Amaju Pinnick has blasted former goalkeeper saying he is ‘mischievous’.
“His message was a lie, an atrocious false alarm before an important match,” Pinnick raged. “I had exchanged correspondence with the Honourable Minister on the issue of the donation and we agreed that there was need for caution.
“The minister said to me that he read the donation in the papers and had expressed serious concern. I also received a mail from the NFF Integrity Officer who expressed very serious concern with this kind of donation.
“I got in touch with the ambassador of Nigeria to Brazil and the honourable minister to say that whatever had to be done should be done after the bronze medal match, to avoid any distractions. The NFF may be having financial challenges, but I assure you nobody in the Federation is interested in that money.
“If we get the government’s go-ahead to collect the money, no official of the NFF will be involved even in the collection. The money will be received directly by the team.”
Pinnick added that the status of Nigeria as a sovereign nation, and the integrity of Nigeria football, is bigger than such financial gains. “If we had rushed to collect that kind of money and hand over to the players, the same people who are condemning the NFF now would have said worse things.
“There are matters in the football world today that FIFA and the various confederations frown at. We are very much aware of that.
Japanese billionaire Katsuya Takasu promised each member of the Dream Team VI squad $30,000 should they win gold in football at the Rio Olympics.
Takasu also pledged $20,000 for silver and $10,000 for bronze after the hearing financial crisis that have plagued the national U-23 team.