World Cup
World Cup Blow for Nigerian-Descendant Spain Star, Aghehowa
The dream of Nigerian-descent forward Samu Aghehowa featuring for Spain at the forthcoming FIFA World Cup has been dealt a major setback after the 21-year-old suffered a serious knee injury while playing for Portuguese giants FC Porto.
Aghehowa is expected to be sidelined for several months after rupturing his anterior cruciate ligament during Porto’s 1–1 draw with Sporting CP on Monday. The injury is set to rule him out for the remainder of the season and cast serious doubt over his availability for the World Cup in North America, which kicks off on June 11.
Born in Melilla to Nigerian parents, Aghehowa has been one of Europe’s rising young forwards. He has featured twice for Spain during their World Cup qualifying campaign and was widely regarded as a strong contender for a place in the squad for the global showpiece.
The striker, who won a gold medal with Spain at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, joined Porto from Atlético Madrid in August 2024 and has enjoyed a prolific spell in Portugal, scoring 32 league goals in just 50 appearances.
Confirming the setback, Aghehowa wrote on social media: “I’ll be out of action for a few months. It hurts me not being able to help the team as I’d like, fighting on the field. Now I’m just another fan supporting us towards our goals.”
For Nigerian football followers, the injury will spark renewed conversations about dual-nationality talents of Nigerian heritage making their mark abroad. While Aghehowa has already represented Spain at the senior level, his rapid rise has continued to attract attention back home, where fans closely monitor the progress of players with Nigerian roots across Europe.
With his recovery timeline uncertain, the immediate focus will be on successful surgery and rehabilitation. Whether he can beat the clock to feature at the World Cup now appears increasingly unlikely, turning what had been a breakthrough year into a period of rehabilitation and resilience for one of Europe’s brightest young strikers.
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World Cup
Historic Blow! Fernandez’s 3,000th World Cup Goal Sinks Egypt


BY KUNLE SOLAJA.
Argentina produced one of the greatest comebacks in FIFA World Cup history on Tuesday, recovering from a two-goal deficit to beat Egypt 3-2 and book their place in the quarter-finals after an astonishing 13-minute blitz that shattered African hopes.
For more than 80 minutes, Egypt looked destined to spring one of the biggest upsets of the tournament. Instead, the Pharaohs suffered a heartbreaking collapse as the familiar curse of failing to manage the closing stages of crucial matches returned to haunt another African side.
Having led 2-0 and still holding that advantage with barely 11 minutes remaining, Egypt watched in disbelief as the defending champions launched a relentless assault that turned the contest completely on its head.
The dramatic victory sends Argentina into the last eight, where they will face either Switzerland or Colombia, while Egypt depart the tournament wondering how victory slipped from their grasp.
The North Africans had made a dream start.
Their confidence, built on a national-record four-match unbeaten run at the World Cup, was evident from the opening whistle. Defender Yasser Ibrahim stunned the South Americans by rising highest to head home the opening goal, sending Egyptian supporters into wild celebrations.
Argentina struggled to recover from the early setback and their frustrations deepened when captain Lionel Messi squandered a golden opportunity to level the scores, seeing his penalty brilliantly saved.
That miss appeared destined to define the evening.
When Mostafa Ziko doubled Egypt’s advantage midway through the second half, the African side looked firmly in control and on course for one of the most memorable victories in their football history.
Argentina, meanwhile, appeared to be heading for a shock elimination.
But champions possess a habit of refusing to surrender.
The revival began when Cristian Romero powered home to halve the deficit and inject fresh belief into Lionel Scaloni’s side.
Moments later, Messi made amends for his penalty miss by firing home the equaliser, scoring his eighth goal of the tournament to move clear at the top of the Golden Boot standings.
The equaliser completely transformed the atmosphere inside the stadium.
Suddenly, it was Egypt who looked rattled.
Deep into added time came the decisive moment.
Midfielder Enzo Fernandez rose superbly to head home Argentina’s dramatic winner, completing an extraordinary comeback and sealing a place in World Cup history.
The goal was significant for more than one reason.
Not only did it complete Argentina’s remarkable turnaround from 2-0 down, but it also became the 3,000th goal scored in FIFA World Cup history since the inaugural tournament in Uruguay in 1930.
For Argentina, it was another chapter in their rich World Cup folklore, demonstrating the resilience and fighting spirit that have defined so many of their greatest triumphs.
For Egypt, however, the defeat will be remembered as one of the cruellest in the nation’s football history.
Having defended resolutely for most of the contest, the Pharaohs were unable to withstand Argentina’s late onslaught, joining the growing list of African teams whose promising campaigns have unravelled in the closing stages of knockout matches.
It was a bitter ending to an otherwise outstanding tournament for Egypt, whose disciplined performances had captured the imagination of African football followers.
Yet the night ultimately belonged to Argentina.
From the brink of elimination to the euphoria of qualification in just 13 breathtaking minutes, the world champions once again proved why they remain among the favourites to lift the trophy.
And with Messi extending his lead in the race for the Golden Boot and Fernandez writing his name into World Cup history with the landmark 3,000th goal, Argentina’s dramatic escape may yet be remembered as the moment their title defence truly came alive.
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World Cup
The Handwritten Note That Changed My Life: Remembering MKO Abiola, The Patron Saint of Nigerian Sports


By Kunle Solaja, New York.
This Tuesday, July 7, Nigeria will pause once again to remember Bashorun Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola, the man whose name has become inseparable from the nation’s democratic struggle.
But for many in Nigerian sports, MKO Abiola represents something else entirely.
He was the benefactor who opened doors. The dream-maker who invested in athletes, journalists and administrators alike. The sports enthusiast whose generosity transformed careers and whose vision helped elevate Nigerian sports to unprecedented heights.
As the 28th anniversary of his death approaches, I find myself reflecting not on the politician or the business magnate, but on the man whose handwritten note altered the course of my professional life forever.
It is a story that began amid turmoil.
In August 1989, I was quietly working as a reporter with African Concord, the influential pan-African news magazine within the Concord Press stable. Unknown to me, a storm was raging elsewhere in the organisation.
Following internal crises within the sports department and the fallout from the tragic death of Nigerian international Samuel Okwaraji during the World Cup qualifier against Angola, management had decided drastic action was necessary. An investigative panel had recommended the dissolution of the sports desk, and plans were already underway to rebuild it from scratch.
While all of this was unfolding, I was immersed in preparing what would become a major cover story on the shocking death of Okwaraji.
Three days after the tragedy, as I returned from an assignment alongside Larry Echiejile, now Dr Larry Izamoje, founder of Brila FM, we encountered Mike Awoyinfa and Dele Momodu within the Concord premises.
Their expressions suggested they knew something we did not.
“They don’t know yet,” one of them whispered.
Moments later, the bombshell landed.
I had been appointed Group Sports Editor of Concord Press.
Larry was to be my deputy.
The announcement stunned me.
What happened behind the scenes was even more dramatic.
My name had reportedly not featured at all during heated deliberations over who should rebuild the sports department. Then a personal aide walked into the management meeting carrying a sealed note from the publisher himself, Bashorun MKO Abiola.
The room reportedly fell silent.
Dr Doyin Abiola, Managing Director of Concord Press, opened the note and read its contents aloud:
“I hereby appoint Mr Kunle Solaja of the African Concord as the Group Sports Editor with immediate effect.”
That single sentence ended all arguments.
The debate was over.
A handwritten instruction from MKO Abiola had settled the matter.
I did not know it then, but that brief note would become one of the most consequential documents of my life.
Ironically, when the appointment was announced, I had never met Abiola.
Rumours immediately spread across the organisation.
Some speculated that I must be related to one of his wives. Others assumed I enjoyed some hidden connection to the publisher.
The truth was simpler.
I was just as surprised as everyone else. I later got to know that he had been reading my write-ups in the pan-African magazine, the African Concord, where I ran a one-man sports desk and had elevated sports news to the cover pages.
My tenure as Group Sports Editor of Concord Press brought me into close professional contact with Chief M.K.O. Abiola, whose unwavering passion for Nigerian sports and commitment to excellence made him one of Africa’s most influential sports patrons and media proprietors.
My first encounter with him came barely ten days later in Yaoundé, Cameroon, on August 27, after Nigeria’s painful 1-0 defeat to Cameroon that ended the Super Eagles’ hopes of qualifying for Italia ’90. I stayed in a downtown low-budget hotel and had to go to the high-brow Hotel Sofitel, where Lelex facilities were available to file my reports.
Having filed my report from the Hotel Sofitel, I spotted Abiola emerging from an elevator. It was my closest contact with him.
I introduced myself.
For a moment, he looked puzzled.
Then recognition dawned.
Turning to those around him, he exclaimed:
“So you’re the new sports editor? Are you this small? With the way you recall events, I thought you were an old man! Keep up the good work.”
It was a brief exchange.
But it marked the beginning of a remarkable professional relationship.
Within months, I found myself moving from relative obscurity into the inner circle of one of Africa’s most influential personalities.
I began writing speeches for him.
I advised him on sporting matters.
Occasionally, I represented him at official functions.
And through it all, I witnessed firsthand the extraordinary passion he had for sports.
Many people knew Abiola as a businessman.
Many knew him as a politician.
Sports people knew him as something else entirely.
He was a benefactor without equal.
Before almost every major assignment abroad, he found a way to support me personally, even when Concord Press had already approved official funding.
One of the earliest examples came when he instructed that I be sent to Barcelona for the IAAF (now World Athletics) World Cup in September 1989. He even left £4,000 for my upkeep through a trusted associate.
Fate intervened.
A Spanish public holiday prevented me from securing a visa, and the trip collapsed before it began.
The money disappeared with the opportunity.
But many more opportunities followed.
At the 1990 Africa Cup of Nations in Algeria, Abiola personally facilitated my trip despite the organisation already having a reporter assigned to the tournament.
When Nigeria recovered from a humiliating 5-1 opening defeat to reach the semifinal, I found myself seated beside him in the VIP section in Annaba.
Security initially refused me access.
Abiola spotted me from afar.
He waved me over.
After the match, he invited a small group of journalists for further discussions.
Then came another unforgettable gesture.
He gave me $2,000 and further instructed me to distribute $1,000 each to every Nigerian journalist covering the tournament. There were 20 of them.
One recipient joked that the amount exceeded his annual salary.
That was classic MKO.
His generosity was never calculated.
It flowed naturally.
Yet perhaps the most profound impact he had on my life came a few months later.
Armed with a FIFA accreditation letter as Nigeria’s only officially recognised print journalist for Italia ’90, I informed him of my plans to attend the World Cup.
He listened carefully.
Then he smiled.
“Please see me before you travel.”
That simple sentence was all the assurance I needed.
And true to his word, he ensured that my journey to Italy became a reality.
That World Cup changed everything.
It launched a journey that would eventually span ten FIFA World Cups, multiple Olympic Games and countless international sporting events.
Looking back today, it is impossible not to see the connection.
Without that handwritten note of 17 August 1989, there might have been no World Cup memoir.
There might have been no decades-long global sports reporting career.
There might never have been the experiences that shaped my professional life.
MKO Abiola was often called the “Africa’s Pillar of Sports,” an honour bestowed on him by African sports journalists.
The title was richly deserved.
He invested in clubs.
He supported athletes.
He empowered journalists.
He believed sport could unite people and elevate nations.
For me, however, his legacy is even more personal.
Every time I walk into a World Cup stadium, every time I sit in a press box thousands of kilometres away from home, I remember the man who saw potential in an obscure magazine reporter and changed his life with an 18-word memo handwritten on a piece of paper.
Twenty-eight years after his passing, Nigerian sports continue to celebrate MKO Abiola’s immense contributions.
I celebrate him for something even simpler.
A handwritten note.
A chance.
And a life transformed.
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World Cup
FIFA backs referee after Trump criticism


FIFA threw its full support behind Brazilian referee Raphael Claus after U.S. President Donald Trump questioned his integrity on Monday, following the red card shown to United States striker Folarin Balogun , which sparked controversy at the World Cup.
Balogun was sent off by Claus after a VAR check in the last-32 win over Bosnia and Herzegovina for planting his boot into the ankle of Tarik Muharemovic.
However, FIFA later suspended Balogun’s red-card ban. Trump said he had asked for the decision to be reviewed, describing Claus as “a little bit suspect if you check his past” without elaborating.
“FIFA recognises Raphael Claus as one of the world’s leading professional referees and a valued member of Team One (FIFA’s elite group of referees) at the FIFA World Cup,” FIFA said in a statement.
“Throughout his career, he has consistently demonstrated the highest standards of professionalism and integrity.”
FIFA said Claus was not available for comment, in line with its policy that referees do not speak to the media during the tournament. FIFA President Gianni Infantino said referees must be respected.
“Once more, I reiterate that we must respect the referees and respect the rules that govern our game,” he said.
“It is very simple and cannot ever be overstated – without referees, there is no football.”
Claus has officiated in over 600 matches in his career and Pierluigi Collina, FIFA’s Chief Refereeing Officer and Chairman of the Referees Committee, emphasised the organisation’s faith in the 46-year-old.
“Raphael Claus is refereeing at his second FIFA World Cup having been with us in Qatar in 2022,” Collina said.
“He is an experienced and highly respected referee, and we maintain full confidence in him as a trusted match official.”
Balogun was eventually allowed to start Monday’s last-16 clash with Belgium and was named in the starting lineup by coach Mauricio Pochettino.
-Reuters
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