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OBITUARY

Sports world mourns soccer-loving Pope Francis

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Pope Francis twirls a soccer ball he was presented by a member of the Circus of Cuba, during his weekly general audience in the Pope Paul VI hall, at the Vatican. AP

Four top-flight soccer matches in Italy were postponed after the death of Pope Francis on Monday, and the Buenos Aires club that the Argentine pontiff supported throughout his life mourned its most famous fan.

The wider soccer and sports world also paid homage after Francis passed away at 88.

All sports events scheduled for Easter Monday in Italy were postponed, including four Serie A games: Torino-Udinese; Cagliari-Fiorentina; Genoa-Lazio; and Parma-Juventus. The four games will now be played on Wednesday, the Italian league announced.

A minute of silence will be observed before all sports events later in the week, the Italian Olympic Committee added.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino said he was “deeply saddened” over the pope’s death.

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“I was privileged enough to spend some time with him on a couple of occasions, and he always shared his enthusiasm for football and stressed the important role our sport plays in society,” Infantino said on Instagram. “All the prayers of the whole football world are with him.”

Tennis great Rafael Nadal expressed his “sincere condolences” for Francis in a post on X in Spanish.

Francis’ passion for soccer became known almost immediately after he was elected pope in 2013 when the Argentine club San Lorenzo tweeted a photo of him holding up the team’s crest. He was even a card-carrying member of the club, with San Lorenzo ID No. 88,235.

San Lorenzo is nicknamed “the Saints.”

“He was always one of us,” San Lorenzo said in an Instagram tribute, remembering how Francis watched its 1946 championship team as a young boy.

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San Lorenzo performed well after Francis was elected as the 266th pope in March 2013. The team won a national title in 2013 and then claimed the South American Copa Libertadores for the first time a year later. Club officials traveled twice to the Vatican carrying trophies to thank Francis for his support.

A planned new San Lorenzo stadium is to be named for Francis.

In Italy, there were also suggestions that Francis supported Juventus since his family came from the Piedmont region where the Turin club is based. Francis’ father, Mario Bergoglio, was a basketball player.

Francis met his fellow Argentine Diego Maradona twice as pope. There was a special audience in connection with a charity soccer match in 2014 when Maradona presented the pontiff with a soccer jersey, emblazoned with the name “Francisco” — Spanish for Francis — and Maradona’s No. 10.

“I think we all now realize he’s a (star),” Maradona said after another meeting in 2015. “I’m Francis’ top fan.”

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When Maradona died in 2020, Francis remembered the soccer great in his prayers.

Record 15-time European soccer champion Real Madrid also mourned Francis in a message on Instagram:

“Real Madrid would like to express its condolences to the entire Catholic community on the loss of a historic and universal figure,” Real Madrid said in a statement. “During his pontificate, characterised by the scale of his immense legacy, Pope Francis has represented an enormous spirit of solidarity and support for the most disadvantaged and vulnerable people.”

During a meeting with the Argentina and Italy national teams shortly after he was elected, Francis noted the influence of athletes, especially on youth, and told the players to remember that, “for better or worse” they are role models. “Dear players, you are very popular. People follow you, and not just on the field but also off it,” he said. “That’s a social responsibility.”

Francis often hailed sports as a way to promote solidarity and inclusion, especially for young people.

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During a global conference on faith and sport in 2016, Francis implored leaders to do a better job of keeping corruption off the playing field and said sports must be protected from manipulations and commercial abuse.

“Francis was a special pope, able to illuminate in his time like only the greatest can,” Gianluigi Buffon, the former captain of Italy’s national soccer team who met the pope on multiple occasions, said on Instagram. “He showed us the way with great courage and moved our souls. I will carry his example forever in my heart.”

-AP

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Kunle Solaja is the author of landmark books on sports and journalism as well as being a multiple award-winning journalist and editor of long standing. He is easily Nigeria’s foremost soccer diarist and Africa's most capped FIFA World Cup journalist, having attended all FIFA World Cup finals from Italia ’90 to Qatar 2022. He was honoured at the Qatar 2022 World Cup by FIFA and AIPS.

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OBITUARY

How Onigbinde Gave Shooting Stars the Famous ‘3SC’ Identity

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By Kunle Solaja.

Late Nigerian football tactician Adegboye Onigbinde left behind many legacies in the country’s game, but one of his most enduring contributions was the popular identity he gave to Shooting Stars Sports Club — the famous 3SC.

The former Nigeria national football team coach, who died on Monday at the age of 88, is widely credited with coining the abbreviation that has since become synonymous with the Ibadan-based club.

During his early years with the club, Onigbinde observed that the team’s name, Shooting Stars Sports Club, was often shortened in different ways in newspapers and football discussions. Seeking a simple and distinctive identity, he adopted the initials 3SC, representing the three words that make up the club’s name.

The abbreviation quickly gained acceptance among supporters, journalists and football administrators, eventually becoming the club’s official shorthand and a powerful brand in Nigerian football.

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Over the years, the name 3SC has become inseparable from the club’s identity, appearing on jerseys, official documents and stadium chants from fans at the Liberty Stadium in Ibadan.

Shooting Stars is one of Nigeria’s most historic clubs and a dominant force during the golden era of Nigerian club football in the 1970s and 1980s. The team won several domestic titles and achieved continental glory when it lifted the African Cup Winners’ Cup in 1976 — becoming one of the earliest Nigerian clubs to win a major African trophy.

Onigbinde himself played a key role in shaping the club’s football philosophy and youth development culture during his association with the team.

Beyond club football, he later went on to coach the national team, guiding the then Green Eagles to the final of the 1984 Africa Cup of Nations and later leading Nigeria to the 2002 FIFA World Cup, where he became the first indigenous coach to take the country to the global tournament.

While his achievements with the national team are widely celebrated, many football followers also remember him for giving Shooting Stars a unique identity that has endured for decades.

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Today, long after the coach first coined it, the simple abbreviation 3SC remains one of the most recognisable symbols in Nigerian club football — a reminder of Onigbinde’s lasting imprint on the game.

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OBITUARY

Nigeria’s Sports Community Mourns Adegboye Onigbinde, A Life Devoted to Football

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By Kunle Solaja.

Another pall of grief descended on Nigeria’s sporting community on Monday night with the passing of veteran football tactician Adegboye Onigbinde, who died at the Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospitals Complex, just a short distance from his ancestral home in Modakeke, Osun State.

His death came amid a sombre period for Nigerian sport, following closely on the heels of the passing of Chamberlain Nnamdi Dunkwu as well as two respected sports journalists, Niyi Oyeleke and Tonex Chukwu.

For Onigbinde, football was not merely a profession—it was the defining passion of his adult life. Over several decades, he served the game in Nigeria and beyond as a coach, administrator and mentor, leaving an enduring imprint on the country’s football development.

In an interview with Sports Village Square in 2022, the late coach traced the turning point of his career to a chance encounter in the early 1960s with Nigeria’s legendary footballer Teslim Balogun.

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Onigbinde regarded Balogun—popularly known as “Thunder”—as the greatest footballer Nigeria had ever produced.

According to him, it was Balogun who set him on the path to coaching.

“I was a Grade III teacher when he spotted me in Ife and advised me to take up football,” Onigbinde recalled. “Coincidentally, I went to Ibadan to do my Grade Two Teachers’ Course at St. Luke’s College in 1961 and became the captain of the team.”

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Dateline: Liberty Stadium, Ibadan. 16 July 1961: Chief Onigbinde, arrowed,  and the early generation of Nigerian coaches. On the far right is the legendary Tesilimi Balogun. On the far left is Moshe Jerry Beit haLevi, the Israeli national coach of Nigeria.

That moment would prove decisive.

At the time, Balogun, working alongside the national team coach Moshe-Jerry Beit haLevi, organised a Grade B coaching course under the Western Regional Council of the Nigeria Football Association.

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The course took place at the iconic Liberty Stadium—now known as Obafemi Awolowo Stadium—from June 26 to July 16, 1961.

Among those trained were several individuals who would later shape Nigerian football, including Onigbinde, Niyi Akande, Ayo Adeniji and Godwin Etemeke.

Onigbinde continued his professional development years later when he participated in another coaching programme organised by Balogun in March 1969. Among the participants in that course was Yinka Okeowo, who would later serve as secretary of the Nigeria Football Association.

With those formative experiences, Onigbinde found his lifelong vocation.

He began coaching in the then Western Region, travelling from school to school and from town to town to impart football knowledge to young players.

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His early club career included managing the now-defunct Water Corporation FC of Ibadan before he rose to prominence with Shooting Stars Sports Club, one of Nigeria’s most historic clubs.

Under his guidance, the Ibadan-based side reached the final of the 1984 African Cup of Champions Clubs, a major milestone in the club’s continental journey.

The same year, Onigbinde also led the national team—then known as the Green Eagles—to the final of the 1984 Africa Cup of Nations, where Nigeria finished runners-up.

His career later extended beyond Nigeria’s borders. In the early 2000s, he worked as a technical instructor and youth coach with the Trinidad and Tobago Football Association, helping to develop the country’s under-17 programme.

He left that position in late 2001 after assembling a promising youth squad that competed against local professional teams.

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Shortly afterwards, he returned to Nigeria to take charge of the national team and led the Nigeria national football team to the 2002 FIFA World Cup, becoming the first indigenous coach to guide the country to the global tournament.

Beyond trophies and statistics, colleagues and players remember Onigbinde as a disciplinarian, a thinker and a committed teacher of the game.

For a man whose journey began as a classroom teacher and was transformed by a chance encounter with a football legend, his life story became inseparable from the development of Nigerian football itself.

With his passing, Nigerian sport loses not only a pioneer coach but also a living bridge to an earlier era when the foundations of the country’s football culture were being laid.

Join the Sports Village Square channel on WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

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OBITUARY

Breaking! Former Super Eagles Coach Adegboye Onigbinde Dies Four Days After Clocking 88

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Former head coach of Nigeria’s national football team, Adegboye Onigbinde, is dead. He passed away late Monday evening, four days after celebrating his 88th birthday.

His death was confirmed in a statement issued on behalf of the family by Mrs Bolade Adesuyi, who disclosed that the veteran football tactician had been ill for some time.

Onigbinde, one of Nigeria’s most respected football administrators and coaches, first took charge of the national team in 1983, succeeding Brazilian coach Otto Gloria. During his tenure, he led the then Green Eagles to the final of the 1984 Africa Cup of Nations, where Nigeria finished runners-up.

Nearly two decades later, Onigbinde etched his name further into Nigerian football history when he became the first indigenous coach to lead the national team to the 2002 FIFA World Cup. He guided the Nigeria national football team to the tournament co-hosted by Japan and South Korea.

Widely respected for his discipline, tactical knowledge and commitment to youth development, Onigbinde remained an influential voice in Nigerian football long after his coaching career.

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Further details regarding funeral arrangements are expected to be announced by the family in due course.

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