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Nigerian Football

After the victory euphoria, the real lessons – the story of Kunle Soname and his Remo Stars

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BY YOMI OPAKUNLE

Enigmatic Kunle Soname and his Remo Stars FC (a privately owned football club) most recently won the 2024/25 season’s Nigeria Premier Football League (NPFL) Cup.

 It is the first club from Ogun State to win Nigeria’s Premier League, since creation of the State and in so doing lifting the erstwhile sleepy town of Ikenne from where revered late sage Chief Obafemi Awolowo SAN hailed from just like himself,  to global recognition for the greatest sport on earth – football – Ikenne gone global, if you ask me. Yes o, the euphoria of this victory has been deservedly very loud. But beyond the victory are several lessons of visionary sure-footedness by Soname, worth scrutinising and emulating, for replication nationwide.

‘Little by little, said a thoughtful lad; Moment by moment, I shall improve…‘ (Source: Anonymous)

The real deal is the various lessons of success nuggets practically demonstrated by my dear brother, Hon. Kunle Soname, the proprietor in this ‘long’ journey to well-earned victory…

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■ Remo Stars did not suddenly or accidentally become NPFL Champions. The club was third three seasons ago and second two seasons ago as well as second again last season! – lessons of painstaking hard work and focus on the club’s vision as consciously envisioned by Hon. Soname.

■ Same Remo Stars, since its establishment, had achieved promotion to the NPFL more than twice and been relegated to the lower league twice, only to bounce back to the NPFL diadem eventually! – lessons of never say die spirit & eyes on the ball, no matter how long, i.e. ‘Never admit failure, until you’ve made your last attempt; but Never your last attempt, until you’ve succeeded.’ So, keep on trying to try….

■ The club started by hiring infrastructure at home in Ogun State, but now owns massive global-standard infrastructure in the state! Lessons of ‘from little seeds grow big Oak trees’ & little beginnings should never be a barrier to great achievements.

■ 1 Club at start, 3 clubs now (Remo Stars Ladies inclusive)! Lessons in incremental growth, & prudent reinvestment strategy laced with focused patience.

■ ‘Unsung/unassuming’ hardworking, focused Chief Coach handling the club for some years now – Ogumodede, deservedly getting national recognition via appointment as one of the Assistant Coaches of our premium national team, the Super Eagles.

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No be mistake o! Lessons of faith and belief of Hon. Soname in the talents/abilities/potentials of his coach, trusting that giving him time would lead to a glorious tomorrow that has become today.

Soname had watched from close quarters the potential in Ogunmodede as Assistant Coach to a couple of past Chief Coaches of the team and decidedly allowed him to be in full charge as the Chief Coach about five years ago. See what his unshaken faith in the talents of the young man has crystallised to…

■ Unshaken belief in the youth! Just check the average age of his players  – he even has an academy (Beyond Limits) that is doing well in the immediate lower Nigeria Pro League and deliberately structured to serve as a feeder team to Remo Stars – intentionality & deliberateness

■ Sustainability/Financial capability! Unlike many previous privately owned clubs which get financially challenged as time gets by, Proprietor who deliberately rather than luckily owns Bet 9ja, must have dedicated a reasonable percentage of ROI from Bet Naija/proceeds from some player transfers/other businesses (including a Portuguese second division team he is the majority owner of) to the pursuit of his well thought out sports business vision, not expecting immediate returns but assured of a certain successful tomorrow that has come to fore.

Lessons: Financial intelligence + continuous search for knowledge/self-development, with a team of workforce he invests in their development and gives opportunity to flourish, if they can.

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Street Wise Soname!

Unknown to many, Soname became streetwise early in life and was even a time-time Executive Chairman of Ikosi-Isheri LCDA (very grassroots of public service governance), becoming a huge success.

Believe me, he was even ready to integrate this his ‘now coming to fruition’ vision, into his home State vision to impact more people statewide (provided a PPP model allowing the vision to blossom was agreeable to the government) back then.

He was even ready to accept the Vice Chairmanship of State-owned Gateway FC back in time in 2011 to jumpstart the dream, but in the wisdom of the then Governor, there would be a conflict of interest, he noted, and so he didn’t approve. I know, because I was SA at the Ministry of Youth & Sports back then and was involved.

By then, now blossoming Bet9ja hadn’t even come to the public scene for him, but he trudged on surefootedly with great determination and today, the rest is history. Lessons: Nigeria is full of God’s special blessings, and once we continue to seek His special grace and painstakingly remain focused, hardworking but patiently wait for His blessings, our dreams can come true..

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Conclusively, this is to salute/celebrate Hon. Kunle Soname, my dear brother and President of Remo Stars Group, who is a whole lesson in successful ‘sportstrepreneurship’, for this hugely and fittingly deserving achievement, divinely thrust on him on his 59th birthday.

Congratulations to Soname (+ his entire group) & toast-toast. 🥂

YOMI OPAKUNLE, a veteran sports journalist, writes in from Ifako-Gbagada Lagos.

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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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Nigerian Football

Maikaba Begins Flying Eagles Rebuild, Invites 35 Players to Camp

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New Head Coach Abdu Maikaba has begun the rebuilding process of Nigeria’s U20 national team after inviting 35 players to camp ahead of the WAFU B U20 Championship scheduled for Côte d’Ivoire in July.

The invited players are expected to report to camp in Abuja on Saturday as preparations begin for the regional competition, which also serves as a major platform for talent discovery and qualification battles in West African youth football.

Maikaba’s first provisional squad reflects a blend of home-based talents and a handful of Europe-based youngsters, suggesting an attempt to balance local league development with foreign exposure.

The list includes players drawn from Nigeria Premier Football League clubs, lower-division sides, academies and overseas teams in Croatia, Spain, Ukraine and the Czech Republic.

Among the notable inclusions are Sporting Lagos goalkeeper Clinton Lawani, Croatia-based Abubakar Rufai of NK-Istra 1961, and Akwa United’s Uchechukwu Aloysius.

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In defence, Maikaba called up Spain-based Wahab Bolanle Musa of FC Malaga, alongside home-based prospects such as Ayinla Olayomi of Warri Wolves and Abubakar Aliyu of Wikki Tourists.

The midfield department features a mix of creativity and physical presence, including Imran Ahmad of Kano Pillars, Sale Abdulrashid from Kryubar FC in Ukraine, and Simon Karshe Cletus of FC Rijeka in Croatia.

Up front, Maikaba appears to have focused heavily on pace and attacking depth, with invitations extended to Katsina United striker Abba Dalli, Spain-based Imrana Mohammed of FC Alaves, and Sporting Lagos duo Seun Akanji and Alex Leme.

The inclusion of several academy products also underlines the continuing role grassroots football is playing in Nigeria’s youth-team structure.

Observers will be keen to see the style and identity Maikaba introduces to the Flying Eagles after taking over the team, especially with Nigeria seeking to reassert its dominance in the WAFU B region and build another generation capable of competing strongly at continental and global levels.

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Nigeria’s Flying Eagles remain one of Africa’s most successful youth teams, having won the Africa U20 Cup of Nations multiple times and finishing runners-up twice at the FIFA U20 World Cup.

The WAFU B Championship in Côte d’Ivoire is expected to provide the first real test of Maikaba’s new squad and technical direction.

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NPFL at 36: Why Nigeria’s League Top Scorers Rarely Become Super Eagles Legends

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Ahmed Musa of Kano Pillars F.C. remains the only NPFL top scorer in 36 years of professional football to establish himself as a lasting force in the Super Eagles.

By Kunle Solaja

As the Nigeria Premier Football League celebrates 36 years of professional football, one troubling pattern continues to define the competition — the inability of most league top scorers to evolve into enduring stars of the Nigeria national football team.

In more than three decades of professional football, only one league top scorer can truly claim to have successfully crossed the bridge from domestic hero to established Super Eagles icon: Ahmed Musa.

The former Kano Pillars F.C. striker remains the outstanding exception in a league littered with what many observers now describe as “one-season wonders.”

Musa announced himself to Nigerian football in the 2009/2010 season when he scored 18 goals to emerge as the league’s leading scorer, breaking the long-standing 17-goal record set by Ishaya Jatau in the inaugural professional season of 1990.

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Unlike many before and after him, Musa successfully translated domestic brilliance into international relevance.

He went on to become Nigeria’s fastest-ever scorer and remains the only Nigerian player to score two braces at the FIFA World Cup — against Argentina national football team in 2014 and Iceland national football team in 2018.

Yet Musa’s success only magnifies the larger mystery surrounding the Nigerian league: why have so many prolific scorers failed to reproduce their domestic form at the national team level?

The list is remarkably long.

The first professional league top scorer, Ishaya Jatau of Heartland F.C. — then known as Iwuanyanwu Nationale — scored 17 goals in 1990 but managed only one goal in a handful of appearances for Nigeria.

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Despite his reputation as a deadly finisher in the league, his wastefulness in national team colours reportedly left then-coach Clemens Westerhof unconvinced.

From there, a pattern emerged.

Players such as Olumide Harris, Ben Agadah, Paul Kpoughoul and Emmanuel Agbo dominated league scoring charts but disappeared almost as quickly as they arrived.

Others, including Peter Ijeh, Victor Ezeji and Joseph Akpala, briefly tasted national team football but never secured lasting places in the Super Eagles.

The problem has persisted across generations.

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Even players who set impressive scoring records in recent years struggled to establish themselves internationally.

Mfon Udoh set a league record of 23 goals in the 2013/14 season for Enyimba F.C., while Junior Lokosa, Anthony Okpotu and Godwin Obaje all enjoyed prolific domestic campaigns.

Yet none became long-term Super Eagles regulars.

The contrast with Nigeria’s greatest striker, Rashidi Yekini, remains striking.

Yekini’s 37 international goals still stand untouched decades after his retirement.

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Observers believe several factors may explain the recurring failure of league top scorers to mature into elite internationals.

One issue is consistency.

Many players explode for a single season before suffering dramatic drops in form. Some quickly leave Nigeria in search of opportunities abroad, often joining lower-profile leagues where their development stagnates.

Others struggle with the tactical and physical demands of international football, where defenders are stronger, spaces are tighter, and opportunities are fewer.

There is also the quality question.

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Critics argue that the Nigerian league’s inconsistent standards sometimes inflate the reputations of local strikers, making domestic scoring records misleading indicators of international readiness.

In several seasons, top scorers emerged with relatively modest tallies. Arthur Moses won the golden boot in 1992 with just 10 goals, while Peter Anyiolobi topped the 1996 chart with only nine.

The instability of clubs and coaching systems has equally affected player development.

Unlike elite leagues where strikers are nurtured within structured tactical environments, many NPFL forwards operate in unstable teams with limited sports science support, inconsistent officiating and poor playing conditions.

Still, the league continues to produce raw attacking talent.

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What remains missing is a system capable of transforming prolific domestic scorers into complete international forwards capable of sustaining excellence over many years.

As the NPFL clocks 36, the enduring question remains unanswered: why does Nigeria consistently produce league top scorers, yet so rarely produce strikers capable of dominating African and world football the way Yekini once did?

Top scorers who failed to make an impact in the Super Eagles

  • 1990-Ishaya Jatau (Iwuanyanwu Nationale), 17 goals
  • 1991-Richard Ojomo (Bendel United), 12 goals
  • 1992-Arthur Moses (Super Stores), 10 goals
  • 1993-Tony Nwigwe (Iwuanyanwu Nationale), 13 goals
  • 1994-Olumide Harris (Shooting Stars), 14 goals
  • 1995-Ben Agadah (Gombe United), 12 goals
  • 1996-Peter Anyiolobi (Enyimba), 9 goals
  • 1997-Paul Kpoughoul (Jasper United/BCC Lions), 16 goals
  • 1998-Hassan Minda (Gombe United), 14goals
  • 1999-Emmanuel Agbo (Iwuanyanwu Nationale), 14 goals
  • 2000-Peter Ijeh (Julius Berger), 14 goals
  • 2001-Uche Okereke (Enugu Rangers), 13 goals
  • 2002-Joetex Frimpong (El-Kanemi), Victor Ezeji (Dolphins), 16 goals
  • 2003-Chibuzor Ozurumba (Iwuanyanwu), Endurance Idahor (Julius Berger), 12 goals each
  • 2004-Kabiru Alausa (Berger), 13 goals
  • 2005-Timothy Anjembe (Lobi Stars), Joseph Akpala (Insurance), Charles Omokaro (Sharks), 12 goals each 2006 -Ibenebu Ikechukwu (El Kanemi), 10 goals
  • 2007 – Ameh Aruwa (Kaduna United), 10 goals
  • 2007/2008 – Abubakar Babale (Wikki Tourist/Sunshine Stars), 14 goals
  • 2008/2009 – Akarandut Orok (Akwa United), 17 goals
  • 2009/2010 – Ahmed Musa (Kano Pillars), 18 goals. (The only one established in the Super Eagles)
  • 2010/2011 – Jude Aneke (Kaduna United) 20 Goals
  • 2011/2012 – Sibi Gwar (Niger Tornadoes) 17 goals
  • 2012/213 – Victor Namo (Nasarawa United) 18 goals
  • 2013/2014 – Mfon Udoh (Enyimba) 23 goals
  • 2014/2015 – Gbolahan Salami (Warri Wolves) 17 goals
  • 2015/2016 – Godwin Obaje (Wikki Tourists) 18 goals
  • 2016/2017 – Anthony Okpotu (Lobi Stars) 19 goals
  • 2017/2018 – Junior Lokosa (Kano Pillars) 19
  • 2018/2019 – Mfon Udoh (Akwa Utd) & Ibrahim Sunusi (Nasarawa Utd) 10 goals
  • 2019/2020 – Cancelled owing to Covid-19
  • 2020/21: Silas Nwankwo (Nasawara United) & Charles Atshimene (Akwa United) – 19 goals
  • 2021/22: Chijioke Akuneto (Rivers United) – 19 goals
  • 2022/23: Chukwuemeka Obioma (Enyimba) – 16 goals
  • 2023/24: Chijioke Mbaoma (Enyimba) – 17 goals

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NPFL at 36: Between Proud History and Lingering Questions Over Quality

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It has been 22 years since a Nigerian club last won a continental title — a telling reflection of the declining fortunes of the Nigerian professional league.

By Kunle Solaja

As the Nigeria Premier League marks 36 years since the advent of professional football in Nigeria, a familiar debate has resurfaced: just how good is the Nigerian league?

The answer depends largely on the yardsticks applied. In football, the quality of a domestic league is often measured not merely by local excitement, but by the strength of its clubs in continental competitions, the calibre of players it supplies to the national team, its commercial appeal and the emotional grip it holds on supporters.

Additionally, at least in Africa, the performance of the national teams at the African Nations Championship (CHAN) is solely for citizens who are nationals of the domestic leagues.

Possibly, too, the number of foreign players attracted to the league could also be a yardstick.  

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By those standards, the Nigerian league presents a paradox — rich in history and passion, yet struggling to keep pace with Africa’s elite competitions.

When professional football kicked off in Nigeria on May 12, 1990, expectations were enormous. The transition from amateurism was expected to modernise the game, improve club structures and strengthen Nigeria’s competitiveness internationally.

Instead, while professionalism brought organisation and structure, the domestic league gradually lost one of its greatest strengths: mass appeal.

Before professionalism, local football rivalries routinely packed stadiums across the country. Matches involving Shooting Stars SC, Enugu Rangers, Stationery Stores F.C. and Bendel Insurance F.C. attracted overflowing crowds and intense regional loyalty.

Today, many NPFL venues struggle to attract significant attendance, while European football — especially the Premier League — dominates television screens, conversations and sponsorship attention across Nigeria.

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The contrast is stark.

While European clubs attract billion-dollar investments and global commercial partnerships, most Nigerian clubs remain heavily dependent on government funding, with limited private-sector participation.

The imbalance is also reflected in player development and national team representation.

Since the introduction of professional football, the overwhelming majority of players who shaped the fortunes of the Nigeria national football team have emerged from European leagues rather than the domestic competition.

Even competitions specifically designed for home-based players exposed the league’s limitations. Nigeria failed to qualify for the first two editions of the African Nations Championship (CHAN), losing to the Ghana national football team in 2009 and to the Niger national football team in the qualifiers for the 2011 edition.

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On the continental club scene, Nigeria’s achievements remain modest when compared to Africa’s leading leagues.

Enyimba F.C. remain the only Nigerian club to win the CAF Champions League in the professional era, triumphing back-to-back in 2003 and 2004.

Since then, Nigerian clubs have struggled to make deep runs in continental competitions, while the CAF Confederation Cup has remained elusive.

The statistics reveal the gulf.

In the first 20 years of Nigeria’s professional league, Nigerian clubs won the CAF Champions League only twice. During the same period, Egyptian clubs claimed the title nine times.

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Overall, clubs from Egypt have won Africa’s premier club competition 18 times in 59 editions, while Nigerian clubs have managed just two triumphs.

The dominance of North African leagues extends beyond the Champions League.

Egyptian clubs won the now-defunct African Cup Winners’ Cup eight times, compared to Nigeria’s three victories. Tunisian clubs dominated the CAF Cup with four titles in 12 editions, while Nigerian clubs managed two.

These performances are reflected in rankings by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics (IFFHS), which has consistently rated the Egyptian league as Africa’s strongest, usually followed by Tunisia, with Nigeria often trailing behind.

Perhaps the clearest evidence of the disparity lies in national team composition.

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At the 2010 Africa Cup of Nations, Egypt’s 23-man squad included 19 home-based players, highlighting the strength and competitiveness of its domestic league.

Nigeria, by contrast, fielded an entirely foreign-based squad.

Indeed, only two players from the Nigerian league featured among the 368 footballers registered for the 2010 AFCON: goalkeeper Chitou Rachad of Wikki Tourists F.C. and Akinsola Boussari of Rangers, who was named in Togo’s squad before the country’s withdrawal.

The financial implications are equally significant.

Under FIFA’s Club Benefits Programme, clubs receive compensation for releasing players to the World Cup. Yet Nigerian clubs have barely profited because the country’s World Cup players are almost entirely based abroad.

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Following the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar, African clubs collectively earned about $4.57 million through the programme, with Moroccan giants Wydad AC receiving more than $1.4 million alone.

No Nigerian club came close.

Still, despite the criticisms, the Nigerian league retains enormous potential.

The country remains one of Africa’s richest reservoirs of football talent, while the emotional attachment many Nigerians still have to domestic football suggests the decline may not be irreversible.

What the NPFL lacks is not history or talent, but structure, commercial vision, stable administration and sustained investment.

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Thirty-six years after professionalism arrived, the Nigerian league remains suspended between glorious memories and unrealised possibilities, a competition still searching for the consistency and quality required to reclaim its place among Africa’s elite.

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