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FIFA Head: Kalu vs Odegbami, Others – Ebere Wabara

15 Min Read

The refreshing quest by the eminent and visionary in­ternational entrepreneur, foremost manager of human capital, Pillar of Sports in Africa and former action (thanks to Chief Olusegun Obasanjo for this unprec­edented epithet) governor of Abia State from 1999 to 2007, Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu, to become the president of the more than100-year-old Fed­eration of International Football Association (FIFA) became public information via a DStv SuperSport programme, “Soccer Africa”, in August and has spread like a con­flagration across global shores. The adumbration of the news in Nigeria assumed the life of a constituent of the country’s 2015 sporting calendar.

Ever since then, no day has passed by without local and regional reaffirmation of the laudable intent by diverse and multifarious sports personalities and authorities. The outpouring of endorse­ments is such that if the final decision were to be a regional or sub-regional thing, the acclamations and ratifica­tions would have presented the topmost football administrative position in the world on a platter to Dr. Kalu. Howev­er, considering the behemoth nature of the office, there are many dynamics and global stakeholderships.

Shortly after Dr. Kalu’s expression of interest, the football mathematician whose precison with shots and pass­es in his heyday as the captain of the Green Eagles (now Super Eagles) re­main unequalled in Nigerian football history, Chief Olusegun Odegbami, declared his own candidacy for the summit football office. It must be un­derscored that mathematical Odegbami is one of the few players in the country with an elevated intellectual bent and is about the most visible of his peers in terms of cerebral entrepreneurship and contemporary sports issues at multifar­ious corporate and institutional levels.

If the predecessor of Dr. Kalu as the Pillar of Sports in Africa, Alhaji Mo­shood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola, were to be alive today, he would un­hesitantly endorse his successor for the plum, universal job. There is no doubt that Odegbami has the right to aspire to head the world body—what is critical, however, is his capacity, global reach and holistic pedigree. Distinction as a player is the minutest and inconsequen­tial consideration, let alone criterion, for qualification for the FIFA Presiden­cy. Dr. Kalu may not have displayed any provincial soccer artistry or nation­al football wizardry as Odegbami had excellently done, but Dr. Kalu’s unpar­alleled management of Enyimba Inter­national Football Club culminating in the unprecedentedness of an unparal­leled back-to-back glorious and historic winning of the Confederation of Afri­can Football (CAF) Champions League in 2003 and 2004 and the tournament’s Super Cup stands him on the best con­tinental stead. That attainment was the first time Nigeria will win the CAF con­tinental laurel in 39 years. At the risk of profuse optimism, I have the conviction that, if Chief Abiola had been alive and age allowed him to contest FIFA Pres­idency, nobody would have challenged him in Africa, how much less Nigeria!

On August 9, 2015, one of the titles on the stable of The Sun headlined its story on this advocacy “Kalu’s dream gathers momentum”. I strongly dis­agree with the caster of that headline because Dr. Kau is passionately desir­ous of the engagement that he is ready to throw in anything that would legiti­mately ensure victory for him and the continent. Therefore, the matter has transcended the realm of dream. Ceter­is paribus, Dr. Kalu is on the path of making history as the first African to hold that office. As you read this, many consultations, meetings and strategies are going on, all geared towards the election of Dr. Kalu as FIFA President next year. For me, it is a reality in pro­cess—not a dream.

In all sincerity and without any prej­udices, Odegbami is good for this job, but Dr. Kalu is better in virtually all parametres and by extrapolation the best candidate to represent Africa at this golden point. Indeed, if it was a race for the headship of the Nigerian Football Federation (NFF), Odegbami would dust other contenders because of his robust antecdents vis-à-vis the localisation of the NFF circumscribed jurisprudential trajectory as opposed to the FIFA universality.

At the crescendo we had reached before the Odegbami intervention, the task left was the mobilisation of Afric­qn football federations for their sup­port towards the actualization of this project. We should not, ordinarilly, be dissipating energy on double candida­ture when the goal should have been backing a candidate with the utmost potentiality and superlative prospect of clinching the job. In all fairness, I had expected that a personality like Odeg­bami should have joined other sporting giants by throwing his massive weight behind Dr. Kalu instead of the present peripherality of interest. Personages like the erstwhile Director-General of the National Sports Commission and former FIFA and CAF Executice Committee member, Dr. Amos Ada­mu, international football legend John Fashanu and leader of Africa’s biggest supporters’ club, Dr. Rafiu Ladipo, who have all endorsed Dr. Kalu’s imminent leadership of FIFA cannot be wrong. More Nigerians as you will read pres­ently have also unsolicitously backed Dr. Kalu,

Undoubtedly, this is the best opportu­nity for Africa to get the FIFA top post for the first time. It would be a tragedy if we allow the self-created chance to slip away on grounds of our domestic disorganization and throwing of span­ners in the contest. It is obvious that on a comparative scale, Dr. Kalu most probably is better than any other as­pirant that has emerged and may still jokingly come out. I had expected that with the towering football image of Dr. Kalu his candidacy would have elicit­ed consensual ratification by all mem­ber-countries (and citizens) of CAF. Alas, there are still muffled, discordant and spoiler voices!

For anyone to think of being at the helm of affair of FIFA, the person must have the supranational influence, test­ed and accomplished personality and a depth of managerial acumen of expe­rienciality. FIFA Presidency is not for local champions, but for men with ev­idence of sporting accomplishments at various levels and dollarized affluence. Even without any insight, it is clear to most People here and elsewhere that Dr. Kalu is eminently qualified for this crown of sporting administration. An issue does not require overemphasis because of its naturalness.

Politics is integral to the FIFA race. Being a dogged politician and one-time number three presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Dr. Kalu is in a vantage and inimitable position to bring his wealth of experienceto bear on this football portfolio. As I men­tioned earlier, what we need ahead of the FIFA election next February is ex­tensive campaign that will involve a su­perfluity of messages tailored towards the realisation of this noble objective. For sure, FIFA politics is different from our local politics, which means that Dr. Kalu needs to go the extra mile, reach out to the people behind the football system here and outside the shores of this country, familiarize himself with the inner workings of CAF and FIFA, if he has not done that already and im­mediately establish credible platforms to catalyze his campaign. Dr. Kalu’s transformative profile and growing of football in this part of the world are the greatest testaments to his anticipatory replication of the same on the global stage. His contributions to sports devel­opment are testimonious of his commit­ment to this human facet long before now.

It is not surprising that former mili­tary leader, 74-year-old General Ibra­him Badamasi Babangida has support­ed the candidacy of Dr. Kalu. With more and more distinguished Nigerians backing Dr. Kalu on his aspiration, the time has come for him to wrap up his candidacy with formal and public en­dorsement by the NFF and ultimately the CAF. This would remove the veil that makes some people see the quest as a dream instead of the reality that it is. This is very critical because without it nothing will jell, ultimately.

Not many people know that Dr. Kalu is still engineering the round leath­er game through the promotion of his club, OUK Football Club that is now known as Abia Warriors of Umuahia, a key team in the Globacom-Nigeria Football League System. His unflinch­ing commitment to football even after setting continental records with Eny­imba International FC is amazingly inimitable. None of his governorship or political mates has devoted so much interest in the development of football in Nigeria and on the continent. He is not coming from the blues to aspire for FIFA topmost calling. That Dr. Kalu and Dr. Mike Adenuga Jnr., GCON, principal proprietor of Globacom, are best of friends today is a function of their inseparable love for the sovere­ignity of football in our country and transnationally.

At this point, I can assuredly say that the 54 African Football Federations will at the opportune time collectively root for Dr. Kalu. It will be a disservice to our continent and indeed the world if Dr. Kalu does not emerge the preferred candidate and go ahead to assume the leadership of FIFA to God’s glory and our honour. I know full well that other countries outside Africa may have their own candidates and possible seek to play the FIFA politics more than we do, but with enigmatic Kalu they will have the shocker of their lives because of his global reputation, recognition, opu­lence as one of Africa’s richest men and networks of networth tentacles spaning business, politics and football. They should know and have a rethink in their own interest.

Dr. Kalu’s eventual victory as FIFA President will have immeasurable ben­efits for Nigeria and Africa. This is evidently so because no African has headed FIFA since it was established. Implicatively, our interests as a nation and continent will enjoy some measure of statutory boost and prominence with our man inevitably in charge. The Igbo say that if you are not at home to look after your yam, it will burn or goats will help you take care of it! We need a man like Dr. Kalu in FIFA. He will admin­ister the world football-governing body more than he did in Enyimba FC. Afri­cans need this pride for the first time in global football history.

According to the NFF President, Am­aju Pinnick, “The FIFA presidential race is a very serious matter, an intense affair that demands playing the politi­cal game on a global canvass.” This corroborates my foregoing assertion that you need a man of the calibre of Dr. Kalu who has the capacity, compe­tency and resources to play the cards. The competiton is not for minions from “small” African countries or even Nige­ria, comparatively speaking!

I will end this article with a quote from former FIFA and CAF Executive Committee member, Dr. Amos Adamu: “If you put Odegbami and Kalu up for selection, for me I will sincerely pick Kalu as he has proved his integrity as a top-class administrator and in the area of marketing, he has also been there at the world level. Odegbami proved his worth as a player in the field of play where he was fantastic no doubt about that. But he failed to translate this to the areas of administration and marketing. I do not want to support a candidate that would travel to two or three coun­tries for campaign across the world and would start asking the people to raise funds for him to continue the campaign. This is capital intensive and someone like Odegbami does not have the capa­bility compared to the financial prow­ess of Orji Kalu who has a world-class airline business in another country and a chain of other multi-billion business empire.”

My final line: Odegbami is good and qualified for FIFA presidential contest, but Dr. Kalu is better for reasons ad­duced above and many more!

 

This article was originally published on The Sun.

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