This week, I am doing what I may have done only once before since I started keeping a newspaper column in February of 1978.
I am giving up my space for an article written by respected Chairman of Stationery Stores FC, Adetilewa Adebajo.
As the 2025/2026 football season comes to an end, his article that I saw on a social media platform reflects the mood of the moment. The contents are entirely his views and responsibility!

A reflection on Nigerian football – Going Back To The Beginning’ ….by Adetilewa Adebajo
Origins And Historical Foundations Of The Game In Nigeria
The history of Nigerian football, pre and post colonial, is very well documented. Our affiliation with the English FA, and the records and archives are intact.
Nigerian takeover of football, post colonial era, was via the Nigerian Olympic movement led by Sir Justice Adetokunbo Ademola, supported by Israel Adebajo. They financed the process and got the English FA to back Nigeria’s application for FIFA affiliation as a requirement for Nigeria’s planned Football participation in the 1960 Rome Olympics. FIFA Affiliation Application went in through CAF in 1959 and was ratified in the FIFA congress in 1960.
Sir Ademola brought in GKJ Amachree as first Chairman of the indigenous NFA and Israel Adebajo as treasurer. Government interference led to their sacking and after the 1966 coup, GKJ Amachree came back as Chairman. Adebajo, however, focused his attention on developing his football club, which eventually produced 10 starting players for Nigeria’s Green Eagles in their first major international football appearance at the 1968 Mexico Olympics. They encountered the legendary Brazilian team, and forced a 3-3 draw after trailing in the match. Nigeria’s first football olympics appearance was a project 10 years in the making, as Nigeria failed to qualify for the 1960 and 1964 Olympics. 28 years later, Nigeria won football gold in 1996 Atlanta Olympics, after the first of six World Cup appearances in USA 94.
Nigerian Football Crisis: Corruption, Government Interference And Decline
Nigerian football is currently down and out as a result of government interference, corruption, greed and conflict of interest with the administrators and their vested sporting commercial interests.
Is it not a disgrace that in Nigeria today, only one Stadium in Uyo consistently meets FIFA standards? This, despite massive investment in sports infrastructure, with abandoned and derelict National stadia both in Abuja and Lagos.
Also Read: The Nigeria Professional Football League! — Odegbami
At a time when the infrastructure was intact, Nigeria hosted AFCON twice in 1980 & 2000, FIFA junior tournaments twice: the U-17 World Cup in 2009 (October 24 – November 15, 2009) and the U-20 World Cup in 1999 (April 3 – April 24, 1999).
NPFL Financial Struggles And Integrity Concerns
The Nigeria Premier Football League is currently being held together by some very brave souls, who are doing a yeoman’s job. They deserve both our sympathy and support. Contrary to popular belief, the NPFL was not killed by digital and social media, or the European leagues. It is was decimated by match fixing, greed and corruption.
DSTV invested over US$100 million in OB vans to cover the league and paid the previous NPFL managers handsomely for TV rights. The administrators in charge then, through their related marketing companies, cornered 85% of the TV rights revenues to the detriment of the clubs. They lacked the capacity to organize a functional league, despite strong interest from telecom companies, banks, conglomerates and oil companies, that demanded transparency and accountability. As a result we have two generations of Nigerian Gen Z & X that have never been to a stadium in Nigeria to watch a football game, but pay the premium to watch Afrobeats concerts.
The question I am always frequently asked is ‘why are the Flaming Flamingos not playing in the premier league?’
My answer: First, Its expensive, not profitable and lacks a viable revenue model for sustainability. Second, it’s a fraudulent system, as matches can be bought and sold and refs, match commissioners and assessors are compromised.
I was in Ibadan last week to watch IICC Shooting Stars FC and it was a disgrace. The decisions of the referee against the Shooting Stars was vividly absurd. Two clear goals disallowed and an obvious penalty denied. Why? season ends this week, IICC currently sits third on the log trying to qualify for continental football, or win the league. So ref has been compromised by the teams above and below IICC on the log, and also the visiting team opponents on the day.
The expense budget for an NPLF season starts at 2.5 billion naira and most clubs spend more. This comes without the commensurate revenue, so even if you win the league maybe you get 200 million naira. No TV rights, no merchandise no gate takings and no meaningful sponsorship revenue.
Nigerian Football Compared With Global Revenue Models
In comparison, each English Premier League club, is projected to receive roughly between about £120 million and £195 million in central TV/broadcast and commercial distributions alone in the 2025/26 season, depending on final league position and live‑TV appearances. Deloitte’s Annual Review of Football Finance reports that Premier League clubs generated about £6.3 billion pounds in revenue in the 2023/24 season and projections for the 2025/26 season is £6.8 billion pounds. The American National Football League (NFL) generated a little over $23 billion US dollars in total revenue last season.
Football in Nigeria is a loss-making venture, where 95% of the players are civil servants with government owned clubs and wealthy private owners that subsidize football in Nigeria.
Also Read: Heading To The Civil Court To Help Nigerian Football! — Odegbami
The myth of selling players abroad is such that our players have now become commodities. It’s more human trafficking and modern slavery. Our hopeful players are littered all over the world doing menial jobs. Nigerian players are also no longer prominent in the top European leagues, other West African Countries have taken over.
Nigeria’s Declining Global Football Relevance
If you have any doubts about what I am talking about, as we prepare for the World Cup, ask yourself how many Nigerian referees have been selected for AFCON? How many of our referees have been to the World Cup? Zero!!!!
If you are still having any doubts about the state of your football in Nigeria, think again: when we had limited World Cup slots for Africa, Nigeria qualified easily.
This year, a record 10 African Countries are going to the World Cup next month and Nigeria is not amongst them, considering our football pedigree. The entire NFF board and management are still in place and have not been sacked, as we continue to celebrate, encourage and reward failure.
Legal Questions Surrounding The NFF Structure
This NFF is also a non-entity and organization without proper registration. It is merely a conduit used to pacify and facilitate FIFA funding to Nigerian football administrators. In January 2012, a Federal High Court in Abuja ordered the disbandment of both the Nigeria Football Federation and the Nigerian Premier League, effectively disbanding the NFF.
The NFA and decree “act”101 is still in place and also has budgetary allocation from the national assembly. In a strict legal sense under Nigerian law, the present‑day Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) is not incorporated by any specific Act of the National Assembly and operates largely as an unincorporated association using FIFA‑style statutes, while the old “Nigeria Football Association” (NFA) is the only body explicitly created and recognized in statute, and court judgments have nullified the NFF.
Football administrators in Nigeria operate a dual structure. They use NFF to collect FIFA and CAF funding and NFA to collect budgetary allocations and direct government largesse.
Nigerian Football Reform And The Call For Privatization
The only way forward for Nigerian Football, is the repeal of decree 101, privatization, and the return to a proper Football Association Structure.
The original legacy clubs owners that started professional football in Nigeria, should take over the responsibility for running football in line with FIFA statutes. Government should provide legal backing, by giving a Charter to the Legacy Club Owners, as they have to ICAN, NBA, NIA and other professional bodies that oversee their members.
Football in Nigeria today is akin to the entire Nigerian Bar Association executive management and leadership, being run by Engineers instead of lawyers.
Adetilewa Adebajo
Chairman
Stationery Stores Football Club Limited



