Let’s field our first eleven
By Okey Ndibe (E-mail: okeyndibe@gmail.com)
T
Twelve days ago, Nigeria’s junior football team vanquished Spain in the
ultimate game of the 12th FIFA Under-17 World Cup tourney. Nigeria’s decisive
victory—3-0 on penalty kicks—was a fitting finale to a riveting
run. On their way to earning the title of world champions, the team had dominated
competitors from such traditional football powerhouses as Germany, Argentina,
France and Colombia.
The team, affectionately tagged Eaglets, did more than demonstrate its superiority
as a team. It also excelled in the two major departments of the game. Its defensive
wall was as impregnable as its attacking arsenal was impossible to contain.
It brought artistry, supreme confidence and a fluidity of movement to their
games. It started the opening minute of each game with the same sense of purpose
and energy as it played the last minute. The players cohered as a team. From
their first game of the tournament, these young Nigerians served notice of their
determination. They were not in Seoul, South Korea for a picnic, or to be also-rans.
They came to town to lift the prized trophy. From the outset, then, they had
their eyes on the prize.
They succeeded with a brilliance punctuated with an exclamation point. Had they
won only against one or two formidable opponents, their dominance might have
been ascribed to luck. But to sweep past the competition as they did, and to
remain the only undefeated team in the tournament, show that this surpassing
feat was no fluke. They—players and coaches alike—worked hard, took
themselves and their opponents seriously, sweated in practice sessions and executed
their game plan with breathtaking finesse.
Thanks to their work ethic, they not only won, they also endeared themselves
to many lovers of football around the world. They charmed their opponents and
fans alike. They proved to be not only the best team around, but the team with
the best individual players as well. They gave the tournament its best offensive-minded
star in the person of Macaulay Chrisantus, the leading scorer. Chrisantus dazzled
opposing defenders. He feinted, bobbed and weaved his way to seven goals.
The Eaglets’ success buoyed a nation in desperate need for cheerful news.
Students of nationalism recognize the role of international sports in galvanizing
national pride. For the 90 or so minutes that the Eaglets took to the field,
they enjoyed the spiritual support of 140 million Nigerians. Their presence
on the field, hoisting aloft the banner of Nigeria, helped—however fleetingly—to
heal the religious, ethnic and class lines that often divide Nigerians. Yes,
even if for an hour and a half, they cemented a nation. They were our proud
ambassadors in whom we took pride, and we rooted for them. Their success belongs
to us, as their failure would certainly have been ours as well.
The Eaglets’ triumph holds out several profound lessons for all Nigerians.
For me, the central lesson is the wisdom of fielding our best talent. A nation
is as great or puny as the men and women in whose hands it entrusts its important
affairs. A country that wishes to soar, to seriously bid for greatness, must
invite its first eleven to lead the charge.
Nigerian leaders are often seized by great accesses of grandeur. They speak
of lifting Nigeria overnight from the ranks of the most economically miserable
countries to the tier of one of the top twenty economies in the world. But even
as they speak, they leave their audience in no doubt that their resolve is feigned.
They dissipate their energy, not in working to actuate their vision, but in
further pauperizing the nation they would transform. Their other actions contradict
their words. They appoint mediocrities into highly critical positions. They
bypass the best and settle for the second or third best.
The Eaglets won because Nigeria put its best football feet forward. How often
are the best hands and minds in Nigeria asked to carry out tasks that are crucial
for national development? How many ministers are recruited on the basis of their
technocratic know-how? How many government officials invest time in mastering
the nature of some aspects of national developmental crisis in order to be part
of the solution? How many Nigerian leaders spare a serious thought in their
waking hours, or keep awake at night thinking seriously about—and this
is a phrase beloved of our politicians—"moving the nation forward"?
If they knew what it takes to move a nation forward, how many of them would
be inclined to do it rather than have their gluttonous guts affixed to the trough?
There can be no question: Nigeria will turn the corner and begin to win the
challenge of development when it embraces the culture of putting people in positions
based on what, not who, they know. If the political leadership persists in its
contempt for those possessed of technical knowledge, then the country has no
right to expect anything but utter failure and frustration.
Nigeria is beset by myriads of crises. Its power supply deteriorates by the
day. Its roads are in a ghastly state. Its health care is nothing short of scary.
Its public-funded educational institutions are in terrible shape. Urban blight
is a bane. Corruption still runs rampant, especially at the highest levels of
the society. As the gap between the (fine) dining classes and the scavengers
at trash dumps widens, the former have become greedier and more mindless. Unemployment
is a deepening malaise and one conjectures that the growing menace of armed
robbery is directly tied to an explosion in the number of the unemployed. Taken
together, these and other dislocations paint an undeniably grave portrait.
Even so, Nigeria has the human resources—a technically equipped and savvy
pool—to tackle the nation’s many travails. This talent needs to
be mobilized, husbanded and given the charge to—Go! If Ghana can dramatically
cut down on power failures in its major cities, Nigeria can do even more. If
Ghanaian universities have attained a reasonable degree of stability, imagine
how much better Nigerian universities can do—given the right tonic of
purpose. If Sierra Leone can conduct respectable elections in which the opposition
trounces the ruling party, then an Iwu-less Nigeria is surely capable of doing
the same if not better.
The secret is not to leave it up to God, or to prepare a laundry list of excuses
to justify failure. Our Eaglets did not win in Seoul because they prayed and
fasted and had sleepless prayer warriors importuning heaven on their behalf.
They won because they bought into the good, old habit of preparing well in practice,
and going at their opponents with focus and determination. If the Eaglets had
stepped on the field armed, not with a strategy for victory, but with pockets
bulging with post-mortem excuses, they won’t today be the world champions
but a pathetic, whining team. They won because they understood the value of
striving for a goal. They cherished the virtue of working in unison, playing
their hearts out, and setting their eyes early and consistently on the prize.
As we fete them and celebrate their dazzling performances, let us remind ourselves
that the final way to make their achievement an enduring part of our experience
is to glimpse what it suggests about our collective potential.
When we banish frauds from steering the wheels of our nation; when we set high
standards for ourselves and our fellows; when we insist on putting our best
informed, best trained and morally astute in charge, then we improve our odds
of taking on the world. And leaving the competition a little dazed.