This boy is good oo( Ndah)
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- packerland
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Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
Ekong and Ajayi’s play at AFCON will not help matters but if the coach doesn’t add to that midfield starting with the Argentina friendly, then he is truly clueless.
"Yea right, we await the beatings the Aussie has for them. The Falcons are just another bad team at the women world cup".....fatpokey Tue Jul 25, 2023 4:34 .
Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
He plays right backpackerland wrote: ↑Mon Feb 19, 2024 9:44 amEkong and Ajayi’s play at AFCON will not help matters but if the coach doesn’t add to that midfield starting with the Argentina friendly, then he is truly clueless.
Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
Well done to Ndah.
Regarding the SA league, marketing and packaging play a great part in its success.
Watching it on TV gives that entertainment value which the NPFL is yet to achieve, even if our standard of actual play is higher - which is arguable.
Attracting the crowds is also crucial to the packaging for TV.
We really have a lot to do.
"Ole kuku ni gbogbo wọn "
Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
Uncle Damunk, forget marketing and packaging for now.Damunk wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 8:26 amWell done to Ndah.
Regarding the SA league, marketing and packaging play a great part in its success.
Watching it on TV gives that entertainment value which the NPFL is yet to achieve, even if our standard of actual play is higher - which is arguable.
Attracting the crowds is also crucial to the packaging for TV.
We really have a lot to do.
If you take 10 South Africa football fans and you take 10 football fans. Ask which clubs they support... Majority, if not all of the Nigerian will mention a foreign club, whilst their South African counterparts will mostly mention a local club.
It's even worse with the elites in Nigeria. Governors, senator, billionaires talking about their love foreign clubs and anyone who mentions a Nigerian team is seen as ara oko.
There has to be a mental change and or generational change.
By the grace of God I am a Christian, by my deeds a great sinner.....The Way of a Pilgrim
Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
Fact. It is really a shame. It is shocking that there is little or no marketing of some home games played by NPFL clubs. I often wonder why it is so. I have come to the conclusion that it is a reflection of government malaise. Persons in the club simply see their positions as state handouts. This is why I think Remo is tge way Nigeria should go. Simply do away with these state owned clubs either by attrition or by design. If the NPFL is managed by those who see it as a business, I believe things will change.Damunk wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 8:26 amWell done to Ndah.
Regarding the SA league, marketing and packaging play a great part in its success.
Watching it on TV gives that entertainment value which the NPFL is yet to achieve, even if our standard of actual play is higher - which is arguable.
Attracting the crowds is also crucial to the packaging for TV.
We really have a lot to do.
The difficulties of statistical thinking describes a puzzling limitation of our mind: our excessive confidence in what we believe we know, and our apparent inability to acknowledge the full extent of our ignorance and the uncertainty of the world we live in. We are prone to overestimate how much we understand about the world and to underestimate the role of chance in events -- Daniel Kahneman (2011), Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
That’s why marketing and packaging are important. If you make the league and its teams attractive, people will buy into them. As long as the product itself is good. You can’t blame the customer for not loving you if you’ve not made yourself lovable.fabio wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 10:35 amUncle Damunk, forget marketing and packaging for now.Damunk wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 8:26 amWell done to Ndah.
Regarding the SA league, marketing and packaging play a great part in its success.
Watching it on TV gives that entertainment value which the NPFL is yet to achieve, even if our standard of actual play is higher - which is arguable.
Attracting the crowds is also crucial to the packaging for TV.
We really have a lot to do.
If you take 10 South Africa football fans and you take 10 football fans. Ask which clubs they support... Majority, if not all of the Nigerian will mention a foreign club, whilst their South African counterparts will mostly mention a local club.
It's even worse with the elites in Nigeria. Governors, senator, billionaires talking about their love foreign clubs and anyone who mentions a Nigerian team is seen as ara oko.
There has to be a mental change and or generational change.
-------------------------------------------
MY NAME IS WAKA-MAN, and YES, I AM A CHELSEA FAN. Please don't hate me - I was fan when David Ellery dashed Cantona two penalties as Man U beat us 4-0 in the FA Cup final. So I've paid my dues.
MY NAME IS WAKA-MAN, and YES, I AM A CHELSEA FAN. Please don't hate me - I was fan when David Ellery dashed Cantona two penalties as Man U beat us 4-0 in the FA Cup final. So I've paid my dues.
Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
Absolutely!! Marketing is critical in pulling in interest. That should not be arguable.waka-man wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 12:02 pmThat’s why marketing and packaging are important. If you make the league and its teams attractive, people will buy into them. As long as the product itself is good. You can’t blame the customer for not loving you if you’ve not made yourself lovable.fabio wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 10:35 amUncle Damunk, forget marketing and packaging for now.Damunk wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 8:26 amWell done to Ndah.
Regarding the SA league, marketing and packaging play a great part in its success.
Watching it on TV gives that entertainment value which the NPFL is yet to achieve, even if our standard of actual play is higher - which is arguable.
Attracting the crowds is also crucial to the packaging for TV.
We really have a lot to do.
If you take 10 South Africa football fans and you take 10 football fans. Ask which clubs they support... Majority, if not all of the Nigerian will mention a foreign club, whilst their South African counterparts will mostly mention a local club.
It's even worse with the elites in Nigeria. Governors, senator, billionaires talking about their love foreign clubs and anyone who mentions a Nigerian team is seen as ara oko.
There has to be a mental change and or generational change.
The difficulties of statistical thinking describes a puzzling limitation of our mind: our excessive confidence in what we believe we know, and our apparent inability to acknowledge the full extent of our ignorance and the uncertainty of the world we live in. We are prone to overestimate how much we understand about the world and to underestimate the role of chance in events -- Daniel Kahneman (2011), Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
- danfo driver
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Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
LOL see everyone mentioning "Marketing."
Marketing is critical if you have something to market. What do we have to market? Our mentality is sh1t, most Nigerians have a bad attitude towards success. Go to the Ndidi/Kelechi thread, and you will see them there. All we ask is for HIGH STANDARDS in everything we do in our country, including national team selection and many Nigerians do NOT want it. That do not want it because their favorite players cannot meet the HIGH STANDARDS and they cant accept that! Padi Padi government--- its not only the politicians! The citizens are the same way. They will cheat, steal and kill to make sure their favorites are rewarded for mediocrity. They have a disdain towards high standards! That is how many of them supported politicians who falsified their certificates.
What exactly are you going to market????! Tell me! You have a citizenry that is completely and unabashedly against high standards and are deeply in love with mediocrity. What the hell are you going to market?? You think the South Africans market mediocrity?
Please lets use out tongue to count our teeth! The real problem is US - the citizens. Many of us are truly the worst of the worst! And go around CE and you will see them.
Marketing is critical if you have something to market. What do we have to market? Our mentality is sh1t, most Nigerians have a bad attitude towards success. Go to the Ndidi/Kelechi thread, and you will see them there. All we ask is for HIGH STANDARDS in everything we do in our country, including national team selection and many Nigerians do NOT want it. That do not want it because their favorite players cannot meet the HIGH STANDARDS and they cant accept that! Padi Padi government--- its not only the politicians! The citizens are the same way. They will cheat, steal and kill to make sure their favorites are rewarded for mediocrity. They have a disdain towards high standards! That is how many of them supported politicians who falsified their certificates.
What exactly are you going to market????! Tell me! You have a citizenry that is completely and unabashedly against high standards and are deeply in love with mediocrity. What the hell are you going to market?? You think the South Africans market mediocrity?
Please lets use out tongue to count our teeth! The real problem is US - the citizens. Many of us are truly the worst of the worst! And go around CE and you will see them.
"it is better to be excited now and disappointed later, than it is to be disappointed now and later." - Marcus Aurelius, 178AD
metalalloy wrote: Does the SE have Gray, Mahrez or Albrighton on our team or players of their caliber?
Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
I agree with you re the marketing deficit in the NPFL. Then again, is there an incentive for government owned clubs which get their budget directly from the government, to invest heavily in marketing? A privately owned club has that incentive as it has to attract fans and generate revenue to stay afloat. A government owned club feeds from the government feeding bottle , hence gets funding even if no one watches its matches.
Results in African continental competitions suggests that the South African league (which for the second season in a row has a club in the semi-finals of the African Champions League) is a lot stronger than the NPFL.
Results in African continental competitions suggests that the South African league (which for the second season in a row has a club in the semi-finals of the African Champions League) is a lot stronger than the NPFL.
Damunk wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 8:26 am
Well done to Ndah.
Regarding the SA league, marketing and packaging play a great part in its success.
Watching it on TV gives that entertainment value which the NPFL is yet to achieve, even if our standard of actual play is higher - which is arguable.
Attracting the crowds is also crucial to the packaging for TV.
We really have a lot to do.
Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
There’s nothing arguable about which league is stronger standard wise tbh. Just look at how many players from their league played at the last AFCONDamunk wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 8:26 amWell done to Ndah.
Regarding the SA league, marketing and packaging play a great part in its success.
Watching it on TV gives that entertainment value which the NPFL is yet to achieve, even if our standard of actual play is higher - which is arguable.
Attracting the crowds is also crucial to the packaging for TV.
We really have a lot to do.
- maceo4
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Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
Don’t their teams also go further in continental tournaments? They are much stronger than our league and much better in the every way.Sunset wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 2:00 pmThere’s nothing arguable about which league is stronger standard wise tbh. Just look at how many players from their league played at the last AFCONDamunk wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 8:26 amWell done to Ndah.
Regarding the SA league, marketing and packaging play a great part in its success.
Watching it on TV gives that entertainment value which the NPFL is yet to achieve, even if our standard of actual play is higher - which is arguable.
Attracting the crowds is also crucial to the packaging for TV.
We really have a lot to do.
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Made in the image of God that's a selfie!
- TonyTheTigerKiller
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Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
Their league is stronger because most of their best players stay home. Ours don’tmaceo4 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 3:47 pmDon’t their teams also go further in continental tournaments? They are much stronger than our league and much better in the every way.Sunset wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 2:00 pmThere’s nothing arguable about which league is stronger standard wise tbh. Just look at how many players from their league played at the last AFCONDamunk wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 8:26 amWell done to Ndah.
Regarding the SA league, marketing and packaging play a great part in its success.
Watching it on TV gives that entertainment value which the NPFL is yet to achieve, even if our standard of actual play is higher - which is arguable.
Attracting the crowds is also crucial to the packaging for TV.
We really have a lot to do.
Cheers.
- maceo4
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Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
They stay home because their league is well run and pays as well as European leagues…If ours was the same, more players would stay as well…TonyTheTigerKiller wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 6:29 pmTheir league is stronger because most of their best players stay home. Ours don’tmaceo4 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 3:47 pmDon’t their teams also go further in continental tournaments? They are much stronger than our league and much better in the every way.Sunset wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 2:00 pmThere’s nothing arguable about which league is stronger standard wise tbh. Just look at how many players from their league played at the last AFCONDamunk wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 8:26 amWell done to Ndah.
Regarding the SA league, marketing and packaging play a great part in its success.
Watching it on TV gives that entertainment value which the NPFL is yet to achieve, even if our standard of actual play is higher - which is arguable.
Attracting the crowds is also crucial to the packaging for TV.
We really have a lot to do.
Cheers.
Super Eagus 4 Life!
Made in the image of God that's a selfie!
Made in the image of God that's a selfie!
Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
You’re probably right.Sunset wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 2:00 pmThere’s nothing arguable about which league is stronger standard wise tbh. Just look at how many players from their league played at the last AFCONDamunk wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 8:26 amWell done to Ndah.
Regarding the SA league, marketing and packaging play a great part in its success.
Watching it on TV gives that entertainment value which the NPFL is yet to achieve, even if our standard of actual play is higher - which is arguable.
Attracting the crowds is also crucial to the packaging for TV.
We really have a lot to do.
Can’t really argue, but some will.
The evidence is there.
"Ole kuku ni gbogbo wọn "
Re: This boy is good oo( Ndah)
Yup.maceo4 wrote: ↑Tue Apr 30, 2024 4:04 amThey stay home because their league is well run and pays as well as European leagues…If ours was the same, more players would stay as well…TonyTheTigerKiller wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 6:29 pmTheir league is stronger because most of their best players stay home. Ours don’tmaceo4 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 3:47 pmDon’t their teams also go further in continental tournaments? They are much stronger than our league and much better in the every way.Sunset wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 2:00 pmThere’s nothing arguable about which league is stronger standard wise tbh. Just look at how many players from their league played at the last AFCONDamunk wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 8:26 amWell done to Ndah.
Regarding the SA league, marketing and packaging play a great part in its success.
Watching it on TV gives that entertainment value which the NPFL is yet to achieve, even if our standard of actual play is higher - which is arguable.
Attracting the crowds is also crucial to the packaging for TV.
We really have a lot to do.
Cheers.
This should be (and is) the bottom line when debating HB vs FB.
But somehow, the debates still rage. Is there really anything to argue about?
"Ole kuku ni gbogbo wọn "