INSIDE NPFL: Indigenization, Alleged Under-the-Table takings, Season Preparation....

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INSIDE NPFL: Indigenization, Alleged Under-the-Table takings, Season Preparation....

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We Have Started Systematic Indigenization Of Kwara United -- GM Badawy
1 October 17, 2021 11:37 am
https://www.completesports.com/we-have- ... m-badawiy/

Kwara United General Manager, Bashir Badawiy, in this interview with Completesports.com speaks on the Harmony Warriors’ preparation for the 2021/2022 NPFL season, including arrangement being put in place to indigenise the club.
Badawiy also touches on other issues including the club’s shock failure to secure a continental competition berth, amongst other salient issues. He also reveals that . Enjoy excerpts…

Completesports.com: How has Kwara United preparations for the 2021/2022 season been, especially against the backdrop of the team’s performance in the concluded 2020/2021 NPFL season?


Bashir Badawiy: Our preparations started almost a month ago. We started with the players that were retained and those invited by the technical crew. We are presently in Ijebu-Ode for Governor Dapo Abiodun Pre-Season tournament. We also hope to participate in the Ogunjobi Gold Cup tournament, and maybe the Governor Ifeanyi Okowa Cup or the Ottassolo Tournament. We have new players in the team, and we want to give them enough opportunity to blend well. Last season, we prepared very well, and that’s reason we got good results during that season.

CS: Talking about new players, how is the selection processes?

Badawiy: The selection process, I think this question has to go to the technical crew. We [in the management] don’t interfere in their job. We only supervise whatever they are doing. And as we all know, the game is an open game. If a player is good, we will all see it. We have to supervise, because we are shouldering the work load of the team as managers. We always believe that whatever the coaches bring to our table, we scrutinize and filter, to ensure whoever they are bringing in can help Kwara United. We always want selections to be done on merit. We want to achieve significant result with this team, and because of that, we always want the best.


Kwara United’s friendly match with Koller FC was disrupted last week by some miscreants. How disappointed were you and how would you describe the ugly incident?

It’s quite unfortunate. In a professional football club like this, let’s put sentiments apart, it’s not possible to force players on coaches. If you do, you can’t get your desired result. We need to educate ourselves. Football is business, and if you want to achieve goals, you need to put sentiment aside, select players that can give you results. This is not a mushroom club, but a professional outfit.

I was disappointed. But, that will not make us to lose focus. We will not be carried away by the distraction. It’s obvious they were being sponsored. Why must you insist that you must be signed by Kwara United FC? I worked in other states before coming to Kwara state. Like Rivers United FC, where they are more aggressive followers of the game. I was the General Coordinator of the team, and I was not embarrassed or harassed the way I was harassed here. We came back home to develop our state and this is what we get. Football is a practical thing. Nobody can force themselves into Kwara United. If you don’t merit it, you don’t merit it.

How many players will Kwara United FC sign for the forthcoming 2021/2022 NPFL season?

So far, we have about 35 registered players. We also have three U-17 players in the team. Our youth development system is also fantastic. We have a player in the national U-17 team. The ‘young’ have enough courage because they play with the main team.

In Europe, some notable players started playing for their senior national team at 17. We have players in the U-17, U-20, and Super Eagles Team B. When you have good players, the national team coaches will obviously be attracted to your team. That’s why we are clamouring on always having the best legs to represent Kwara United. Four of our players were recently invited to Eagles Team B; Captain Chris Nwaeze, Stephen Jude, Afeez Nasir and Murtala Lawal. That’s a big achievement for us. In the U-20, Ejeh Isaiah, Olawale Farayola and Chris Nwaeze were part of the team. We can still have more.

Looking back at the concluded season, isn’t it unfortunate that Kwara United missed the continental cut?. What’s your target in the forthcoming season?

When you finish third yesterday, today, you will want to finish first. This is part of the reasons we want the best players here. For me, if anybody asks me, apart from the kangaroo decision that denied us our rightful place last season, we finished 3rd, and we are supposed to represent the country in the continent. We came third on merit, not through boardroom points. Football matches should not be won at the offices but on the pitch of play. This season, God willing; we are targeting the top position.

From a 2-0 win against Plateau Utd in Jos, to 3-0 win at home against Katsina United in the last match of the season, how challenging was the last season?

We were determined, this, I can say, sums up everything. And we had additional motivation and determination for the season after beating Plateau United in Jos in the very first match of the season. And again, we strived as a management, to pay the players and officials their salaries and bonuses as at when due. Not that the money was there, but that sacrifice was to sustain the momentum. We hope to do more this season.

Also, don’t forget that we paid our players salaries even during the Covid-19 period, when there was no league games at all. If you get reward for service rendered, that will encourage you to do more. I will want to thank Gov. AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq for giving us that opportunity. And then too, we were able, from the money, secure permanent ownership of our players. Now we have our own players, and we are in real business. We are using tax payers’ money to run this team, so we must ensure the money we get goes to the appropriate quarters, in the running of the club.

But there were allegations that some of you in the management were benefiting from players who are not indigines of the State, and appeared to look away from the indigenous players. What’s your take on this?

(Laughs….) This country…..because Ilorin itself is a country. I am from Kwara state. My dad is a son to Kamaldeen Al-Adabiy (RFA). I married from Ilorin. How can someone sit down somewhere, and speak that way?. Very funny. Enyimba is paying up to N1m to players, Rivers pay up to N1.1m, Plateau N750, 000–N800,000, even Nasarawa is paying up to N500,000. Abia Warriors are paying up to N600,000. Then you pay your players N200,000–N300,000 and you still go back to take from it?


They don’t really know what they wanted. They started by saying they want 90% indigenous players. Later, they changed it by saying they are fighting for Kwara. If you want to fight for Kwara, let the whole zones come out and fight. We have Kwara Central, Kwara South and Kwara North. We have a rule, policy in the team. We don’t take kickback, and anybody caught in the act will go. We use our personal money sometimes to motivate the players, just to encourage them. Then some people somewhere will come out and vomit this type of sentiment.

When people say we don’t have indigenous players in the team, it makes me cry inside me, as if I am from a different state, or that our chairman, Kumbi Titiloye is not a Kwaran. Just like the other board members.

We have 35 registered players in the team, the indigenous players are 11. They are Issaa Magaji Sulaiman Zubair, Issa Gata, Musa Abdulafeez, Abdullateef Ishola, Sulaiman Mojeed, AbdulSalam AbdulSalam, Shola AbdulRaheem, Muritala Lateef, Yusuph Shina Ibrahim, Saka Habeeb and Abayomi Taofeek Adeshina. We still have about five home grown players – They were born and bred in Kwara. They are Joshua Agboola, Ayodeji Bamidele, Dele Aiyenugba, Kabir Balogun and John Emmanuel aside this list of 35.

Those that were agitating to be in the team, if they are good enough, we will be proud to have them in the team. We have 10 youth players that we are sponsoring at the Kwara Football Academy. It’s a systematic indigenization of the team. We inherited a team that had only three indigenous players, Abdullateef Ishola, Issa Mogaji and Akeem Onigari, who was the Captain. Amongst all the players, there is none that’s from Irra, where I come from, or from Oro, where the chairman comes from. Football is one language. Kwara is Kwara. Majority of the players are from the Central.

Your advice to Supporters, Fans and the stakeholders based on the target you set for the coming season?


I will want to thank the Supporters Club, the Fans Club, as well as some notable stakeholders, for their support and words of advice. They need to keep supporting us. Our relationship with them is very cordial. They should not allow distraction. They need to educate our people about the team.

You have been in football for long. You played the game, and now, you are managing it. If you are not in football, what would you have been in life?

I would have been an Uztaz, because I am a Mallam. I was born into Qur’an, and I will die inside Qur’an. After my football management career, I will go back to my Islamic School, Madrasat, by the grace of Almighty Allah. Football is just by the way. I will go back to be an Islamic scholar.

Thanks for sharing some thoughts on Kwara United with Completesports.com.
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

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