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The clash between Manchester City and Queens Park Rangers on Sunday will be one of the most watched among the 10 games on the last day of the 2011/2012 Premier League season. 

For the not-so-simple reason that City need the game to win the league for the first time and QPR need at least a draw to survive relegation, the game will draw attention even from the fans of rival clubs.

Yakubu Aiyegbeni is already in a dilemma. He will have to decide whether to remain at Blackburn Rovers or not after the club were confirmed for relegation following their loss to Wigan Athletic last weekend.

Three other Nigerians – Taye Taiwo, Nedum Onuoha and Danny Shittu — in the Rangers squad will not want to join Aiyegbeni in the lower division. It will be a battle of their livesto keep the team in the elite division. Besides their commitment to the club, they all have their personal reasons to ensure City don’t win at the Etihad Stadium.

Taiwo was a leading player in France at Marseille, winning the Ligue 1 title and other domestic competitions with the team but he moved to AC Milan last season and was tipped to hit his best form at the Italian giants. Unexpectedly, however, he made just four appearances for the Serie A club before his surprise loan move to QPR.

Taiwo’s loan deal means he would have to return to Milan at the end of the season should QPR be relegated just as the club have the option of buying him for £3.5m if he succeeds with them.

The problem is that the left-back does not want a return to Italy where Milan manager, Massimiliano Allegri, was not keen in fielding him during his short spell at the San Siro. Therefore, the solution to keep playing regular topflight football by next season is to get result at the Etihad Stadium.

For Onuoha, the story is not completely different; but he faces a little more complex situation.
The defender grew up supporting his local club, Manchester City, he was a ball boy at the club and subsequently joined their Academy. He graduated to the first team and played 95 games for the Blues. No doubt City have been his first love, and they will always be, as he has admitted. But duty calls on Sunday and he must make sure City don’t win.

“If City could finish it off and win the title without finishing us off then I couldn’t be happier,” Onuoha told the London Evening Standard.
In one moment, the defender talks with genuine excitement about what winning the Premier League would mean to City. The next, he ponders the devastating impact relegation would have on QPR.
But Onuoha will still win even if QPR lose providing Bolton don’t triumph at Stoke; that could also be said of City as long as Manchester United fail to beat Sunderland.

The 25-year-old leaves no room for doubt that his loyalties are firmly with his new employers.
He said, “QPR staying up is the biggest thing for me, no question. As long as we experience that emotion (of having secured their Premier League status) then everything else is a bonus.

“The Etihad Stadium could be the best place in the world this weekend if they win and we stay up but unfortunately that is only one of many scenarios.
“But if it happens then there will be hugs for the QPR players and fans first and then I will give City the credit they deserve.
“I don’t think I’d be invited to their party if they win the league as I only played five minutes for them this season.
“However, it’s all about QPR. It’s in our own hands. We know we can’t rely on anyone.
“On a personal level it will be emotional, though, going back to where I spent so many years. But to think they could win the league and we could stay up — it would be one of the best days of my career.”
Unlike Taiwo and Onuoha who joined QPR during their topflight campaign, Shittu has a longer tie with the London club.

 He joined them in 2001 when they were still in League One. He helped them gain promotion to the Championship in 2005 before leaving for other clubs. He rejoined the club last year just before they gained promotion to the Premier League.

He has not played any league game since his return but that will not make him lose his commitment to the club. Besides, should QPR go down, Shittu could be among the players to be shown the exit door following the expiration of his contract at the end of the season.

The Nigeria Football Federation has finally confirmed the U.J. Esuene Stadium in Calabar as venue for next month’s 2014 FIFA World Cup and 2013 Africa Cup of Nations qualifying matches involving the Super Eagles.

The decision to play in Calabar follows the meeting between the NFF President, Alhaji Aminu Maigari, and the Director General of the National Sports Commission, Dr Patrick Ekeji. The venue will host the matches against Namibia and Rwanda respectively.
 “The venue issue is now settled. We looked at all the options available to us and we decided Calabar is the best choice for now.

 Although work has started on the pitch of the National Stadium, Abuja, it will not be ready to host the match, especially with FIFA asking us to confirm a venue by Friday,” Maigari said.

The search for the venue for the Eagles became extra ordinary due to the twin factors of bad pitch and security problems as a result of bombings in the northern part of the country. The poorly managed National Stadium in Abuja now has a bad playing pitch. The Kaduna venue, which would have served as the alternative venue, was ruled out due security worries despite the behind-the-scenes political manoeuvrings to have the match played at the venue. The NFF had to jettison that idea when it became clear that the Eagles themselves, fans and the visiting countries were not going to accept that venue.

Nigeria will take on Namibia for the FIFA World Cup qualifying race on June 3 before flying to Blantyre the following weekend to face the Flames of Malawi. The Eagles will return to Nigeria to clash with the Amavubi of Rwanda in the return leg of a 2013 African Cup of Nations qualifying fixture on June 17.

As the Eagles prepare with the friendly match against Peru, the Namibians will train in Germany and play a warm-up game against Mozambique as they prepare hard for the game against Nigeria. Namibia, led by German technical director, Klaus Stark, will set up a training camp in Kaiserau, Germany, from May 21.

During their 10-day stint in Germany, they will test their readiness with warm-up games with Mozambique as well as German lower league sides. The Brave warriors have called up 23 players mostly drawn from the country’s league as well as from neighbouring South Africa.
Thousands of years after the first athletes competed at the ancient stadium in Greece, a high priestess swathed in white lit a flame from the sun to mark the start of a new Olympiad on Thursday.

The Olympics are as much about tradition and legacy as they are sporting events, with none so vivid as the lighting of the torch which will now wind its way from Olympia to the Games in London.

The solemn ceremony, held in the ruins of the 2,600-year-old Temple of Hera, saw actors in ancient Greek costume use a mirror to harness the sun's rays and light the Olympic torch.

It marks the start of the flame's week-long journey to Britain, where it will begin an 8,000-mile (12,875-kilometer) route across the country before entering at the new stadium in east London.


Taking center stage in the lighting ceremony was Greek actress Ino Menegaki as the traditional high priestess. Among the dignitaries present were International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge and London organizing committee chairman Sebastian Coe.

The first relay runner to take the flame was Greece's Liverpool-born open water swimming champion Spyros Gianniotis.

He then passed it to 19-year-old British boxer Alexander Loukos, who grew up in east London where the Olympic Stadium is now situated, but whose father hails from Greece.

Making its way to Britain, the flame will first take in Greek archaeological sites including the Acropolis and Olympic Stadium in Athens, site of the first modern Games in 1896.

Arriving on May 19 at Land's End in the far southwest of England, it will then wind its way through 1,019 communities, carried by 8,000 torch-bearers.

The final leg will run from Hampton Court Palace, the former home of King Henry VIII, before arriving at the opening ceremony on July 27.



Former Super Eagles striker, Rashidi Yekini, died on Friday in a private hospital in Ibadan, aged 48.
The former Vitoria Setubal of Portugal striker was said to have died after a brief illness. A statement from the Commissioner for Youth and Sports, Kwara State, Tunji Moronfoye, said he would be buried on Saturday (today) in Ira, Offa, Kwara State.
The Supervising Minister of Sports, Bolaji Abdulahi, said in a statement signed by his Special Adviser, Julius Ogunro, that Yekini’s name would live forever in the memory of Nigerians.
“The honourable minister is saddened by the death of Yekini. He was the greatest in Nigeria’s football history and although he has gone to rest, he will live forever in our memory. We commiserate with his family and pray that God will give them the fortitude to bear the loss,” the statement said.
Yekini had a successful international career with the Eagles between 1984 and 1998, scoring a record 37 goals in 58 appearances. The highlight of his days in the Eagles was when he scored Nigeria’s first World Cup goal in the 3-0 demolition of Bulgaria at the 1994 World Cup in the US. He also played in the 1998 World Cup in France.
He began his journey to football fame in 1982 when he joined Shooting Stars of Ibadan. He left the club two years later, joining Abiola Babes of Abeokuta. In 1987, he joined the Nigerian football legion playing outside the country when he moved to Africa Sports of Abidjan, Ivory Coast. His best club achievement was at Setubal in Portugal, where he scored 90 goals in 108 appearances between 1990 and 1994.
He moved to Olympiacos of Greece soon after the World Cup in 1994, but his form dropped considerably as he struggled to find his scoring form. He returned to Setubal in 1997 and after spell at Zurich, Bizerte, Al-Shabab and Africa Sports, he journeyed back home and joined Julius Berger in 2002. His last club was Gateway of Abeokuta in 2005.
His death was a climax to a wave of rumours surrounding his private life. Since ending his career as a footballer, he had withdrawn from public life, living as a recluse.
Yekini’s life outside football was in contrast to the success he achieved as a player. His celebrated marriage to Kemi, a graduate of the University of Ibadan, after the World Cup in 1994, only lasted three months and his relationship with two other women was shrouded in controversy.
A few years ago, he was alleged to have beaten up his tenant in Ibadan over domestic issues, sending him out of the house. He lived alone in the sprawling house he built at Oni and Sons area of Ibadan. An unconfirmed report said Yekini was furious because the said tenant had tried to talk him into having a relationship with a woman. He was also alleged to have sacked his lawyer after he discovered that he increased rent on his property without his knowledge.
Last year, rumours went round that the former striker was seen burning valuable house items at his home in Ibadan; an action that sparked further rumour that he was mentally ill. He fuelled the speculation more with a new wave of generosity.
Concerned friends said Yekini withdrew millions of naira from his bank account and gave to people; some of them were people he did not know.
When contacted in Ibadan over the issue, the former Shooting Stars striker refused to react, although his attitude towards his few friends, players of a local club he supported with money, and daily activities were normal.
He lived a life of fixed daily routine. He trained at the Liberty Stadium (now Obafemi Awolowo Stadium) each morning and spent the afternoon at Sabo area of the ancient town, where he usually prayed at the central mosque. He would return home around 3 o’clock and drive to Olubadan Stadium around 5 pm, where he stayed with a friend simply known as Uncle Bayo.
At the time, Uncle Bayo, who sells compact discs beside the Olubadan Stadium, spoke in defence of Yekini’s state of mind. He said Yekini was financially stable and that what he gave out to people was a fraction of his wealth. He said the former footballer had a huge deposit in a leading bank in Nigeria.
Back in those days, there was a report that Yekini rejected the Peugeot 504 given to the players by Shooting Stars patron, Chief Lekan Salami, because he felt he was too young to use a car.
Giving more insight into the life of the football legend, Bayo says Yekini’s reticence was a result of his betrayal by many people in the past and that his recent behaviours could be traced to the failures in his personal life.
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