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01062019 - APC lawmakers move against party

Vanguard Newspaper 01 June 2019

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SATURDAY Vanguard, JUNE 1, 2019—25<br />

unde Fashola presenting<br />

emens Westerhof while<br />

e Tayo looks on during<br />

Olamikan.<br />

From right, Minister of Power, Works and<br />

Housing Babatunde Fashola discussing<br />

with Saturday Vanguard Editor Mr. Onochir<br />

Anibeze while Former Super Eagle Coach,<br />

Clemens Westerhof looks on shortly after<br />

presentation Certificate of House to him in<br />

Abuja. Photo by Gbemiga Olamikan.<br />

S WESTERHOF:<br />

From right, Former Super Eagle<br />

Coach, Clemens Westerhof looking<br />

at Certificate of House issued to him<br />

by Federal Government in Abuja.<br />

Photo by Gbemiga Olamikan.<br />

his best woman from Africa<br />

house, and the tricks he played with players and officials<br />

In another friendly and warm gathering<br />

in Abuja, Westerhof recalled the dummy he<br />

sold to his players while on a training<br />

camp in Papendal Sports Resort in<br />

Holland. He told them he had gifts from<br />

Mercedes which had agreed to give them a<br />

car each in a sponsorship deal. It is a story<br />

that Daniel Amokachi had told this<br />

correspondent before. Amokachi spoke of<br />

how he made plans to ship his own car to<br />

Nigeria while Keshi sent for his wife to<br />

hurry down to Holland from Strassbourg,<br />

France. The camp was full of excitement.<br />

They looked forward to the car. When the<br />

officials of Mercedes arrived it dawned on<br />

the players that their gifts were toy<br />

Mercedes cars which he came with as<br />

souvenirs for them. Outrage. They did not<br />

know what to do with Westerhof. It was<br />

not a laughing matter then. They were<br />

enraged. But they laugh it off these days.<br />

Westerhof was and is today still full of<br />

humour. But he worked very hard and his<br />

watchword was discipline. Once at night,<br />

he took a seat and sat at the entrance of<br />

the hotel’s elevator with a novel. Some of<br />

the players had dressed gorgeously, ready<br />

for a night outing. But each one that<br />

stepped into the elevator to go out quickly<br />

returned to their rooms on sighting him.<br />

He was there till about 3 am. “In one<br />

night a player can destroy the fitness level<br />

it took you one week to achieve”, he says.<br />

In Abuja he recalled the day he paid two<br />

hotel staff to mark the players who would<br />

leave the hotel at night. The players did<br />

not know Westerhof had engaged people<br />

to monitor their <strong>move</strong>ments and actually<br />

report those who would sneak out at<br />

night. “At the morning training, I divided<br />

the team into two. I told Christian<br />

Chukwu to train a set of players while I<br />

took on the ones who went out in the<br />

night. They did not know I knew them<br />

until they started complaining about the<br />

rigorous training. They did 50 metres race<br />

ten times, 100m eight times and<br />

in 400m I<br />

timed them. They must do it in one<br />

minute or you would repeat it. So,<br />

they were repeating the 400m. They<br />

were shocked when I told them the<br />

fitness training would help them<br />

rebuild what they lost in their night<br />

outing.<br />

They were looking at each other,<br />

wondering how I knew. When you<br />

work with players you must work<br />

hard and you must protect your<br />

work otherwise you fail. You protect<br />

your work by insisting on discipline.<br />

Sometimes you allow a player who<br />

breaks the law to remain in the team<br />

but you must penalise him. I fine<br />

them. They lose allowances or<br />

bonuses. But you must be a father.<br />

Every time I told the players ‘I fight<br />

for you but you fight for your<br />

country. It’s a deal. I fight for the<br />

welfare but they fight for their<br />

country on the field. How many<br />

times did I want to resign when they<br />

owed my players and staff? Even<br />

when we qualified for the World Cup,<br />

somebody took the money. I made<br />

war and the government brought<br />

another money to pay the players.<br />

Hayayayaaya, I fight all the time but<br />

the players must fight also on the<br />

field. They must fight for each other<br />

and make a family on and off the<br />

field. That way, you make a good<br />

team”.<br />

In Abuja, he still played the father<br />

that he was to his team. He made a<br />

case for the players who were yet to<br />

receive their allocation papers. He<br />

met Bewarang, one of his assistants<br />

and spoke to Christian Chukwu on<br />

phone. “What are you doing in a<br />

•Lana<br />

London hospital,” he started in a<br />

telephone chat that lasted about five<br />

minutes. He wished Chukwu well<br />

and told him to feel strong and get<br />

well soon.<br />

When he returned home Thursday<br />

he called and put the phone on<br />

speaker.<br />

“There’s a festival here,” he said of<br />

the atmosphere and what Lana and<br />

Kloe had turned the house to. They<br />

were screaming, celebrating his<br />

return. He spoke about them and<br />

•Kloe<br />

•Lana<br />

his wife every time in Abuja.<br />

Certainly, Westerhof has found a new<br />

life in his new family. They make him<br />

happy and talk about them with so<br />

much excitement. He looks good for<br />

his age. But when he walks you<br />

appreciate how time tells on<br />

everyone. That’s the<br />

man Peter Rufai<br />

described his shots<br />

as gunfire. Before<br />

he engaged a<br />

goal keeper<br />

trainer in Gerry<br />

Van Iyke,<br />

Westerhof<br />

handled the<br />

training. His<br />

shots were<br />

terrific. He<br />

would<br />

place<br />

balls on<br />

the 18<br />

yard<br />

•Lilian, his wife<br />

box and his shots were nightmares to<br />

the keepers.<br />

“This is no shooting, it’s release of<br />

gunfire,” Rufai once told Westerhof<br />

of his shots in training.<br />

The great man of Nigerian football<br />

is 79 now and derives joy in talking<br />

about his daughters and beautiful<br />

wife. They matter a lot to him now.<br />

He was happy visiting Nigeria which<br />

he said refreshed memories of his stay<br />

here.<br />

From the airport to the Bon Hotel<br />

in Asokro where he lodged to the<br />

ministry and few other places he<br />

visited people asked for selfies and<br />

pictures. They told him nice things<br />

and how Nigerians still appreciate<br />

him. He felt good.<br />

Below is his letter of acceptance<br />

to the minister of Power, Works and<br />

Housing, Raji Babatunde Fashola<br />

who ensured the promise made to his<br />

team in 1994 was redeemed on May<br />

27, 2019.<br />

The Honourable Minister,<br />

Federal Ministry of Power,<br />

Works and Housing,<br />

Headquarters,<br />

Mabushi, Abuja<br />

Sir,<br />

LETTER OF ACCEPTANCE<br />

With great gratitude I accept the<br />

allocation of a house at the Federal<br />

Capital Territory by the Federal<br />

Government.<br />

The Federal Government then led<br />

by General Sani Abacha announced<br />

a reward of a house to each member<br />

of the Super Eagles team that won<br />

the Africa Cup of Nations in Tunisia<br />

in 1994.<br />

The fulfillment of the reward<br />

coming 25 years after our feat in<br />

Tunisia gladdens me because I<br />

thought that it would never be<br />

realised again.<br />

I, therefore, most sincerely thank<br />

the government of President<br />

Mohammadu Buhari for making it<br />

happen. Let me, in a special way,<br />

thank the Honourable Minister of<br />

Power, Works and Housing, Mr<br />

Babatunde Raji Fashola for<br />

making this possible.<br />

Honourable Minister, thank<br />

you very much. I really<br />

appreciate this tremendous<br />

gesture and huge honour. It<br />

makes me feel special. I<br />

have always felt Nigerian.<br />

They call me Dutchgerian.<br />

I am. And giving me a<br />

home here in Nigeria<br />

makes me more Nigerian<br />

than I was. Once again,<br />

thank you.<br />

May I also thank all<br />

Nigerians for their<br />

tremendous support<br />

while I worked here.<br />

Together, we did it.<br />

I’m always proud of<br />

the work we did<br />

here. It feels good<br />

to know that we<br />

have not been<br />

forgotten. I love<br />

you, Nigerians.<br />

Tunisia ’94 was<br />

emotional for me<br />

because it<br />

happened after we<br />

qualified for the<br />

World Cup and I<br />

wanted to be in<br />

USA ’94 as<br />

African<br />

champions. We<br />

made it. We were a<br />

great family. That’s<br />

what my team was.<br />

It therefore feels<br />

very sad that some<br />

members of that<br />

great family have<br />

passed on. I pray for<br />

the souls of Stephen<br />

Keshi, Rashidi Yekini,<br />

Willy Agbonibavre,<br />

Thompson Oliha and<br />

Uche Okafor. May their<br />

souls continue to rest in<br />

peace.<br />

I understand that some of the<br />

players in our team have not<br />

received the award. I strongly<br />

appeal that those yet to be given<br />

their own awards be rewarded too.<br />

The families of those who passed will<br />

appreciate the reward highly.<br />

Thank you President Buhari,<br />

thank you Honourable Minister,<br />

thank you Nigerians. It feels good to<br />

be home, again.<br />

Regards<br />

Clemens Westerhof

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