Turnovers and touchdowns as American
football takes off in Nigeria
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[May 11, 2016]
By Sharon Ogunleye
LAGOS (Reuters) - At the Campos Mini
stadium in Lagos, cheerleaders dance as spectators root for their local
team. However, the players at this game are not the usual defenders
guarding posts or strikers scoring goals but linebackers and
quarterbacks huddled round the line of scrimmage and aiming for
touchdowns.
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In soccer-mad Nigeria, American Football, a sport usually played
thousands of miles away in the United States but growing in
popularity around the world, is slowly winning over new fans.
The West African country this year hosted what organizers said were
its first two games as its two amateur American Football teams, the
Lagos Marines and Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) Titans, battled it
out on the pitch.
Before the first game in March at the Titans' home ground in
northern Kaduna state, few Nigerians had heard of either team. A few
weeks later in Lagos, dozens of fans waved banners and cheered in
support.
"It's not exactly the NFL (National Football League), or college
football," sports journalist Colin Udoh said. "But for a first
effort this is not bad at all. I think it's long overdue."
With no official game structure in place, the two matches were
one-offs, but the teams are hopeful Nigeria could one day have a
league for the sport just like soccer.
ABU has been training its players for several years, holding inhouse
matches. In Lagos, German coach Dominick Muller founded the Marines
in late 2013, recruiting players more used to soccer, basketball and
volleyball.
"Accepting the sport in Nigeria is very difficult but so far...
everything is looking up," said quarterback Adesina Pelumi, who
cites New England Patriots' Julian Edelman as his favorite player.
"My personal aim is to get (into) the NFL."
The Marines train four times a week. With no major sponsor, it was
Muller who paid for about 65 kits for his players.
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Raising awareness of the sport in a country where the NFL is rarely
followed is a challenge, but Pelumi believes developing the sport
could play a role tackling Nigeria's mass youth unemployment, which
experts worry could create social problems and raise the risk that
young people turn to radical groups.
"The basic thing American football is doing for (us) Nigerians as
youths is that it controls aggression," he said.
"We have lots of people that are really angry and if they can
channel that anger to playing a sport I don't think we will have any
issue with security in Nigeria."
For now, no immediate games between the teams are planned but the
players expect to face each other again.
"We're coming back," Titans player Paul Bakwak said. "This is the
beginning of American Football in Nigeria."
(Writing by Marie-Louise Gumuchian, editing by Ed Osmond)
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