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PoliticsCaption This Photo Of Sai Baba Addressing Oyinbos by breakingbad(op): 10:29pm On Sep 15, 2015
Buhari: Ze feeful of Nijeriya are kworrupt fa!
Oyinbos: If we look serious maybe he'll think we understand Swahili


Cc: ishilove, lalasticlala

SportsRe: Motivating Story Of Odion Ighalo Who Dodged Bullets On His Way Up by breakingbad(op): 7:56pm On Sep 12, 2015
abnsugbe:
useless country were only the rich survive...at times i hate being a Nigerian
Did u say "only the rich"? This can't be true. If u had even said "mostly the rich" it'd had been debatable
SportsRe: Motivating Story Of Odion Ighalo Who Dodged Bullets On His Way Up by breakingbad(op): 7:44pm On Sep 12, 2015
Mcowubaba:
u say 'common cold' emmmh..i dey laff u.....u neva jam....
A real naija guy can cope anywhere in d world. No be cold? Highest 2 weeks u go adapt with heavy sweaters, headwarmers and hot coffee etc
SportsRe: Motivating Story Of Odion Ighalo Who Dodged Bullets On His Way Up by breakingbad(op): 6:21pm On Sep 12, 2015
Imagine those lazy ones that left because of common cold. Smh. Even if na for freezer I go hustle I for no give up
SportsMotivating Story Of Odion Ighalo Who Dodged Bullets On His Way Up by breakingbad(op): 5:09pm On Sep 12, 2015
This is a story of Odion Ighalo and is meant to motivate those of us from humble background.

Watford's Odion Ighalo dodged bullets and ate snow on his way to living Premier League dream

Nigeria international survived gang-wars in Lagos slums and shivered through a spell in Norway as a teenager before helping the Hornets win promotion


Ghetto-blaster Odion Ighalo used to train with bullets flying over his head as
police chased gangs across the pitch.

He used to kick tin cans in his bare feet around the mean streets of Ajegunle, a sprawling district of Lagos where his mother worked 17 hours a day selling bottled water and soft drinks to pay for Ighalo’s first pair of football boots.

And when he trod that well-worn path from tropical Nigeria to icy Norway, the first time he ever saw snow he ate it.

Ighalo, 26, is now enjoying the riches of English football, and his journey from inner-city hardship in Africa to Watford’s tilt at Premier League survival, is now the yardstick for kids who dream of turning from austerity to prosperity.

Today, Ighalo will be on the Hornets front line against high-flying Swansea having just signed a new five-year contract at Vicarage Road. Watford have yet to score at home under head coach Quique Sanchez Flores, but the Nigerian international striker has endured worse privation.

“I come from the ghetto where there was no 24-hour electricity, no good water, bad roads and the neighbourhood is tough,” he said. “We used to kick old cans, plastic bottles, sometimes even an orange, around the streets in bare feet.

“Whatever I go on to achieve in football, I will always give thanks to God for this opportunity to live my dream – but I will also never forget where I came from.

“Ajegunle is where my journey began and I’m proud of that. My first team, Olodi Warriors, used to play on a grass pitch known locally as the ‘Maracana’ but it was really a big, wide-open field.

“On one corner there were boys selling marijuana and they were always being chased by the police when they cut across the pitch. We would hit the floor when we heard the ‘pop, pop, pop’ of gunfire and then continue training.

“It’s part of life, but bullets don’t always know who are the footballers and who are the bad guys.”

Ighalo was scouted by Norway’s Lyn Oslo as a 17-year-old, and the youngest of seven children left Nigeria to seek his fortune in a country where temperatures were often 70 degrees colder.

“There were three players from Nigeria who went to Norway – but one of them had to go home because he could not cope with the cold,” he said. “I could easily have followed him, but when I thought of the hardship I left behind, I was not going to cut and run.

“I had never seen snow before in Nigeria. The first time it snowed in Oslo I was like a child. I was eating it, rubbing it on my head, throwing it in the air like confetti... it was a new toy.”

After 10 months, Ighalo was snared in the web of Watford’s owners, the Italian Pozzo dynasty, joining Udinese before being loaned out to their Spanish club, Granada, where he is revered.

Ighalo scored the winner in ­consecutive play-off finals as Granada leapt to La Liga.

His happy knack of scoring important goals and winning promotion endured after his move to Vicarage Road 14 months ago.

When Watford, trailing 2-1, were down to 10 men at Derby on Good Friday, Ighalo snaffled a precious equaliser.

Three days later, his rocket against Middlesbrough in another promotion shootout clinched an important 2-0 win and made the Hornets believe they were going up.

Ighalo was off the mark on the opening day of this season in a 2-2 draw at Goodison Park, leaving England’s John Stones on his backside with his signature ‘scoop’ turn.

“I’ve been lucky enough to score some important goals, but my work is not done,” he said.

“One day, when I’ve made good money in football, I would like to go back to Ajegunle and provide better pitches, help the kids at grassroots levels.

“My mum had to work so hard, selling bottled water and soft drinks, to pay for my first pair of adidas Copa Mundial boots, and everything I am today I owe to her and to God.”
Source: http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/football/news/watfords-odion-ighalo-dodged-bullets-6428342

SportsMotivating Story Of Odion Ighalo Dodge Bullets On His Way Up by breakingbad(op): 5:03pm On Sep 12, 2015
This is a story of Odion Ighalo and is meant to motivate those of us from humble background.

Ighalo was scouted by Norway’s Lyn Oslo as a 17-year-old, and the youngest of seven children left Nigeria to seek his fortune in a country where temperatures were often 70 degrees colder. And when he trod that well-worn path from tropical Nigeria to icy Norway, the first time he ever saw snow he ate it.

Ighalo, 26, is now enjoying the riches of English football, and his journey from inner-city hardship in Nigeria (Ajegunle) to Watford’s tilt at Premier League survival, is now the yardstick for kids who dream of turning from austerity to prosperity. Read his story:

“I come from the ghetto where there was no 24-hour electricity, no good water, bad roads and the neighbourhood is tough,” he said. “We used to kick old cans, plastic bottles, sometimes even an orange, around the streets in bare feet.

“Whatever I go on to achieve in football, I will always give thanks to God for this opportunity to live my dream – but I will also never forget where I came from.

“Ajegunle is where my journey began and I’m proud of that. My first team, Olodi Warriors, used to play on a grass pitch known locally as the ‘Maracana’ but it was really a big, wide-open field.

“On one corner there were boys selling marijuana and they were always being chased by the police when they cut across the pitch. We would hit the floor when we heard the ‘pop, pop, pop’ of gunfire and then continue training.

“It’s part of life, but bullets don’t always know who are the footballers and who are the bad guys.”

“There were three players from Nigeria who went to Norway – but one of them had to go home because he could not cope with the cold,” he said. “I could easily have followed him, but when I thought of the hardship I left behind, I was not going to cut and run.

“I had never seen snow before in Nigeria. The first time it snowed in Oslo I was like a child. I was eating it, rubbing it on my head, throwing it in the air like confetti... it was a new toy.”

After 10 months, Ighalo was snared in the web of Watford’s owners, the Italian Pozzo dynasty, joining Udinese before being loaned out to their Spanish club, Granada, where he is revered. Ighalo scored the winner in-consecutive play-off finals as Granada leapt to La Liga. His happy knack of scoring important goals and winning promotion endured after his move to Vicarage Road 14 months ago.

When Watford, trailing 2-1, were down to 10 men at Derby on Good Friday, Ighalo snaffled a precious equaliser.
Three days later, his rocket against Middlesbrough in another promotion shootout clinched an important 2-0 win and made the Hornets believe they were going up.

Ighalo was off the mark on the opening day of this seasonin a 2-2 draw at Goodison Park, leaving England’s John Stones on his backside with his signature ‘scoop’ turn.

“One day, when I’ve made good money in football, I would like to go back to Ajegunle and provide better pitches, help the kids at grassroots levels.

“My mum had to work so hard, selling bottled water and soft drinks, to pay for my first pair of adidas Copa Mundial boots, and everything I am today I owe to her and to God.”

He recently signed a new five-year contract at Vicarage Road. And scored the only goal today in their victory against Swansea City. May God Bless his hustle

Cc: lalasticlala, ishilove
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga)Re: Categories Of EPL Fans In Nigeria by breakingbad(op): 11:00pm On Aug 09, 2015
jeoprince250:
But for real if you see any
mancity fan ask them what year they started
watching football. So funny!
U wan find justicejay mouth abi?
EducationRe: The Shambolic State Of Secondary Education In Nigeria by breakingbad(op): 10:57pm On Aug 09, 2015
Let us suggest solutions to this problem. The government have a lot to do in restructuring public schools but private schools(business centres)still have a field day amassing fees whilst recklessly abandoning their primary duty. Government need to set strict measures to be adhered by both private and public schools
EducationRe: The Shambolic State Of Secondary Education In Nigeria by breakingbad(op): 5:47pm On Aug 08, 2015
tpiander:
Its still not on frontpage? huh
Its still not. I don't even know what qualifies for Fp no more. Issues like this needs more attention for our own sake
EducationRe: The Shambolic State Of Secondary Education In Nigeria by breakingbad(op): 5:44pm On Aug 08, 2015
Richiez:
Good write up, it will get to fp
I don't think so its almost growing white beards
EducationRe: The Shambolic State Of Secondary Education In Nigeria by breakingbad(op): 5:43pm On Aug 08, 2015
Richiez:
Good write up, it will get to fp
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga)Re: Categories Of EPL Fans In Nigeria by breakingbad(op): 1:52pm On Aug 08, 2015
obinnafred:
Oga mi u no be original lfc fan u hear
So because e be liverpool fan make e throway him money? Even balotelli dey bet against liverpool vs some big teams but no be for my mouth you hear say oba dey mess ooo
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga)Re: Categories Of EPL Fans In Nigeria by breakingbad(op): 1:49pm On Aug 08, 2015
Larynx:
Gunners till I seize breathe.... And I've never blame anybody in the squad except for some seasons ago when Wenger bleeped up.... Buh now... I'm a gunner till the End of time... This year premier League title belong to us.... Don't be surprise... We r winning champions league too
Pahleeeese! Two fa cup and two community shield. You've sucked lady luck dry. Now u wanna push it with champions league? Even wenger isn't drooling that far. Dream for the title first please
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga)Re: Categories Of EPL Fans In Nigeria by breakingbad(op): 1:32pm On Aug 08, 2015
Oceemo:
Yea on point u sabi. But I guess @op u not one of this bet agent.
I wish oo. Nairabet and Nairastake don chop my money finish, pursue 2 of my girlfriend b4 I "repent". Now na once in a blue moon I dey stake N50 to get N50.75k
EducationRe: The Shambolic State Of Secondary Education In Nigeria by breakingbad(op): 8:04am On Aug 08, 2015
Swaggzkid:
@op even u sef you don fall victim


No paragraph.
You're very correct I guess I'm still learning the art of posting. Thanks nonetheless
EducationRe: The Shambolic State Of Secondary Education In Nigeria by breakingbad(op): 8:01am On Aug 08, 2015
Please this post deserves as much attention as possible. Pls promote this to fp lalasticlala, ishilove
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga)Categories Of EPL Fans In Nigeria by breakingbad(op): 1:08am On Aug 08, 2015
Ladies and Gentlemen, the moment you've all been waiting for is here....its the start of the English Premier League 2015/2016 season. Grab some popcorn, a bottle of coke, an empty bucket (for tears), a chair and a seatbelt for its gonna be one long and turbulent ride as we all show our unwavering support for our various clubs be it Manchester United, Chelsea, Arsenal, Liverpool, (and maybe) Manchester City, and Tottenham (abi Leicester city fan dey nairaland?). These are the various category of fans we have in this country:


1. The Die-Hard fanatics: This set are the patriotic fans that tend to love their teams even more than the players, coaches and even the owners. You'll hear some chelsea fans say "Roman Abrahamovic carry Benitez come Chelsea to come relegate us abi". They are the most genuine fans. They may not know what year Nigeria gained independence but know their entire club history.


2. The Die-Another Day fans: This set of fans will vow never to support their teams again when they suffer a huge loss. But a month later when their team "seem to" have bounced back, they will return. Arsenal fans be like "I will never support Arsenal again till they sack Wenger" all na mouth.


3. The Passive fans. This set of fans may even have jerseys but support their teams only with mouth and on social media fora but have not watched a single match since 1996. Some liverpool fans used to belong to this group.


4. The Bad Belle fans: This set are born to hate. They may claim to be supporting a team in Cyprus or Ukraine so you can't even bad-belle them back. You'll hear some say I'm an Anti-Man U fan. Shuooo


5. The Glory Hunters: This set were Mancity fans in 2014, Chelsea fans in 2015 and Who-ever-will-win fan in 2016. They jump on the merry band wagon wherever they see it. But for real if you see any mancity fan ask them what year they started watching football.

6. The follow-follow fans: I started this post by saying "Ladies and Gentlemen" but we all know 80% of girls support the teams their boyfriends support. They were Chelsea fans when they were dating Chukwudi but are now Liverpool fans now that they're dating Frank. Few guys also belong to this group.


7. The football encyclopedia: This set knows the nitty-gritty and entire history of football. They can tell you the second player that was substituted in the friendly match that Arsenal played in 1927.


8. The Gamblers: This set of footballers are the ones that have high bp at the closing minutes of games. Taunt them at your own peril.


9. The Debators: This set argue football like its service to humanity. They can argue even the most mundane things such as "inside christiano ronaldo and neymar hair which one fine pass".


10. Some La liga fans: This is a very small set of fans that were once Premier league fans but got their hearts shattered and decided to run to support Barcelona where they know they'll be safe.


Which category do you fall under?
EducationThe Shambolic State Of Secondary Education In Nigeria by breakingbad(op): 11:42pm On Aug 07, 2015
Fellow Nigerians have you observed that Education is in a very sharp decline in our country? Visit a regular secondary school in your neighborhood and you will observe that our education is in shambles. I am neither a brainiac nor an Albert Einstein but I can proudly say in my time education was in a far better shape.

In our time many students wrote WAEC and JAMB without assistance and still had reasonable results but today "Miracle Centre" is the order of the day. Secondary School Students of today jumble tenses, spell woefully and show just little traces of intelligence. One would think that in this computerized world, with even toddlers having access to browsing phones, information at our fingertips and access to google, wikipedia and tonnes of educational materials, there would be an increase in the intellect but sadly, reverse is the case. Social media such as 2go, whatsapp etc have even worsened the basic spell-ability of our youth.

You don't need to go far, check out comments of fellow nairalanders and you'll get a glimpse of this anomaly. Is it that aridity is now our societal norm? God forbid. The question is who is to blame?

1. Society: The Nigerian Society emphasizes more on paper qualification (Machiavellian end-justifies-means) than ability necessitating parents to enrol their children in Miracle centres. Educational competition prize money can be as "high" as 100,000 while Big Brother Africa can earn you N10,000,000. Please where is the encouragement?

2. Parents: Parents have little to no interest in their children academic performance. Some even force the school to "jump classes" for their children to finish quickly

3. Schools: I believe our schools (esp private schools) carry a very large chunk of the blame as they directly/indirectly condoned student's indolence, indiscipline and lackadaisical attitude to studies. Have any of you heard of any students repeat of late? Repeating classes is now "old school"

4. Exam bodies: Exam bodies are co-conspirators in this crime. They not only turn a blind eye on malpractices, they reduce their standard. Checkout WAEC questions of today, very cheap. I faintly remember once when Jamb cut off mark for medical students was 270 but now....

5. Teachers: Let's face it even the teachers of today are not as intellectual as the teachers of old. Many teachers today are just teaching to pass time till they get better jobs. Some are quite intelligent but are not trained to impart knowledge.

6. Students: I believe most students do not know the enormity of their actions YET else they would sit up but I think society at large is to blame because we are products of the society we live in.

Please nairalanders what do you think should be done to curb this unfortunate condition of our educational system in Nigeria?
EducationRe: Shocking Facts You Didn't Know About Earth by breakingbad(m): 6:19pm On Aug 05, 2015
Wow this is really amazing esp 1,2,4,7
Nairaland GeneralRe: 10 Nairalanders Behaviour In Political Discourse by breakingbad(op):
xrayz:
dis got me cracked.so on point.








plz frm my response.wer do i belong?
7 naa

Cc: Lalasticala Ishilove
Nairaland General10 Nairalanders Behaviour In Political Discourse by breakingbad(op): 4:55pm On Aug 05, 2015
Being a reader of different topics on nairaland one section that always catch my attention is the Politics section especially due to members comments. The following are some observations I've made as an observing member

1. Sentimental Saints . People tend to be religiously partisan, supporting a particular party regardless of the sanity or lack of sanity of their actions. Criticize their party and be crucified.

2. Insult Distributors: the quickest way to get insulted on nairaland is to pledge ur support for a particular party or any of its member or mention a politician's name and they come rioting. The longest posts on Nairaland owes its thanks to this set

3. Picture Posters : These set of people always have a ready picture that suits whatever idea they are trying to express. I still wonder if they have such pics saved for years waiting for the right opportunity to attack

4. FTC Fighters: Took me several days to know the full meaning of this. It is obvious that there's a certain reward (which I'm still yet to find out) in commenting first necessitating people to post a quick comment/smiley to make it

5. Moderator attackers: This set of people are ready to be banned, unbanned and rebanned they just blast the mods and break whatever rule they can. Some even come back from a ban and their first comment would break 5 rules

6. Smileyers: These people seem to lack a keyboard or can't spell so just put up a smiley or 2 or 3..........

7. The OP-ers. This set of people can go waaaay out of point. You could be discussing about PMB's achievements and they'll talk about the Cold War. Some advertize products etc

8. Solidarity Soldiers: This set come to defend their "comrades" whenever the need arises. All for one, one for all must be their motto

9. The Observers: This set read almost every post on Nairaland but NEVER post a comment. They're like air, always there but you never see them. I belong to this group. Had to just register to post this

10. Add yours

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