Johnie's Posts
Nairaland Forum › Johnie's Profile › Johnie's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 (of 108 pages)
ifyalways:Glad to see this thread come alive again! Ikota school and Agungi pedestrian bridges have been finished , kudos to Ambode but do pedestrians use it? Only school kids most of the time!.I can speak comfortably about the Ikota Bridge because I frequent Ikota Village. I used that bridge just last Friday evening (for the first time) because of the terrible traffic. I was to attend an event that evening, on the side opposite Mega Chicken but if was to drive through the traffic, which began at the Ikota bridge, it would take me not less than an hour to get to the other side. I had to park my car at Mega Chicken and cross to the other side via the bridge. Curiously, I had a mind to take pictures from the top of the bridge but dropped it thinking "what's the use?" Thinking back now, I should have. it would have been useful to attach to this post. Each of the two times I traversed the bridge (going and coming), there were few people crossing along with me. These included two young men who carried some stuff on two wheelbarrows. I can imagine how difficult it would have been for them to cross without the bridge. I also noticed two fitness buffs using the steps for exercise. If you have passed around the area when Ikota Primary School children cross (morning and afternoon) in large numbers or you have witnessed accidents around there, you would appreciate the government for completing that bridge. I believe the Ikota and Agungi bridges were given priority over VGC because of the larger number of and more vulnerable people they serve. That Ikota bridge area became notorious for very horrendous accidents. I think the former HOR member for the area, who happens to be a prince of the area, must have also brought his influence to bear in prioritising the Ikota bridge over others. Unfortunately, he had to vacate his seat for Obanikoro's son following Obanikoro's defection to APC. @ ifyalways, naptu2, megastu, icon8 , x2x, remii I hope we can keep the thread alive. |
Swanzi: Group F: Cameroon,Ghana, Benin, Guinea-BissauBe careful what you wish for. |
Imagine how beautiful this thread would have been if it was devoid of insults and innuendos. |
johnie:Found it! I"'ll be seeing you" is the title. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LpH9iZ9TQuc |
I googled Tale of the unexpected just now and discovered that it was initially solely written and, on the programme introduced, by Roald Dahl! Apparently, the opening montage actually included Dahl's name but I did not pay attention to it then. The opening score also gave me goose bumps. |
naptu2:Tales of the unexpected! That's the one I was looking for as alternate to Hammer House of Horror. They always had very strange endings. In the particular episode I am remembered recently, a man had been cheating on his wife. He plotted and got his wife killed. About that time, his girlfriend had a car accident and required an eye transplant. When the transplant was done, he discovered to his hottie that it was his wife's eyes that the girlfriend was given. This meant his late wife would haunt him through those eyes till he died. Can you remember the action/detective ones? Thanks |
ibnlawal:Mubarak was an Air Chief Marshal. The highest rank in the Air Force is marshal of the Air Force (equivalent to Field Marshal) Tantawi who took over from Mubarak and preceeded Morsi was a Field Marshal. He organised elections after the Arab Spring and handed over to Morsi. Same with El Sisi |
What a month! Bouteflika Bashir Now Assange? And we have not reached mid month. |
Same way all the people on the first row were swept away by the Arab Spring. The man on the extreme right was chased away not too long after. https://www.nairaland.com/786694/worlds-infamous-dictators-how-met/2#47211441
|
Is he next?
|
Both gone within days of each other.
|
[quote author=naptu2 post=77411453][/quote]Iroha was ahead of his time. He was the first defender I knew to overlap so effectively. That goal against Ivory Coast endeared him to me. When Roberto Carlos came onto the stage, I kept remembering Iroha. He being a defender, natural left footer and overlapper. interestingly, he later played as a midfielder at San Jose Clash, scoring and providing assists: https://www.sjearthquakes.com/post/2016/03/31/1996-clash-where-are-they-now-midfielders |
mapet:My earlier comment on this match: https://www.nairaland.com/4032139/epic-encounters-between-nigeria-cameroon/1#60124826 johnie: |
wayodude:I remember this day clearly. I had a very close female friend who loved football dearly. She passed on around this time. One thought that nagged me throughout that period was "So, she won't see Nigeria play at her first World Cup despite her love for the game." Her death was quite painful. Interestingly, Africa's Pillar Sport was also not privileged to watch Nigeria play at her first World Cup live. Imagine if MKO was a free man when Nigeria appeared at USA'94! |
naptu2:Spam bot banned me from posting since yesterday so I couldn't contribute to this. Three (3) remarkable things for me about this match: 1. Oliseh the master passer It was the first time I was seeing Sunday Oliseh play. one thing that struck me within a few touches of the ball he had was his tailored passes particularly to Yekini. I knew right away that he would be a gem in the team. Those passes later became characteristic of him for years to follow. His partnership with Yekini was wonderful until some years later when rumours started flying around that Yekini was deliberately being starved of passes because he was taking too much of the glory for the success of the team. I choose yo believe this was no more than rumours. 2. Okocha, the free kick specialist. This match also gave me the conviction that we had discovered a free kick specialist in JJ. Of course, he became known for that annoying habit of smiling after ballooning the ball to "ojuelegba." 3. Yekini's tight angle goal This goal was phenomenal. The only other times I recall seeing such were the final hat trick goal Kanu scored against Chelsea in the 1998-99 season when he was with Arsenal, Marco Van Basten's Euro '88 stunner, Roberto Carlos' goals for Madrid against Sporting in '98 and against France in '97, one by Maicon at the 2010 World Cup and another scored by another Brazilian (I think it was Serginho at Espana '82).
|
I am searching for a number of episodes of some programmes that used to run on TV stations in the 80s/90s. Unfortunately, I am having some difficulties remembering the names of these programmes. The only one I can readily remember is Hammer House of Horror which I think ran on Fridays These programmes were usually the last programmes on NTA2 Channel 5 before the station shutdown for the day. Some were detective series. A particular episode of one of the detective programmes had a title like 'Marioki by midnight.' This one ran on Thirsdays, if my memory serves me right. Help! Tags Naptu2, oldpretender, caveatemptor, waleyp, kannymoore, konquest |
DrTee1:You are welcome. |
Super Eagles ’94 Squad Manager Clemens Westerhof Players No Player Date Of Birth Caps GoalKeepers 1 Peter Rufai 24 August 1963 55 16 Alloysius Agu 12 July 1967 – 22 Wilfred Agbonavbare 5 October 1966 – Defenders 2 Augustine Eguavoen 19 August 1965 35 19 Michael Emenalo 14 July 1965 – 3 Bennedict Iroha 29 November 1969 – 4 Stephen Keshi (Captain) 23 January 1962 59 6 Chidi N’Wanu 27 September 1967 – 20 Uche Okafor 8 August 1967 – 5 Uche Okechukwu 27 September 1967 26 Midfielders 7 Finidi George 15 April 1971 23 8 Thompson Oliha 04 October 1968 – 10 Jay Jay Okocha 14 August 1973 10 13 Emeka Ezeugo 16 December 1965 – 15 Sunday Oliseh 14 September 1974 – 18 Efan Ekoku 8 June 1967 – 21 Mutiu Adepoju 22 December 1970 18 Forwards 12 Samson Siasia 14 August 1967 32 9 Rashidi Yekini 23 October 1963 46 14 Daniel Amokachi 30 December 1972 26 17 Victor Ikpeba 12 June 1973 – |
1994 World Cup team list 1 Peter RUFAI Goalkeeper 24 August 1963 2 Augustine EGUAVOEN Defender 19 August 1965 3 Ben IROHA Defender 29 November 1969 4 Stephen KESHI Defender 23 January 1962 5 Uche OKECHUKWU Defender 27 September 1967 6 Chidi NWANU Defender 1 January 1967 7 Finidi GEORGE Forward 15 April 1971 8 Thompson OLIHA Midfielder 4 October 1968 9 Rasheed YEKINI Forward 23 October 1963 10 Jay Jay OKOCHA Midfielder 14 August 1973 11 Emmanuel AMUNEKE Midfielder 25 December 1970 12 Samson SIASIA Forward 14 August 1967 13 Emeka EZEUGO Defender 16 December 1965 14 Daniel AMOKACHI Forward 30 December 1972 15 Sunday OLISEH Midfielder 14 September 1974 16 Alloy AGU Goalkeeper 12 July 1967 17 Victor IKPEBA Forward 12 June 1973 18 Efan EKOKU Forward 8 June 1967 19 Michael EMENALO Defender 14 July 1965 20 Uche OKAFOR Defender 8 August 1967 21 Mutiu ADEPOJU Midfielder 22 December 1970 22 Wilfred AGBONAVBARE Goalkeeper 5 October 1966 WESTERHOF Clemens (NED) Coach |
Wonderful speech by Oliseh. They couldn't have picked a better person to give it. That team remains the best Nigeria has ever produced. I agree that a street should be named after the squad in every street, no matter if the street is fine or not. Kudos to NFF for this honour. Sad that Keshi, Uche Okafor, Rashidi Yekini, Thompson Oliha, and Wilfred Agbonavbare are no longer with us. the team achieved the highest FIFA ranking position ever achieved by an African football team. (fifth) incidentally in April 1994 - exactly 25 years ago. Clemens Westerhof and the Babangida regime deserve credible mentions for their role in developing the team. Westerhof was given enough time to work on the team despite the early challenges the team faced. Westerhof took charge of the team immediately after losing the Italia '90 World Cup ticket to Cameroon, taking the team to the finals of the Algiers '90 Nations Cup and four years later winning the Tunisia '94 Natiins Cup and getting the team into the second round of USA'94 World Cup. The support for Westerhof and the team by the government, in my opinion, was unprecedented. I don't recall Babangida being at the stadium to watch any match but Admiral Augustus Aikhomu was always there. Air Commodore Emeka Omerua (the comedienne Chigurl's father) was sports minister then. I've always wondered why airforce officers were put in charge of the sports ministry in those days - Omeruah, Bayo Alfa, Anthony Ikhazobor. Thinking back now, I just realised that all of this was in the midst of the June 12 saga. Hmm... |
naptu2:Thanks for the mention. |
DrTee1:That's Pa. Adekunle Ajasin. |
HospitalityDiva:Unless it is a high speed train linking major cities |
SageMK:Has rule 17 has been repealed? What does it say? It no longer appears in the "constitution." seun
|
JAWBONE:Words on marble! |
JAWBONE:Words on marble! |
naptu2:Aha! That's the one. The picture of the tram is one I cannot forget. Please restore the pictures. I skimmed through the thread just now. I couldn't help laughing as I read about: 1. Jarus story about his family patriarch whose bicycle was stolen in 1945 2. The post about the person who had her dress soiled with pepper on a molue 3. The father of the late FRA Williams who rode the trains daily just for the fun of it. Great thread! |
johnie:I just checked the date of this post and realised that my dad died just six weeks after the post was made. I still miss you dad. |
naptu2:Someone liked my post from 2012 on this thread today. That prompted me to read the whole thread again One of the first people I took a liking to on Nairaland was someone who wrote and maintained a very detailed thread on transportation in Lagos (or Nigeria). At the time, I paid no attention to the name of the person. Naptu2, are you you the one? If yes, please post the link to that thread here. You did a wonderful job then just as you are doing now. Only better! |
jblaqq and Jaymichael, Tijuana Taxi is another of Herb Alpert's pieces used on some radio programmes in those days: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cK5pl6W2CFE I am still trying to remember the programme. Naptu2, do you? These songs sparked my interest in Jazz (which I knew then as instrumentals). |
naptu2:Rowan Atkinson (Mr. Bean) did a parody for the London 2012 Olympics. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CwzjlmBLfrQ |

