“WHEN KUNLE SOLAJA REVIEWED
THE GOLDEN BOOK OF SHOOTING
STARS”
(An excerpt of the speech made by Kunle Solaja,Director of special Publications,Sun Newspaperi on the 16th of December,2015 at the unveiling of the book on the book which is a compedium of Shooting Stars history which is the first of it kind in Nigeria)
It is a great pleasure for me to be here today.
Being at this premier modern sporting arena brings nostalgic feelings to me. As
some of you may know, I grew up in Ibadan and the then Liberty Stadium was
always a place I visited either to watch matches or to be among my playmates on
the practice pitch of this arena. I can recall some great matches that I have
watched at this stadium.
But more significantly, it was at this arena
that I first met Ayodele Ademokoya, the author of the book that has magnetised
everyone here today. Three days ago marked exactly five years when a mutual
friend, Ganiyu Salman brought the two of us together to discuss the book being
launched today as well as my own book project. I had been invited by the Oyo
State wing of the Sports Writers’ Association of Nigeria to deliver a paper
titled “Sports as catalyst for peaceful society”.
Since that December 13, 2009 interaction,
Ademokoya and I established a bond. I am therefore happy today that the object
of our meeting has matured into reality today. The book on Shooting Stars has
left the drawing board. It is no longer in the pipeline. We can now all hold
the book that has added to the gradually increasing literature on Nigerian
sports, especially football.
Ademokoya has therefore contributed his own
quota to sports literature in Nigeria. As most of you may rightly observe,
there is a dearth in sports literature in Nigeria despite the great passion
that the citizens have for sports, particularly football. The fans are therefore
being starved of vital information on their passion. It is on that note that I
once again congratulate Ademokoya for the painstaking job that has extended the
frontier of knowledge on the oldest existing football club and history-making
Shooting Stars.
What an occasion to also launch the book. It
would have been a great mistake if the author had brought out the book this
time last year. I therefore congratulate the players, the technical crew as
well as the generous government of Oyo State who all worked assiduously to
ensure that the Shooting Stars are back in the Premier League that they should
always rightly belong.
Before I am accused of getting off focus, I
return to the object of my being here: the review of “The Golden
Book of Shooting Stars”. For the records, this is not the first book on
the club. There have been two others that I know. Olu Aina of the BCOS wrote “IICC
Shooting Stars: Two decades of Soccer” in which he chronicled the saga of
the club. Femi Adesina, my boss at The Sun Publishing Limited wrote another
book on the club: “The Shooting Stars: The Golden Era of a Soccer Team”.
I can also recall that Chief Lekan Salami, perhaps, the most passionate
Nigerian football administrator and fan that I ever know about, had set the
ball rolling with his book: “Over Three Decades of Ibadan Soccer History”.
All those publications served as the Biblical
John the Baptist to Ademokoya’s book. The author raised the bar with “The
Golden Book of Shooting Stars”. In a classical dramatic style, the author
opened with a recall of the early days of football in Ibadan, the base of the
subject matter, Shooting Stars. He later took his readers to the interview he
had with one of the legends of Nigerian football, Dejo Fayemi. Ademokoya
revealed that it was the interview he had with Fayemi that actually gave rise
to the 255-page book that is being launched today.
The book was not just on Shooting Stars which
had transformed severally from WNDC Shooting Stars to IICC Shooting Stars and
now simply 3SC which is an acronym for Shooting Stars Sports Club. The story of
the club will not be complete without words on the famous Liberty Stadium which
is now renamed after its visionary and executor, the Honourable Chief Obafemi
Awolowo.
The author took us back in time on the building
of the arena and the exploits of Shooting Stars on the alluring turf of the
arena which was the pride of Africa. Ademokoya told the story of how Shooting
Stars at their inaugural match in February 1963 beat the Local Government
Police side, 13-0 at the Liberty Stadium. The author wrote about the
recruitment drive of Chief Lekan Salami to build the team at its infancy.
Ademokoya in Chapter six wrote on the glorious
years of the club, especially the winning of the African Cup Winners’ Cup in
1976 especially the thrilling semi final duel with Zamalek of Egypt and the
final duel with the Roger Milla-inspired Tonnere Kalala of Cameroun.
The book is spiced with interviews with great
sports personalities like Dejo Fayemi (earlier mentioned), General David
Jemibewon (rtd), Segun Odegbami, Taiwo Ogunjobi, Idowu Otubusin, Zion
Ogunfehimi and Alan Hawkes, the English coach of the club in 1976. The latter
gave a player by player profile of the victorious 1976 squad.
Of course, the story of the Shooting Stars cannot be complete without
the famous “balu balu n’tafin”. This is the sad tale of the failure to win the
then Africa Cup of Champions Cup in 1984. The author writes: “The indefatigable
chairman of IICC Shooting Stars Supporters’ Club, the later Alhaji Ganiyu
Elekuru a.k.a Baba Eleran, and his colleagues composed and hit the air
waves with the song: ‘Balu balu n t’afin o, Balu balu nt’afin o, afin i
reran osan o ! Balu balu ntafin’. This means that blurred vision is a major
trait of albinism, an albino does not see in the afternoon. That raised the
hopes of millions of Nigerians that there was nothing to worry about the game
against the Egyptians who Baba Eleran compared to albinos who do not see
clearly under scorching sun. The match was slated for 1:00pm.
In conclusion, the book is a collector’s item. I strongly recommend it
for football fans, administrators, coaches among others. It is hoped that this
publication will also ginger the writing of books on other clubs in Nigeria.
Ladies
and gentlemen, I thank you all for your attention
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