Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Countdown to AUNSGA Elections 2011

The most politically oriented, drama-filled, nerve racking, traitor revealing (ok not just traitor-ship … there’s some real chess skills shown once in a while), genius producing moment of the AUN social calendar is here.
The AUN SGA elections where sons of politicians prove that they have what it takes to be like their parents.
The AUN SGA elections, when you start seeing posters defacing the walls and windows of my beloved (if I hear) university.
The AUN SGA elections, when people who have barely said a word to you all your lives WILL come up to you acting like you have been friends for all ages, asking you for your votes.
The AUN SGA elections, when your boyfriends/girlfriends would ask you to pick between the relationship and TY/Soji… Mansur/Peter… Babalola/Effiong Alpine/Tola/Santali/Ahmed/Babatunde/Maryam Awaisu/Fuad … Same story, different names.
The AUN SGA elections, when the question always comes up; “Are you REALLY going to do all these things?” (Yea baby, I will be faithful to you even when you go on exchange...In fact transfer, I’ll be here)
The AUN SGA elections, when you begin to wonder whether the voters even understand what their candidates are saying before the start cheering and whooping out loud.
The AUN SGA elections; when … … … is it just a popularity contest? How will these new guys achieve what the old ones couldn’t? Is this how 9ja’s is going to be when we are in power? (Yes to the last question if God doesn’t format our brains in 2012).
You should get the point by now. The decisions we are going to make are going to shape how your next academic year is going to be on every aspect except academically (actually even academically if we’re going to be boycotting any more classes). These people are going to try their best to fight for what YOU NEED (need not want). I would want to vote in people who would know how to fight right and achieve results (it’s not all shouting … but getting results). I try my best to steer clear of religious and political debating.
By the way, I’m running for the office of PRO. Hopefully, you’ll recognize I’m not running because I want to put it on my resume or I want to wear a shirt that says PRO on it. I’m actually running because I feel that the SGA can make AUN a better place for students and I can contribute to that.
Thank you for your time..

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Who should and who will win the 2010 FIFA Ballon d'Or

Who should win the 2010 FIFA Ballon d'Or for the best player of the year in world soccer? It's a question that I've heard from several students of AUN of late, and now seems like an ideal time to address the topic. For a number of reasons this year's race is the closest we've seen in years, and the questions of who will win and who should win are grist for some lively debate. Before we get into the candidates though, a quick background on the award itself. In July, FIFA announced that it had teamed up with the magazine France Football to merge the two most prestigious awards in men's world soccer: the FIFA World Player of the Year (in existence since 1991) with the Paris-based magazine's Ballon d'Or (in existence since 1956). In theory it's a good idea: The fewer Player of the Year awards the better, as far as I'm concerned, no matter what the sport may be. Having two awards had become redundant, anyway: In the past three years the same player has swept both: (Kaká in 2007, Cristiano Ronaldo in '08 and Lionel Messi in '09). The new prize also combines the two awards' voting blocs, including the national-team coach and captain from each of the 208 FIFA nations and one media member from each FIFA nation.
The two most important competitions of the year, of course, were the World Cup and the UEFA Champions League, though we should certainly take into account performances in domestic leagues as well as non-European leagues and club tournaments like the Copa Libertadores. (Let's be honest, though: The players who succeed at the highest levels of European club soccer have a huge leg up on players based in clubs on other continents.)
To this end, I embarked on a survey to find out the views of AUN students regarding their top five contenders for the FIFA Ballon d’Or. I really got some interesting views from them.

Xavi – Barcelona & Spain
Coming in at number 5, the diminutive midfielder, the master passer in the Spanish and Barcelona teams, crowned his super displays in South Africa by winning the FIFA World Cup, aided by his passing excellence, having completed more passes than any other player in the competition. He was the heart beat in the Barcelona side that edged rivals Real Madrid to the league title last season.
The argument for: Spain won the most important tournament of 2010, the World Cup, and as the reigning world and European champion has to be viewed as one of the great teams of this generation. You have to reward that, and while Spain is built around passing and teamwork, the man who makes it go more than anyone is Xavi. Just because Xavi doesn't score many goals (only four in calendar year '10) does not mean that he doesn't have a giant influence on games from his central midfield position. One only needs to see how important Xavi is by noting how much better Messi plays for Barcelona than he does for Argentina. The best player on the World Cup champion has won the FIFA World Player of the Year every time it has been awarded, and this year should be no different.
The argument against: There's a reason why Xavi didn't win the Golden Ball as the best player of the World Cup: Forlán, in the eyes of the voters, had a better tournament. Xavi's Barcelona lost to Inter Milan in the Champions League, and Sneijder won more trophies than Xavi did this year. Besides, Xavi wasn't even the best player on his club team this year. Messi was.



Lionel Messi - Barcelona & Argentina
Coming at number 4, the super talent of the name Lionel Messi would be nailed down in any manager’s team-sheet in any team in world football. The diminutive forward, the current holder of the Ballon d’Or, excelled in yet another excellent campaign for his club Barcelona, often exhibiting breathtaking moments of genius. Showed flashes of his mercurial brilliance at the FIFA World Cup for Argentina but failed to score a single goal during the tournament in an otherwise disappointing campaign by his high standards.
The argument for: Is there any doubt that the year 2010 cemented Messi's reputation as the best player in the world? The reigning World Player of the Year has had 11 multi-goal games (and counting) for Spanish league champion Barcelona in the '10 calendar year, including four hat tricks and a majestic four-goal tour de force against Arsenal in the Champions League quarterfinals. Ask yourself: Which player produced the most mesmerizing, did-you-see-that moments in world soccer in 2010? It has to be Messi. And while it's true that Messi didn't win the World Cup or the Champions League, he did play well in both. There's also a precedent for a once-in-a-generation player winning the sport's top individual prize over an eligible player who won a World Cup that same year: 1974, when Johan Cruyff won the Ballon d'Or over Franz Beckenbauer, even though Beckenbauer had won the World Cup and European Cup that year.
The argument against: It's simple: Messi didn't win when it counted most in the Champions League and in the World Cup -- when, it should be pointed out, he didn't score a goal. How can you give the prize for the best player of 2010 to a guy who got bounced from the World Cup in a 4-0 quarterfinal defeat to Germany?



Diego Forlán - Atlético Madrid & Uruguay
Our number 3 won the Golden Ball at the FIFA World Cup in South Africa underlining his true potential as a striker, having scored vital goals in Uruguay’s charge to the semi final where they came short against Holland, although still managing to obtain fourth place for his country. Although he had torrid times at Manchester United, he flourished in Spain where he scored goals aplenty for Villarreal and later Atlético Madrid, where his double for Atlético in the final against Fulham secured the Europa League Cup in the season just gone by.
The argument for: Forlán has had a remarkable year on the big stage. He won the Golden Ball as the best player in the 2010 World Cup, where he tied for the tournament high with five goals and led Uruguay on a surprise run to the semifinals. At times he appeared to put the Uruguayan team on his back. He also led Atlético Madrid to the Europa League championship, its first European trophy in 48 years, by scoring both goals in the final victory over Fulham.
The argument against: Atlético Madrid crashed out of the Champions League in the group stage (behind Porto and Chelsea) and struggled in La Liga last season, falling to ninth place after finishing fourth in the previous campaign. Forlán scored 12 Spanish league goals in the '10 calendar year, but his total of 18 placed him only fifth in the Pichichi race (which he had won with 32 goals the season before).
Andres Iniesta - Barcelona & Spain
At number 2, Xavi’s midfield partner in crime Iniesta scored the winning goal which won Spain the FIFA World Cup. Tricky, neat and skillful, the Barcelona youth product is touted as one of the best playmakers in world football. He was also another crucial piece of the Barcelona machine which won La Liga glory last season.
The argument for: Iniesta scored the game-winning goal in the World Cup final, and he was an integral part of Barcelona's run to the Spanish league title, teaming with Xavi and Messi, among others, to produce some of the world's most entertaining soccer. It's a measure of Iniesta's importance to the Spanish national team that he was present for its triumphs at the World Cup and Euro 2008 but was out injured in the one recent tournament that it failed to win (the '09 Confederations Cup).
The argument against: Iniesta was out injured for more than a month during the key club stretch of 2010, when Barcelona was knocked out in the Champions League semis by Inter Milan. And while Spain's World Cup victory was a testament to team play, I would argue that if we're splitting hairs Xavi was slightly more important than Iniesta in 2010 when it came to the tiki-taka style that made Spain (and, for that matter, Barcelona) so successful.
Wesley Sneijder - Inter Milan & Holland
At number 1, under the guidance of Jose Mourinho, Wesley Sneijder became the focal point of Inter Milan’s historical treble winning season, playing an instrumental playmaking role for the Italian side. He had an equally outstanding tournament in South Africa, becoming just as pivotal for his country Holland by netting five crucial goals enabling the Dutch to reach the final.
The argument for: Simply put: He won more than any other candidate. Discarded foolishly by Real Madrid, the 26-year-old midfielder was the key attacking figure in Inter Milan's historic treble (Champions League, Italian league, Italian cup), and in Holland's run to the 2010 World Cup final. Sneijder may not have scored much for Inter (five goals so far in calendar year '10), but he did for the Dutch in South Africa, netting four times in seven games, including twice in their 2-1 upset of Brazil in the quarterfinals. He was also capable of unspooling the killer pass: Witness his remarkable distribution in Inter's second-leg Champions League Round of 16 triumph over Chelsea.
The argument against: If Holland had won the World Cup, Sneijder would probably be a shoo-in for this award. But not only did Sneijder's Dutch team not win the World Cup, but it also elected to play a cynical, thuggish style in the final against Spain that shouldn't be rewarded here. (Sneijder, it should be noted, wasn't guilty of the dirty play himself.) And while we're on the topic of rewarding styles of play, nobody would compare this year's possession-averse Inter Milan outfit to Brazil's 1970 World Cup team. If we're going to give the sport's top individual prize in a World Cup year to a player who didn't win the tournament, he had better be a transcendent player (a la Cruyff in '74), and Sneijder is not that player.
WHO WILL WIN THE 2010 FIFA BALLON D'OR
Who should win the award and who will win it are two very different things. Remember, this is an election, one that will involve 624 votes. I happen to think that, as was the case in the World Cup Golden Ball election, the Spanish stars who shared the ball so well in South Africa will share (read: split) the vote to their detriment.
That leaves Forlán, Messi and Sneijder. Getting into the heads of the voters (which include three votes each from Dominica and Azerbaijan, the same number held by Spain and Brazil); I think the majority of the votes will go to the answers of two questions: 1) who’s the best player in the world? (Messi), and 2) who won the most in 2010? (Sneijder). One of those two will win. Personally I think Sneijder’s year before and during the world cup was exceptional and since this is a world cup year (how else did Asamoah Gyan get into the nominations?), he could just be the winner unlike Messi who’s Argentine team faltered when it mattered.

WHO SHOULD WIN THE 2010 FIFA BALLON D'OR
Winning matters. And in a World Cup year, I feel that winning that quadrennial trophy should matter the most. Only in a truly exceptional World Cup year should someone from outside the World Cup-winning team take home the sport's most prestigious individual prize, and I don't think we have met those exceptions in 2010. Xavi was the best player on the World Cup champion. His style defined Spain's style. It did as well with Barcelona, which won the Spanish league and was no slouch in the Champions League, reaching the semifinals.
Your 2010 FIFA Ballon d'Or winner should be Xavi. I'm not a voter, but here is how I would cast my vote:
1. Xavi
2. Lionel Messi (a truly exceptional year barely outweighs Sneijder's trophy advantage)
3. Wesley Sneijder (one game in July kept him from leading my ballot)
4. Diego Forlán (raised his game to a new global level in 2010)
5. Andrés Iniesta (scoring the goal in the World Cup final kept him in the final five)
I would also suggest that in addition to inviting the five or six finalists for the Ballon d'Or to the award ceremony in Zurich on Jan. 10, FIFA should also name 2010 Player of the Year awards for each confederation -- men and women -- and invite them to the event as well. Let's make it as grand an occasion as possible and acknowledge that great soccer is being played around the world, not just in Europe.
Adafe-Jaja can be reached on twitter @therealadonye

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

THE WAP SCAM

WAP: Wale Adenuga Productions Limited is set to collect 2000 naira each from job desperate Nigerians in an on going promo on TV and he is set to pay the "lucky one" fifty thousand naira to play a part in the independence anniversary edition of super story.
Film like any other art medium is seen as an intellectual and noble venture and I believe in my opinion that it should be excluded from the cheap and get rich quick ventures that we currently see in the back of "small" Nigerian newspapers like Complete Sport and others.
Knowing how Nigerians react to an opportunity to act in films and going by the economic malaise we have somehow found ourselves in this country, we expect to see thousands of people rushing to the bank to "try their luck"

The questions I will like to ask are:

HOW is Wale Adenuga going to audition thousands of Nigerians for a role?

IF he is not going to audition, how will he be sure that the person that is going to emerge winner is going to play a given role very well.

WHO is going to conduct the ballot to make sure that the position to act does not fall into the hand of "one of his students" in the PEFTI institute.

In recent times we have seen many funny schemes on TV claiming to help people only to defraud them. is this what WAP has degenerated into? It is true that times are hard, but WAP still get their fair share of advert patronage from reputable companies, what is the reason for this insatiable lust for money?
Before long we are going to see other production houses stripping Nigerians of the money they don't have, Is corruption a physiological part of us or are we inherently evil in our ways?

Two thousand people alone will yield about Four million naira (₦4, 000, 000), how much is Fifty thousand naira (₦50, 000) compared to what he is going to collect? I believe it is time EFCC started looking into issues like this, we need everything we can do to prevent the further pillaging of the resources of Nigerian youths

WE MUST ALL COME TOGETHER TO TELL WALE ADENUGA PRODUCTION THAT HE HAS INSTITUTED A BROAD DAY LIGHT SCAM.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

So I'm Back...Swagger Lyk Us

Swagger like us,Lyrical is boss
If u chilling with me,yeah u always on point
Dissing me is like making a bad free throw,no point
I rock more stones than a diseased kidney
Looking so plush am spending next week in Sydney
I gat 2 much swag, am incredible like the hulk
I don't pray for enemies,i prey on them like a hawk
Baggy jeans,Converse sneaks and my hood like a monk
Got a bank account so fat like i fed it on junks
Am decked in so much bling
Money talks?..I gat girls dancing to my tune they say my money sings
I sweep girls of 'em feet like Aladdin's carpet
Plus i gat more swag than the 21st alphabet



I'm off the chain like a broken pendant
Swag so ferocious like hungry red ants
The name is ADONYE,am looking so plush and fly
Am gonna be here long enough to see u haters die
Like my BB,my game is bold
Rock so much Ice even my neck is cold
Am the kind of GUY ur girlfriend sees and have a crush
I don't even need to blush before She get's the rush
Haters following me like twitter
But i ditch them in the gutter
U think I ain't tight enough,well that's funny
Golden watch strapped on my wrist......who the fuck said time isn't money..

JADA..

Wednesday, March 17, 2010