
In the high-stakes world of modern sports, the narrative is usually binary: you either win and celebrate, or lose and disappear. However, Nigerian football legend Chief Segun Odegbami recently revisited a pivotal moment in 1977 that challenged this notion, proving that the “Olympic spirit” can sometimes shine brightest in defeat.
A Golden Era of Nigerian Club Football
The mid-1970s marked a stratospheric rise for IICC Shooting Stars FC of Ibadan. By 1976, the club had secured a historic double—winning the Nigerian National League and the Africa Cup-Winners Cup. This continental victory was the first of its kind for Nigeria, established after a grueling final against Cameroon’s Tonnerre Kalala FC, led by the legendary Roger Milla.
Odegbami, then a Mechanical Engineering student at The Polytechnic, Ibadan, was a cornerstone of this success. Alongside his clinical striking partner Moses Otolorin, the duo accounted for 15 of the 16 goals scored during that championship run.
The 1977 ‘Civil War’ on Grass
By 1977, the rivalry between Ibadan’s Shooting Stars and Enugu’s Rangers International FC had transcended sport. It was a socio-cultural “war” of sorts between the Yoruba and Igbo tribes, rekindling competitive tensions just seven years after the end of the Nigerian Civil War.
When the two giants were drawn against each other in the semi-finals of the African Cup-Winners Cup, the nation held its breath. The first leg in Lagos ended in a tense 0-0 draw, but the atmosphere was so volatile that the Federal Government intervened, relocating the second leg to the neutral ground of Ahmadu Bello Stadium in Kaduna.
The Giant in the Goal
The second leg mirrored the first—a tactical stalemate played in a stadium “jammed like canned beef.” The match eventually moved to the dreaded penalty shootout. It was here that Emmanuel Okala, the towering Rangers goalkeeper, became an insurmountable wall.
”With his imposing height and fire in his eyes, he stared down at our kickers,” Odegbami recalls. “It was almost like looking into the barrel of a gun.” Rangers emerged victorious, leaving the Shooting Stars devastated.
A Reward for Excellence, Not Just Victory
What happened next remains one of the most remarkable gestures in Nigerian sports history. Despite the loss, the Governor of Oyo State at the time, General David Jemibewon, recognized the sheer effort and quality the team had displayed.
Upon their return to Ibadan, the team was not met with scorn, but with a reception at Liberty Stadium. There, Jemibewon presented all 22 players with the keys to brand new Volkswagen cars.
The Governor’s message was clear: winning is not always about coming first; it is about the “effort and performance” of those who leave everything on the pitch. In a world obsessed with trophies, the 1977 Shooting Stars proved that true victory is measured by the character shown in the heat of the battle.
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