If you think you are a huge fan of football, take this quiz and see how big a fan you are. You have one minute to unscramble these names:
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If you think you are a huge fan of football, take this quiz and see how big a fan you are. You have one minute to unscramble these names:

Football is more than just a sport; it’s a lifestyle. Knowing this, it’s easy to gauge people’s personalities based on the teams they support. After all, birds that flock together play ludo together, or however that saying goes. Don’t take this list personally because all I have is mouth, I can’t fight.

All hail the kings of dorime! You have a lot of money and are not afraid to spend it. As a matter of fact, your motto in life is, “money stops nonsense.” You used to be a broke-ass guy, but you hammered money doing something no one can explain, and now, the whole world will not rest again. You’re also unproblematic and quick to move on from disappointment. Where will we find you? Probably in the club from Thursday to Sunday, using Azul to rinse your hand.

You know you’re not that different from Arsenal fans, right? Just like them, you’re afraid of change. You said you’d leave with Mourinho, but look at you today. You also come from old money and a family that didn’t allow you to play football growing up because your skin was too fragile #AjebutterChronicles. You can be annoying sometimes, but your passion for the things you love makes you an okay guy last last.

Your head is too big and your ringtone is probably All I Do Is Win by DJ Khaled. You like to brag about how successful you are, thinking it makes you look like some kind of rockstar, but the truth is, everyone is tired of your bullshit. Oga, please, rest. On the plus side, you’re not all mouth. If you say you’ll do something, most of the time, you actually do it. Does your plan always work? No. But at least, you’re not afraid to try.
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You obviously like stress and failure at this point because, bro, why the hell are you still on this table? Arsenal fans are living on past glory that wasn’t even that glorious to begin with, so you probably like to remind everyone that you used to be a happening guy, even though your rep is now in the gutter. On the plus side, you’re a loyal and patient guy. Even though it always ends up in hot tears, your dedication is lowkey interesting to watch.

You’re a reliable OG. Even when you disappoint people, it’s easy for them to ignore it because your track record has always shown you as a stand-up guy. Talking about your successes sometimes comes off as bragging, but you’re also old, and no one wants to offend a 30+ man.

You’re a fake guy. You’ve always had an easy life you didn’t have to work for. Because of this, you’ll always pick the easy way out and avoid stress. If they say bathing in salt will cure Ebola, you’d probably do it to avoid doing real research. We see through you, bro.

You used to be a popping guy, but you lost your biggest selling point, and now, you’re humble. You’re the kind of guy that made it really early in life, and just assumed the going would be sweet until your container sunk into the deep sea. Even if your enemies want to feel sorry for you, they can’t, because when the going was good, your mouth was doing cho cho cho up and down. Anyways, pele dear.

You’re that guy whose friends don’t include him in their WhatsApp groups. It’s not because they hate you, they just tend to forget that you exist. You’re a sweet guy, but you’re not memorable, and that’s your biggest flaw. Try something new, bro. A daring haircut, maybe? Don’t give up yet.
ALSO READ: Messi Vs. Ronaldo: These Nigerian Men Pick Their GOAT


Have you ever thought about what cities share the most similarities with your favourite football clubs? Well, we have, and now we’ve attempted to draw parallels between some of England’s biggest football clubs and places in Nigeria.
Small nyash wey dey shake sometimes. They had two minutes of good history and that was it. They’re both modest achievers and have a few notable individuals. Tottenham has a league cup to its name and Akure has… well, Shoprite and an airport.
These two have a lot of good old days to remember. Just like Arsenal under Wenger played great football, Calabar used to be a really great place when it had that governor who built that famous mountain resort. Both are now better known for their lack of genuine progress. Calabarians bask in the golden years of Donald Duke just like Arsenal fans never stop bringing up their golden Premier League trophy from nearly 20 years ago.
A lot of history and notable figures with years and years of decay in the middle, and a renaissance engineered by a visionary leader in the persons of Seyi Makinde and Jurgen Klopp, respectively.
Loud, proud, notable individuals in recent history, great strides financed by oil money. Chelsea fans and folks from Port Harcourt are some of the proudest people you’ll ever meet.
Great history. Many notable individuals. Ever since their iconic leaders (Babatunde Fashola and Sir Alex Ferguson) left them, they’ve been left at the mercy of administrators who haven’t measured up to standard. Meanwhile, fans and inhabitants of the club and city go to bed every night stressed, while trying to convince themselves they’re still as great as they used to be.
They don’t have a long history or many notable individuals. In fact they don’t have as many inhabitants and fans as other cities and clubs around. But in terms of recent strides, they’ve become very high achievers thanks to the injection of oil money. Everyone is migrating from their cities and clubs to this city because they’re the shiniest new object in town.

There are only a few things that hurt as much as seeing your team lose an important match. Aside from the pain of losing the game, the banter on Twitter will crush you further. As a lifelong Arsenal fan, I have tasted all forms of football humiliation you can think of, so I’m in a good position to tell you how to cope in these trying times. For your mental health, here is what to do after your team takes a giant L.

Just log out fam. The streets on Twitter are mean. Even if you unfollow all the sports pages on Twitter, one oloriburuku will retweet something that will hurt your feelings.

For the next few days, avoid Bleacher Reports and Sky Sports news. Goal.com already has a screaming headline about how disgraceful your team’s performance was. Please, save yourself the mental breakdown.
We understand that you’re human and you need to let off steam somehow. Channel all the rage you feel after a stinging defeat to going online and challenging your leaders to do better. It will also be a good time to remember #EndSARS.


Console yourself about how there’s more to life than football. You’re attractive, you have a partner and you have a job, unlike the people currently shamelessly trolling your club on social media. Even if you don’t have any of these things, focus on nature — see how the sun shines brilliantly on your neighbour’s roof and how the breeze whispers in your ears. Isn’t it amazing?.

Your friends will surely relish the opportunity to rub it in. When they start bantering you, take a slow, deep breath and tell yourself: “It’s nothing serious. It’s just football. I know Okoro is my friend, and we’ve been friends for a long time and he loves me. It’s just football. It’s just football. He’s just teasing me. He loves me. There are more important things in this life.”
Repeat this till you believe it.

Yes o. In order to achieve inner peace, take meditation seriously, especially on the very morning after your team has taken a big L. Arsenal and Manchester United fans may not need this anyway since they’re psychologically adjusted to disappointments every weekend.
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Channel all the heartbreak you feel into your work. Use the force of all that negative energy to shatter your KPIs. Footballers are going to get paid so why not just focus on your own work too?
Do all these things for one week and the whole world would have moved on by the time you’re back.

Navigating life as a woman in the world today is interesting. From Nigeria to Timbuktu, it’ll amaze you how similar all our experiences are. Every Wednesday, women the world over will share their experiences on everything from sex to politics right here. This is Zikoko’s What She Said.

Today’s subject for #ZikokoWhatSheSaid is Topher, a 27-year-old Nigerian woman. She talks about sharing her love for football with her twin brother, losing a piece of herself when he died and holding on to the sport as she navigates life without her favourite sibling.
Chelsea. Even before I became a fan in 2008, Chelsea was a team I liked because they wear my favourite colour, blue.
Before Chelsea, I watched football for the thrill, and finally picking a team to support was random.
I was at a neighbour’s house watching the Champions League finals where Chelsea played against Manchester United. It was the first time ever they made it to the finals, and I could feel the excitement of the players. 90 minutes went by and Chelsea lost the game. I was expecting some level of frustration from the guys, but they seemed happy. Even with the loss, they cheered. These guys reminded me of the reason I loved football in the first place: that ability to bounce back after a loss or enjoy the little wins.
After that, I became a Chelsea stan. Up blues!!
My twin brother — Chima — taught me to play. When I was 5, we’d go to Ile Ewe field to play what we called kpako football. That’s the kind of match that always ends with some kind of scratch or bruise. I played with my brother’s team. I was the only girl, but I didn’t mind.
Between our four older siblings and parents, my brother and I were the closest. We did practically everything together, but sports was our main thing. He showed me how to play tennis, and we’d stay up watching basketball on TV. I used to pull off the buttons on my shirt and we’d use biro covers to push it around like a ball. Football was the only thing we didn’t do together, so I begged him to teach me.
Rough at first, then we became best guys. The first time I played, one of the guys set leg for me. Instead of saying sorry, he laughed. Of course, my brother slapped him. He was always so protective.
After that, everyone got the memo and treated me nicely. We became a team. They also started calling me the “Queen of football.”
With each win against an opposing team, we went ballistic with excitement. Even when we took an L, we cheered each other on. That love in the face of anything made me love the game. Football became my passion.
My brother and I shared seven years of that passion together. I was 12 when he died. After that, loving the game wasn’t the same.
Thank you. Not only did I lose my best friend and backbone, I was also fighting for my life.
I fell sick hours after hearing the news. My appendix burst. There was no time to process that he was gone. I went in for the surgery and dealt with a dry cough and pneumonia while recovering. It was hard.
I became a tomboy. LOL.
For a long time, I felt empty without him. He died in January and by March, my mum moved only me to Abuja because she got a new job. She wanted to keep a close eye on me while I recovered, but I hated it. Without my brother, I felt alone. So I started wearing his clothes to feel close to him and also prove to him I could be strong.
That’s how my tomboy era started, which my mum hated. I didn’t care though. It was the only thing that kept me sane until 2009.
At that point, home was more frustrating.
My siblings and dad had joined us in Abuja. And my mum couldn’t hold back her hatred for my clothes anymore. Maybe it made her think of Chima, but we weren’t close enough to open up to each other. When I was 14, my mum yelled at me for my new style and my siblings beat me for being heady about it. I didn’t have anyone in my corner.
My dad tried to be there for me, but nothing compensated for my brother. In 2009, I wanted to end it. I took some of my mum’s diabetic pills and locked myself in the room. But I couldn’t do it.
I made a promise to Chima, and I wanted to keep it. I was going to get as rich as we planned to and name my son after him. I couldn’t do that if I was dead.
It’s okay. I didn’t feel alone — I felt he was with me. I probably had on one of his shirts.
Never. Playing the game was purely for fun. I never stopped loving football; it was my strongest connection to him. I just didn’t watch it as much.
Before I left for Abuja in March 2007, I wanted to try playing football again. It had been almost two months since the surgery, and I was bored of sitting at home. I missed the guys at the pitch, but I couldn’t play without Chima. There were too many memories.
I still wanted to play though. So for the first time, I played football with girls.
Yeah. When I was younger, the girls on my street liked to play ten-ten or suwe. I found jumping, clapping and singing quite annoying. The only game I could manage was seven stone.
LMAO. Yes! It’s better than shouting “ten ten”.
I can’t even call what we played football. No offence to my friends that might read this, but they were playing rubbish. It was like they had never played football. Their penalty and corner kicks were so weak. It felt like we were running around the field playing suwe. Gosh! I wanted some kpako football. After a few games, I just stopped playing.
Yes. Writing became the easiest thing I could do. I penned down my thoughts and wrote about fictional characters. When I wasn’t doing that, I read books for an escape. If I wasn’t doing that, then there was a bit of dancing. It lifted my mood.
In between, there was cooking. Actually, cooking was the only connection I had with any other sibling — my older sister. When I wasn’t at the pitch as a kid, she was teaching me how to cook.
In 2011, I started saving up for culinary school. I wanted any excuse to leave my house. Whenever my siblings sent me on errands, I’d add an extra ₦1k or ₦2k to their bill. At least all the waka waka had to pay. By 2013, I had enough for a six-month culinary course. I knew the basics, so the chefs taught me to cook continental dishes like onion soup and Chinese noodles. No one in my family knows I took that course.
I was attempting to live my life. I got into uni a few months after the course. Pursuing a chef career wasn’t something my parents would’ve accepted. I ended up studying English. When I graduated in 2017, acting became the next phase of my life.
Call it exploring. I was trying to find something that was as good as sitting to watch a game and made me good money. Acting only lasted for two years. Within that time, I starred in about eight to nine movies. My career was growing, but I wanted a break from it. I was tired of the rush of call time, rehearsals and late nights.
I sat down one day and decided to pursue my cooking career.
I’d say cooking, maybe because it’s the most recent development. Watching people eat and love my food gives me joy.
But football will always be my number one love. Every time I sit and watch a game, I feel connected to my brother. I still miss him, but I have fewer moments of feeling so empty without him. As I’ve moved around, I’ve lost most of Chima’s things. I outgrew the rest. My mum and I have never talked about what losing Chima meant to either of us. Maybe one day.
When we were younger, he dreamt of being a Catholic priest. I always wanted him to ordain my marriage. Now, I have to live with that dream as only a memory.
For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women like content, click here

The UEFA Champions League is back. For those of us who are dating core football fans, this means that between now and December, there will be days during the week when our partners will be watching 22 men run on a field while two men scream instructions at them from the sidelines. Here’s what you can be doing while they’re doing that.

The match is ninety minutes long, and that’s minus added time. If you truly want to distract yourself, enter the kitchen and cook a 12-course meal. By the time you’re done, your partner will most likely be done with their match too. However, you may be too tired to have their time by then.

Nothing. Absolutely nothing will redirect their attention from a football match faster than this statement. What better way to distract them from the tension of the knockout stages?

Dress up sexy and go out with friends that aren’t football watchers. To make it more fun, go to a strip club. By the time your partner finally removes their eyeballs from the TV screen at the end of the match, you’d already be downing shots of tequila and putting money in the underwear of naked people.

Once you wear it, walk in front of the TV and see their reaction. They may shout at you and tell you to move away from the TV, but it’s worth a try.

You can decide to be nice. Invite their friends over and get them snacks and drinks. UCL nights are pretty important and full of tension. But be sure to tell them that they’ll be the ones cleaning up afterward sha.

They’ll fight you, but at least they’ll be paying attention to you.

If they’d rather watch a bunch of grown men kicking and chasing a ball than the next episode of your favourite show together, it’s their loss. Watch the newest episodes and give them spoilers. Smh.

Watch the match with your partner but give as much commentary as possible. Mix up the names of the teams and players and ask a lot of questions. Person wey say e mama no go sleep, em sef no go sleep.

Any partner that chooses football over you is not someone that deserves your loyalty. Pick up your phone and find a side piece that has your time.


If you want to start a war, ask football fans to choose between Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo. Over here, we do usually like violence, so we decided to ask these Nigerian men to pick their football faves and tell us why. The shade was plenty, but these are some of the answers they gave us.
I hate both of them, but let me start with all the reasons I can’t stand that short man devil, Messi. First off, he has scored countless goals against my team, Arsenal, including a hattrick. I also hate the fact that his stans continue to suck him off even though he hasn’t won a Champions League without Xavi and Iniesta. He is currently fighting for his life in a farmers’ league right now, but FIFA and the media keep giving him awards to support their propaganda that he is the greatest footballer.
I admire Ronaldo, but I’m not a fan. I only support him because doing so makes Messi stans angry.
Ronaldo is a finished player abeg. Can’t you see what he’s playing for Manchester United? It’s rubbish. He’s just staying there for no reason and you can tell he’s the type of player that wants everything to rotate around him. I prefer Messi because he’s a more technical player. When you see Messi playing, you can tell that he knows what he’s doing. He knows how to dribble better, pass better and finish better. As a whole, Messi’s a better team player, but Ronaldo is very lazy — he only knows how to score. Even if Messi has not been scoring goals this season, he impacts and assists his other teammates.

Ronaldo all the way Most people underrate the guy because what he does looks easy, but he’s killing it day in, day out. A lot of players have tried hard to keep up with Ronaldo when it comes to goals and finesse, and they’ve all failed. People say Messi is effortless and it’s “God-given talent”, but what is talent without hard work? So far, Ronaldo has conquered Spain, Italy, England and Portugal. Has Messi achieved something like that? No, he was too comfortable in Spain and even the PSG he plays for now, he has been terrible with like one goal in about 20 games. That’s very poor.
Messi is clearly the best footballer ever! Ronaldo does a lot of work before he gets results, but Messi is pure, God-given talent. Nobody has ever been or will ever be like Messi. The guy scores goals, makes goals and dribbles — he makes football a beautiful sport to watch. Ronaldo is good, but Messi is a notch higher and the greatest footballer the world has ever seen. I dare say he’s greater than Maradona, Pele and Zidane..
Ronaldo is better on and off the pitch. Yes, Ronaldo is a good player, but even outside football, he has a personality that’s just lit AF. Outside football, Messi is a dead guy. We all know Messi can play well, but I also think he’s overrated because he has fans that see whatever he does as something spectacular. Messi is nothing without his fanbase. For Ronaldo, I can justify why I think he’s great. Numbers don’t lie and he’s proven it. But like I said, outside the pitch, he’s also scoring because he’s a bigger public figure, and he has hacked how to interact with his fans.
Messi over Ronaldo every day. Messi has more goals and assists than Ronaldo when we look at their goals-to-game ratio. In 2012 alone, Messi scored over 90 goals, a feat neither Ronaldo or any other player has been able to achieve. For anyone getting into football for the first time, Messi is more entertaining to watch, and finally, he doesn’t have rape allegations hovering over him.
Ronaldo for sure because that guy is the GOAT among the two of them. Don’t get me wrong, Messi is brilliant, but what Ronaldo does is amazing. Ronaldo has that edge because he can walk into any league, any team and still kill it. Messi on the other hand has fewer goals than Werner this season. Plus, I don’t know how you can call the guy with the most goals in the world “overrated”.

Thanks to Uncle Bubu, AFCON brought both tears and rage to the eyes of many Nigerian men. These men were deeply enraged by the loss to Tunisia and Maduka Okoye suffered in their hands. Honestly, all we can say is, let’s see this energy on Valentine’s day o. The whole drama brought us to one conclusion: men will do the craziest things for the love of sports. We went out to test the theory and these seven ridiculous fanboys have proved us right.
I could never eat before a game. For instance, once Barca is playing in the Champions League, everything else has to be shut down. The only focus is Barca until the end of the day. Game days were like my own Sabbath day for football. There’s no food or work until the end of the game. Absolutely nothing was permitted to distract me and my mother understood the boundary. As long as Barca was on, she knew it would be war, getting me to do anything around the house.
My love for football led me to gambling — up Madrid for life. It started out as a way to make quick money to fix my phone — I got ₦50k for betting ₦5k. Omo. After that I kept going. In the first three months I lost about ₦120k, but I kept going. There was just something liberating about placing a bet whether I lost or not. In January, I made my biggest bet and cashed out on the Real Madrid vs A. Bilbao match. I needed money to pay my rent, so I put in my salary for the bet. It was ₦300k and cashed out ₦600k. This is what I call dedication and hard work. If I didn’t win, it might have been a different story — I knew Real Madrid could never disappoint me.
My love for basketball started from my years as a teenager. When I was in SS3, I snuck out of tthe boarding school conpound at night to watch a Lakers game. It was all night and I had my WAEC’s physics paper by 7 a.m. the next morning. After the game, there were no cabs and I had to stay behind at the viewing centre till the next morning. I didn’t get back to school until 8 a.m. and the invigilator didn’t let me in. That’s how I had to retake WAEC the next year.
My love for sports didn’t start today. I was in the acrobatics team in secondary school — I was ready to do anything to win a match. One of my friend’s told me to eat beans and milk so I could be light before one of the competitions we had in school. He told me I would be able to somersault and win the medal for our team. I ended up winning the silver medal, but I vomitted on stage. The principal asked me to clean up before presenting me with the medal. I never collected it because the principal was furious for the rest of the day; it’s thunder that will strike that guy that lied to me.

As a football fanatic, I used to hold prayer sessions before my team played in any final. In secondary school, I wrote the name of every player on the team and placed it in my bible to pray over it. I kept up with the tradition for a couple of years, but Arsenal just kept breaking my heart. I remember casting and binding for the Europa league final against Chelsea. I’ve never prayed for something so hard. Arsenal still failed me after everything. We lost by three goals. I was in severe pain.
My daughter betrayed me. I had to send her out of the house for the rest of the day. It was a match between Manchester United and Chelsea. Like any other human being, I was rooting for my club the Red Devils. Next thing, my daughter walked in chanting, “Up Chelsea.” She was about twelve then. I wanted to beat her honestly. I ended up making her sit on the chair in the balcony until her mother came back from work. That one can’t be my own offspring.
I put my shit on the line for Arsenal o. As an Arsenal stan, I told my guy I wouldn’t shit for a full week if we lost the match. He was happy to agree because he always complained about the way I blasted the toilet. Arsenal disgraced me and I had to hold my shit for a week. My guy and I work remotely, so he was watching me like a hawk.

Don’t call yourself a big football fan if you can’t match these coaches to their clubs.
Take the quiz:

After the Super Eagles decided to go home yesterday because rest is good for the body, Kwame, Nana and Frimpong came out to drag us by our edges. But you know Nigerians na, we were the first to drag ourselves. Here are some of the funniest responses to Nigeria leaving AFCON.



