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Field of Dreams in Niger Delta
In Niger Delta, the next great hope for Nigerian sports might not be on a pitch in Lagos. Rather, it’s taking shape in a quiet boardroom in Uyo.
Chiedu Ebie, the Chairman of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), is betting on it. He recently told stakeholders that the regional Niger Delta Games could become a conveyor belt for future Olympians. The second edition of the Games is scheduled for late February 2026.
For Ebie, a former Delta State Secretary to Government and oil sector lawyer, this is more than a sporting event. From his standpoint, this is a legacy project with an institutional goal, namely: to build a sustainable platform that identifies raw talent across the nine oil-producing states and funnels it to the national stage.
This vision requires meticulous scaffolding, which might be why he endorsed a recent planning retreat by consultants Dunamis-Icon, emphasising the need for “structured evaluations” to correct flaws. The subtext is clear: after decades of false starts, the region is attempting to build something that lasts.
The ambition faces a familiar backdrop. Ebie’s own tenure at the NDDC began with a legal challenge over his appointment, though the courts dismissed the case. The commission itself has a long history of unmet promises. Turning a sports festival into a reliable talent pipeline would be a tangible departure from the past.
The forthcoming Games will be a quiet litmus test. Can a region better known for pipelines and protests build a new reputation on the running tracks and swimming pools of a week-long tournament?
For now, Chairman Ebie’s optimism is a policy statement. The real answer won’t come from a retreat, but from whether a teenager discovered in Yenagoa or Port Harcourt someday stands on an Olympic podium wearing green and white.







