Oderah Chidom, the AfroBasket champion, quit the Nigeria Women’s basketball team, citing a “lack of professionalism” within the Nigeria Basketball Federation.
She stated, “It saddens me to announce that I will no longer play for the Nigerian National Team” on her social media page.
“My purpose for doing this is to shed light on the lack of professionalism within the federation, and that needs to change”, said Chidom.
Last month, the Nigerian Basketball Federation named Rena Wakama, a University of Western Carolina alum and former national team player, as the team’s new coach. Wakama replaced Otis Hughely, who exited last year.
Wakama’s appointment was followed by the announcement of open tryouts for the women’s team in Chicago, Lagos, and Abuja from July 8 to 11.
After the upheaval within Nigerian basketball that led to the withdrawal of the team from the FIBA World Cup, Chidom told ESPN that the open tryouts were the last straw for her.
“The trigger for me was seeing an Instagram post of open tryouts in three different locations three weeks before Afrobasket,” the 27-year-old Chidom said.
“I will not be attending. I don’t think that’s professional at all. I consider myself a professional. And I don’t think it’s okay for me to pay my way to try out for something when I think I have a resume that speaks for itself.
“I have standards for how I conduct business at the professional level, and Nigeria continues to disappoint me.
“This is a national team. Generally, what you do is invite a group of professionals to compete in a camp, and then the 12 best at that camp get to compete on whatever team, and that’s mostly how a national team is conducted.
“I was with my family when I got the message, and I was just in shock. Playing for the national team is something that my family is proud of and that I am proud of, as it holds a lot of weight for me, and the way that they conduct themselves is taking all of that away from us. It’s just so disheartening.
“I have been blessed to play with a lot of teams where I have seen professionalism from management, and I don’t see those same qualities within our own federation. So to continuously keep coming back to a federation that I feel does not value me is not worth it.
“I am officially done with the national team. I cannot continue to have this added stress in my life. As a team, we try to choose our words very carefully so we do not offend anyone on the federation.
“But personally, I’m done, and my purpose of doing this is to shed light on the lack of professionalism within the federation and that it needs to change.
“It’s really difficult to not have any sense of communication or professionalism. All of our information comes from Twitter and social media.
“We never know what’s going on. We ask a lot of questions about simple things like when camp is, where it will be held, and who the coaches are, and we get responses like ‘please be patient’.
“Everything that we do is super last-minute. The level of professionalism is just not up to par with the constant production that we produce.”
Many Nigerian female players were reportedly going to boycott the team and AfroBasket. Chidom, however, says this is not the case, and she expects others to keep playing.
“We’re not boycotting anything. We weren’t even invited. No one’s communicating with us at all. So, it’s frustrating. Of course, I would love to continue to play for something bigger than myself and represent my country,” Chidom added.
“That means so much to me and my family. But with the current federation, I just cannot continue to agree with the way they do business.
“A lot of us have all sent the post around. And pretty much all of us are disappointed and upset with the lack of communication.
“I genuinely don’t know what the other girls are intending to do, but I know that there’s a general sense of frustration and disappointment throughout the entire team, considering that no one has spoken to us.”
NBBF president Musa Kida told ESPN that open tryouts for the national team are nothing new.
“We did the same thing in 2017, and we raised a team that went on to win the AfroBasket in 2019,” said Kida.
“Not everybody will like the idea, but we are trying to make the best decisions for Nigerian basketball. We have a new coach, and we want to rebuild the team.
“Of course we would like to see all the players show up, but we can’t force any one to do so, and it is up to each player to make the decision that is best for them.”
After winning three consecutive AfroBasket titles, D’Tigress will pursue a record-equaling fourth in Rwanda.