Power play turns sour as NBBF Board tenure expires amid Constitutional storm

A special report by Maxwell Kumoye 
 

A leadership vacuum has engulfed Nigerian basketball.

The tenure of the Nigeria Basketball Federation (NBBF) Board has officially expired and what should have been a routine transition is now spiraling into a full-blown governance crisis.

Elected on January 31, 2022 in Benin City, the Board’s four-year mandate ran out on January 31, 2026. 

That much, according to the 2019 NBBF Constitution, is black and white. Tenure begins immediately after election and swearing-in. No ceremony. No delay. No reinterpretation.

Yet, attempts to stretch that mandate to October 2026 based on a later “inauguration” by the Federal Ministry of Youth and Sports have triggered fierce backlash from stakeholders who insist the Constitution recognizes no such extension.

And the documents back the stand of the stakeholders.

The Board was sworn in on election day. It began operations immediately. 

FIBA formally congratulated the leadership on the 7th of March 2022. 

Nigeria’s national teams competed internationally under its authority from February 2022. 

Internal communications reportedly acknowledged January 31, 2026 as the terminal date.

By every constitutional measure, the clock has run out and Congress was never called in four years. The mention of board meetings was dead on arrival.

It noteworthy to mention that tenure expiration is only the tip of the iceberg of the outgone board's inadequacies.

Under Article 20.1 of the Constitution, Congress is the supreme organ of the Federation and must convene at least once annually. 

The fourth Congress is meant to be elective and that never happened.

From 2022 to January 31, 2026, no Congress was convened. Quarterly Board meetings, four required each year, were also not consistently held. 

Your authoritative and award winning news channel FIRST ZEALMEDIACAST BLOG can report that a December 4, 2024 gathering in Lagos described as a Board meeting reportedly failed constitutional tests of notice, quorum, and approved venue.

This development, stakeholders and critics, say it is more than oversight, rather it systemic governance failure.

Concerns extend beyond procedure.

Allegations have surfaced of non-operation of an official NBBF bank account.

Sponsorship deals not disclosed to the full Board non-transparent handling of friendly match revenues as well as conflicts of interest tied to kit sponsorship arrangements.

That's not all, expulsion of elected Board members without due process.

It is imperative to state that on January 9, 2026, the Director General of the National Sports Commission (NSC), Honourable Bukola Olopade, convened key stakeholders, including members of the Nigeria Olympic Committee.

The resolution was unanimous, the Board’s tenure ends January 31, 2026.

A transitional window until March 31, 2026 was proposed, not as an extension but to allow statutory notices to be issued and to ensure continuity for Nigeria’s Women’s National Team ahead of crucial World Cup qualifiers in France in March.

But even that transition process was not activated through a valid Congress.

Meanwhile, concerned Congress members have now formally petitioned FIBA, seeking guidance to safeguard constitutional order and to allow domestic sports authorities to manage the transition without accusations of government interference. A response is awaited in that regard.

As it stands, after January 31, 2026, stakeholders insist there is no constitutionally recognized NBBF Board in office.

• No Congress extended the mandate
• No constitutional mechanism validated continued occupation of office

The Stakeholder explained that any meeting convened by the outgoing President, they argue, is null and void.

Most critics believe that this battle is no longer about personalities. It is about the rule of law.

The ball is now in the court of the sport’s custodians that is the FIBA and the National Sports Commission (NSC).

Because in basketball as in governance, when the clock hits zero, the game is supposed to end.

Comments