Reporters were held from viewing the start of Monday’s practice until the team was done with an on-field prayer session. The faith is part of “tradition” in Nigeria, coach Edwin Okon says.
“Nigeria wants to add God to everything,” he said last week when I asked him about the team’s faith. “We are very serious about it. And we don’t joke with it once the name of God is mentioned in that particular thing, because the name of the Father, God, has been mentioned. And the players are aware of this. Everybody in Nigeria is aware of this.”
Forward Francisca Ordega said last week that Christians and Muslims on the team pray together. But the country is divided, the North predominantly Muslim and the south mainly Christian.
“We believe in God. We worship,” she said last week. “We are all Christians – well we have Muslims among us, but we believe and so we are one. Muslim, Christian, nothing – we serve the same God.”
“Same songs. We say the same prayer.”
But whether or not lesbian players are allowed on the team remains unclear.
It is illegal to be involved in homosexual behaviour in Nigeria, punishable by up to 14 years in prison according to a law passed last year.
A source tells Sports Illustrated’s Grant Wahl that at least two players who would be on the team for the 2015 World Cup are not because they are thought to be gay.
“If a player comes out and says, ‘I’m gay,’ then the trouble doesn’t just start and end with the player,” the source tells Wahl. “It goes all the way back to the family: parents, sisters, brothers, cousins, everything. One person just sparks off a chain reaction. That’s why it’s so tough.”
Asked about the topic in a press conference on Monday, Okon said he does not address sexuality within the team.
“I don’t know what you mean by ‘homosexual,’ he said. “I don’t deal with personal lives. I think of the game proper. I don’t think of my players. I only think of what they do on the pitch. That is what concerns me.”
Four years ago, the Nigerian Football Federation (NFF) was investigated by FIFA after Uche Eucharia detested homosexuality as a “dirty issue,” and “spiritually, morally very wrong.”
Homophobic attitudes remain entrenched in Nigerian culture.