Shaibu: ‘NIS will become Nigeria’s engine room for champions’

Director General/Chief Executive Officer of the National Institute for Sports (NIS), Philip Shaibu, has laid out plans to reposition the institute as the “engine room for producing champions.”

In an interview on M4STV, Shaibu, who previously served as Deputy Governor of Edo State and is a longtime advocate for sports development, outlined a sweeping transformation agenda aimed at turning the NIS into a world-class centre for athletic excellence.

Shaibu emphasised that the NIS must evolve beyond its current state and take a leadership role in shaping Nigeria’s sporting future.

“The National Institute of Sports should not just exist; it should lead. We must treat sports as a serious business. The NIS must be the place where champions are made, not just for Nigeria, but for the world,” he said.

Under his leadership, Shaibu said that the institute will prioritise the discovery and training of talented athletes, elevate coaching standards, and foster strategic partnerships with the private sector.

His blueprint includes upgrading the institute’s facilities to meet international standards, making it a modern and attractive training ground for athletes and professionals alike.

The former Edo State deputy governor also plans to invest heavily in human capital by training more coaches, sports scientists, and administrators, while building strong relationships with private companies to support funding and innovation.

He acknowledged the challenges facing Nigerian sports, including poor infrastructure, inadequate funding, and weak management systems and described the NIS he inherited as being ‘underground,’ a 50-year-old institution in dire need of renewal.

He noted a troubling manpower imbalance, with more administrative staff than professionals, and revealed that only one staff member currently holds the requisite qualifications for their role.

“The manpower gap is huge,’ he said, adding that the curriculum in use is outdated, what he called a ‘Mungo Park curriculum in a modern era.”
To address these issues, Shaibu is committed to building a solid digital foundation for the institute, one that can compete globally and train coaches capable of preparing athletes for podium finishes.

He lamented that many Nigerian athletes abroad now return home to compete for the country because the local talent pool lacks exposure to quality coaching and modern facilities.

While the 2026 budget is one avenue of funding, Shaibu stressed that the institute cannot rely solely on government allocations. He described sports as an industry and positioned the NIS as a vital part of that industrial cycle, an institution responsible not only for training coaches and athletes but also for producing sports medicine professionals, physiotherapists, and paramedics.

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