NFF, State of Maryland agree on collaboration

The Nigeria Football Federation and the Government of Maryland have

highlighted and agreed on a number of co-operation programmes designed

to enhance the development of football in the country Nigeria and the

State of Maryland, an important mid-Atlantic State in the United

States of America.

At a meeting in Baltimore, Maryland on Wednesday, 30th June 2021,

President of the NFF and a Member of the FIFA Council, Mr Amaju Melvin

Pinnick and the Lieutenant Governor of Maryland, Boyd Rutherford

agreed on a number of collaborative areas including but not limited to

minimum of one friendly match with Nigeria’s Super Eagles and Super

Falcons in FIFA window opportunities; utilization of the platform to

create a symbiotic economic relationship in broader areas of economic

development; leveraging of the Baltimore-Maryland 2026 platform/assets

to create added value for NFF Sponsors for broader activations; focus

on youth development programmes and; the development of a formal

sister city relations to cover football development and stadium

management.

Baltimore, the largest city in the State of Maryland, is a candidate

city for hosting of matches of the 48 –team 2026 FIFA World Cup

finals, which has already been awarded to the triumvirate of USA,

Mexico and Canada.

Pinnick, who was in Baltimore on a specific invitation by the

Government of Maryland, said he was enthusiastic about the agreement

and wished Baltimore-Maryland good luck in its desire to be a Host

City for the 2026 FIFA World Cup finals. The invite was premised on

the enormous respect that the Government of Maryland has for Nigeria

as a nation and the NFF as an institution. Lieutenant Governor

Rutherford confessed to being a great fan of the Super Eagles, who

dazzled the world in an impressive debut at the FIFA World Cup in the

USA 27 years ago, while the Nigeria U23 squad (with many players of

the same Super Eagles’ team), spectacularly won Africa’s first Olympic

football gold also in the USA two years later