Taming Match-Day Madness: Nigerian Football Faces Growing Hooligan Problem as League Violence Spirals
The fight to keep Nigerian league football safe has taken another ugly turn, with incidents of crowd violence, pitch invasions and player assaults continuing to stain the NPFL season. What used to be a family weekend activity is slowly becoming a dangerous gamble, as hooliganism keeps creeping into stadiums that were once lively hubs of community football.
The latest flashpoint came in Katsina, where enraged supporters stormed the pitch during a Week 12 fixture and attacked Barau FC players for daring to score an equaliser. Midfielder Nana Abraham was struck in the neck by a projectile, leaving players and officials scrambling for safety. Nobody died, but fans say it’s only a matter of time if things continue like this.
Katsina United were slammed with a ₦9 million fine, banished to play behind closed doors in Jos, and instructed to improve security. But critics say those sanctions barely scratch the surface, and won’t deter desperate fans or politically protected club officials.
Just weeks earlier, Kano Pillars received a ₦9.5 million fine, three point deduction and an indefinite stadium closure, after chaotic scenes in their clash with Shooting Stars. The club was ordered to identify culprits and overhaul its security plan, though many doubt such directives are ever enforced fully.
“This Would Never Happen in England” Coaches Demand Stronger Laws
Former Warri Wolves head coach Napoleon Aluma says the issue persists because Nigerian football authorities lack the spine to enforce strict punishment, unlike top European leagues that cracked down decades ago.
“Hooliganism still persists because the NFF and NPFL has been lenient with clubs. In England, everyone knows the consequences. People get jailed, banned for life. That’s why you don’t see this nonsense now.”
He pointed out that England once had the worst hooligans in the world, but reforms after stadium disasters and UEFA sanctions forced radical change. Today Premier League stadiums famously operate without perimeter fencing, trusting fans rather than treating them like threats.
“We were all here when England was banned from UEFA competitions. They fixed it because they had to. Our problem is we treat football as recreation, not a business that should be protected.”
Aluma added that betting excuses don’t hold water.
“Europe has had betting for decades. It still boils down to enforcement.”
Stakeholders Say Fines Are Meaningless If Nobody Pays Them
Some club officials claim teams simply relocate temporarily and return home without settling fines, making sanctions more symbolic than impactful. Lobi Stars media officer Emmanuel Ujah says punishment must be severe enough to change behaviour:
“Banishing a team for a few weeks is not punishment. A fan who attacks officials should face the full weight of the law so nobody tries it again.”
He insists clubs must be held responsible for fans’ actions, arguing that some even encourage intimidation tactics when results don’t go their way.
“Identify, Prosecute, Jail Them” says Ex-Eagles Star Iloenyosi
Anambra FA chairman Chikelue Iloenyosi agrees the NPFL has made progress under chairman Gbenga Elegbeleye, but says real change requires law enforcement, not just press statements.
“Once a fan causes trouble because of a club, the club should bear responsibility. These clubs know their fans. In England, they arrest you, prosecute you, and you stay miles away from the stadium. It’s straigh forward.”
He notes that the Premier League works closely with supporters groups to police themselves because the league operates as a billion-pound business worth protecting.
NPFL Boss Defends Progress, Blames Saboteurs
NPFL Chief Operating Officer Davidson Owumi says the league is not ignoring its problems, insisting the recent incidents are isolated and blown out of proportion.
He said some figures are resisting modern reforms:
“Some people don’t want to embrace the new horizon of Nigerian football. We will defeat all the bloodthirsty idiots out there.”
Owumi claims away games are now safer than in past seasons, and the league is determined to maintain order.
A League at a Crossroads
Despite improvements, the NPFL risks losing fans permanently if stadiums continue turning into battlegrounds. The older generation remembers when supporting Rangers, Shooting Stars or Stationery Stores meant pride, travel and community not police tear gas and flying bottles.
If authorities fail to step up enforcement and accountability, Nigerian football may keep losing not just points and reputations, but the remaining fans still brave enough to attend.