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The Audio Long Read

Innit innit boys and Super Eagles: how Nigerian Londoners found their identity through football

The Audio Long Read

The Guardian

Society & Culture

4.32.4K Ratings

🗓️ 24 February 2025

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For the children of the Nigerian diaspora, displaced by war and split between two worlds, footballers from John Fashanu to Jay-Jay Okocha were a first glimpse of themselves in Britain’s mainstream. Written and read by Aniefiok Ekpoudom. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/longreadpod

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is The Guardian.

0:09.4

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0:29.5

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1:38.3

Welcome to The Guardian Long Read, showcasing the best long-form journalism covering culture, politics and new thinking.

1:47.5

For the text version of this and all our long reads, go to the Guardian.com forward slash long read.

1:56.0

In it, Init boys and Super Eagles, how Nigerian Londoners found their identity through football, written

2:03.7

and read by Inafiok Ekpidam.

2:10.2

They arrived in 80s London with small intentions, to study, to work, to outrun what they had come

2:17.0

from, and then maybe one day return back home.

2:21.3

A people who came en masse from Nigeria, working the dark hours, balancing two jobs with part-time education,

2:29.3

rolling in a ceaseless loop of morning shifts into lectures into night work again, until maybe a qualification

...

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