Nigeria is the English-speaking world's Scrabble superpower. Africa's
most populous nation is home not only to the global Scrabble champion,
but team Nigeria ranks as the world's top Scrabble playing nation —
ahead of the U.S. in second place.
The Scrabble world champion is Wellington Jighere.
He's 33, has a soft voice, a slow smile and a penchant for fedoras,
earning him the nickname "the Cat in the Hat." Jighere acknowledges that
he's taciturn by nature, but also has an explosive, infectious laugh,
though he considers Scrabble is serious business.
"You can't
afford to waste too much energy doing unnecessary chatter," he says.
"During a tournament, I see it as business time. And that is no time to
be joking around." Jighere plays chess to relax, "and for fun," he says.
Jet-lagged and weary, Jighere was crowned the world Scrabble champ last year in a
grueling 32-round competition in Australia. Up to 30 of the top 100
global players are from Nigeria, which has the highest percentage of any
country in the top 200. The Nigerians' apparent collective strategy —
short words that rack up the points.
Nigerians have been
credited with perfecting that tactic under the tutorship of senior team
coach, Prince Anthony Ikolo. He says Nigerians are passionate about
Scrabble and the short word method gives them an edge. Many put
Nigeria's towering Scrabble prowess down to its players ability to
"choke the board" as they say, with this defensive play.
"The
game of Scrabble is actually built around short words — especially five
letter words," says Ikolo. "If you have such a word base, then you are
good to go. But it would be a very big mistake for the
world to think our players only know short words, especially five-letter
words," he warns.
The coach says "the short words help you to
be defensive [by blocking longer words from opponents], but when it's
time to be offensive, we know those long words also. Nigeria is a force
to be reckoned with when it comes to Scrabble," says Ikolo.
Ikolo,
who's also a university mathematician, came up with lists of
five-letter words and distributed them to his players, including Jighere
the world champion, to train them how to block the board. The coach
says, armed with these, the Nigerians could take on and beat competitors
playing seven-eight- or even nine-letter words.
The other
strategy was to gather his players at a hotel, before the tournament,
and have them play two days of nonstop Scrabble. It appears to have
worked.
Jighere though says his personal strategy is to have
"no strategy at all. I play a fluid kind of game. Yah. I really don't
have a particular kind of style that you can pin me to", he says. "So,
when you are expecting me to do the traditional thing, I will just
choose to do something that is uncharacteristic. It's what sets me apart
from everyone else."
Jighere should know. He and team Nigeria triumphed at the World English-Language Scrabble Players Association
world championship in Australia in November 2015. They fully intend to
hang onto that success when they defend those titles next year in Kenya,
he says.
Nigeria's president, Muhammadu Buhari, phoned
Australia to congratulate him, says Jighere with a big smile. "It felt
so warm to have him speak with me right then and there. It was a very,
very important experience. He told me how proud he is of my
accomplishment and how proud I have made the nation as a whole, not just
the nation but Africa as a whole. And that it has really gone to prove
that we are truly the giants of Africa."
Jighere bested a
Briton in Perth, while Team Nigeria dethroned the U.S., which had been
at the pinnacle for about decade, with Nigeria yapping at its heels,
determined to topple the Americans.
"We are currently ranked
No. 1 nation in the world for Scrabble," says the champ. "In the world
we have the highest number of persons in the top 100 rated Scrabble
players. We have as many as 20 to 30 tough masters in Nigeria that can
really give you a tough fight any time any day."
Ikolo, the
coach, will attest to that. Jighere's friends and fellow Scrabble
masters cut him no slack, in the jovial, noisy and garrulous atmosphere
during the Lagos tournament.
Ikolo gleefully told NPR that,
until the Nigeria National Scrabble Players competition, in the main
city Lagos, at the tail end of July, Jighere had failed to win any
significant tournament after his success in Australia last year.
"Since
he became the world champion, he has been beaten blue and black by his
colleagues. It tells you how strong Nigeria's Scrabble is. It tells you
that the Scrabble scene we have here is a very tough one. It's highly
competitive and nobody can boast tomorrow that I'm going to win this,
I'm going to win that when it comes to Nigerian Scrabble playing."
So
why Scrabble? "Ah, I didn't exactly choose Scrabble," says Jighere. "I
ran into some friends who were tournament players and I beat them. They
told me 'Ah, if I could do this well against them, that means I should
come to the next tournament.' " He adds, "And I was like, "Ah, you mean
they play this in tournaments? OK, let's go. And the rest, as they say,
is history." And he laughs.
That was in 2002. Today, Jighere
sits atop the global Scrabble tournament ladder. He describes how he had
to overcome fatigue and jet lag to win in Australia. Learn those words,
commit them to memory and stay cool – and awake.
Scrabble was
given official recognition as a sport in Nigeria in the 1990s. But local
players, coaches, parents, officials and tournament organizers say
government assistance has been patchy and more must be done to support,
sponsor and finance Scrabble.
"Why will the government and
corporate firms not look the way of Scrabble?" laments coach Okolo.
"Government and corporate firms should come to the aid of Scrabble."
The
Lagos State government provided the venue — Teslim Balogun stadium for
indoor sports — for the recent tournament, as well as organizing some
logistics.
But senior team coach Ikolo says while cash prizes
are welcome, the authorities — and corporate sponsors — should do more
to capitalize on Nigeria's global success at Scrabble. "We don't value
that Nigeria is ranked the best Scrabble playing nation in the world,"
says Ikolo, "and we have the world Scrabble champion, Wellington
Jighere."
And yet Scrabble has caught on in Nigeria in a big way, among
veterans and youth. There are scores of clubs up and down the 36 States
of a nation of 180 million people. Daylong and weekend tournaments are
held regularly and young players, like 10-year-old Angela Osaigbovo, are
champions in their own right.
She's been playing Scrabble
since she was 5 and began competing at age 6. "Scrabble for me is a fun
way of using my academics, to help me in my hobbies and afterschool
life," says Angela with a big smile. Thrusting her Scrabble board into
the air, she then shakes her bag of tiles, and tells me, "I'm good in
Math and Literacy. And I think it's due to Scrabble."
As a scrabbler, she likes using "premiums, or bingos, which are 7-letter words – such as zaniest, quiting and players."
Relaxed
and confident, Angela sits next to Vincent Okere, who's 13. The teen
won the local players championship and the trophy in the youth category
in Lagos. He spent most of the tournament weekend prowling around the
Masters, watching every Scrabble move by the veterans and, no doubt,
learning.
But no hard feelings, says Angela, who came in
second. She was working hard in the build-up to the youth championship
at the Mind Sports International (MSI) global tournament in Lille,
France, starting Saturday.
Every other year, MSI organizes a championship for all-comers, while WESPA holds its tournaments the other years.
"Yes,
I'm very excited. I'm aiming to win the WYSC – which is World Youth
Scrabble Championship" in Lille at the end of August, Angela told me,
adding. "I'm not very shy!"
Her mother, Toyin
Osaigbovo, is delighted that Angela loves Scrabble and says her
daughter possesses what Nigeria has in abundance — focus and
determination.
"Nigerians are very determined and dogged people," says Osaigbovo. "And once we set our minds to something, we achieve it."
Angela had this warning for their global competitors — "Watch out, because Nigeria is coming, with force!"
However,
Angela's disappointed mother told NPR her daughter was refused a French
visa, so won't be able to compete in Lille since the youth championship
began Saturday.
The champ, Wellington Jighere, announced
yesterday that most Nigerian players who applied had also been denied
visas to travel to France. Social media has been twitching with outrage.
Now Jighere says they've been told to report to the French Embassy on
Monday morning to be issued with visas.
So Scrabblers, you're warned, Nigeria's champions are on the warpath!
http://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2016/08/27/491470531/and-the-no-1-scrabble-nation-in-the-world-is
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