The violent attack on Rivers United officials in Ilorin, which earned Kwara United a record N10 million fine and three-point deduction, has sparked predictable outrage and calls for ever-harsher penalties. Yet according to branding and culture expert China Acheru, such responses fundamentally misunderstand the problem. In a searing analysis on his blog, Acheru argues that stadium violence will persist for another decade or more regardless of sanctions, because Nigerian football’s crisis is not primarily regulatory but structural and economic. The uncomfortable truth, he contends, is that the league’s customer base is itself the obstacle to professionalism, and no amount of point deductions will reform a fan culture built on patronage rather than ownership.
Acheru draws on historical precedent to puncture the assumption that punishment deters. He notes that post-civil war Nigeria introduced the death penalty for armed robbery, the ultimate sanction, yet crime not only continued but evolved, with criminals becoming more ruthless to avoid identification. Drug trafficking persists in East Asian countries where execution is routine. Coup plots continue across Africa despite treason carrying a death sentence. “Punishment alone rarely eliminates crime,” Acheru writes. “And this is because people are who they are.” This grim realism frames his diagnosis of Nigerian football: the league’s hardcore attendees are not fans in any commercial sense but individuals primed for chaos, often financially incentivised by clubs to provide aggressive “support.”
The economic implications of this dynamic are profound and self-reinforcing. Acheru observes that genuine paying customers, people with jobs, disposable income, and alternative entertainment options, behave differently. He contrasts his own stadium experience with his 17-year-old son: “I do not see him, or any of my three sons, jumping over barriers to assault referees.” Responsible, ticket-buying individuals, he argues, have too much to lose. Yet Nigerian clubs have spent years filling grounds with jobless youths ushered in as favours, individuals whose loyalty is expressed through violence precisely because they have no financial stake in the game’s reputation or continuity.
The comparison with Nigeria’s entertainment industry is stark and economically revealing. Acheru asks why Nigerians will pay N7,000 for a comedy show or scramble for tickets to a Davido concert yet resist paying N500 for a football match. Last year in Uyo, Rivers United made entry free for a CAF Champions League fixture and struggled to attract 500 spectators. The next day, the same stadium hosted a concert that filled 30,000 seats with young people. “Value. Experience. Perception,” Acheru concludes. The league offers none of the production value, energy, or social cachet that younger generations demand, leaving it populated by those with no alternatives and no standards.
This generational dimension carries long-term economic consequences. Acheru segments Nigerian society by age cohort: Baby Boomers remember a glorious league now vanished; Gen X has largely moved on to European football; Millennials follow the domestic game primarily for betting; Gen Z, raised on Instagram and TikTok, cannot name a single Nigerian league player. His youngest son, five during the 2022 World Cup, recognises Mbappé, Salah, and Drogba but no local talent. “Soon comes Gen Alpha,” he warns. “We are losing entire generations.” Each lost cohort represents permanently foregone revenue from merchandise, tickets, broadcast subscriptions, and sponsorship value.
The NFF faces a choice that is fundamentally economic. It can continue applying punitive bandages to a haemorrhaging patient, or it can recognise that the league’s product, its brand, its customer experience, and its cultural relevance require complete reconstruction. Acheru positions himself and others with expertise in branding and youth engagement as willing partners in such a rebuild. The alternative is a slow-motion collapse where stadiums become exclusively the domain of violent non-customers, driving away the very audiences the league needs to survive commercially. “Gen Z and Gen Alpha will not abandon their handheld devices to participate in stadium violence,” he writes. “First, you would have to convince them to even attend.”
That act of persuasion, of building a product worth attending and a culture worth joining, is the economic challenge that fines and point deductions cannot solve. Until Nigerian football treats its audience as customers to be won rather than crowds to be managed, the violence will continue not despite the sanctions but because the underlying business model has failed.




