Head coach Eddie Howe has challenged his Newcastle United players to seize the moment and follow in the footsteps of the side who defeated Barcelona in 1997.Newcastle will meet Barca in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie at St James’ Park on Tuesday night.
The fixture stirs memories of Tino Asprilla’s hat-trick and the night Newcastle stunned the La Liga giants in the old group phase.
Howe was a player at Bournemouth at the time, but was among the millions tuning in to the 3-2 victory from afar.
“You couldn’t not watch that game,” he said. “It was on terrestrial television. It was one of those legendary games.
“You want people in future years to be talking about this team. Tino Asprilla gets the hat-trick, a couple of them from Keith Gillespie’s delivery on the right.
“I want our players to be talked about in the same way in 20, 30, 40 years.”
The current sides met in the league phase back in September on a night Newcastle were defeated 2-1 on Tyneside.
Howe took positives from that loss, though, and has described this rematch as the “biggest game” in the club’s recent history as he looks to guide Newcastle into the quarter-finals of the competition for the first time ever.
“It’s an opportunity to grab a moment that we may never get again,” he added. “You never know what life brings tomorrow, let alone future seasons.
“We don’t want to waste that opportunity. We don’t want to kick ourselves or think, ‘What if?’”
In Ezeagu, the vibrant cheers that once echoed from village football pitches and school sports grounds are increasingly being replaced by a cautious silence – insecurity and communal clashes.
Community leaders and residents have linked the persistent absence of motorable roads and stable electricity to rising crime. Specific communities like Umumba Ndiagu, Awha Imezi, and Olo have reported being in darkness for months, which facilitates kidnapping and other criminal activities.
Violent clashes between farmers and suspected herders have resulted in heinous killings and terror within Olo community and Ezeagu in general. These attacks often target vulnerable rural dwellers, leading to the displacement of people and the abandonment of homes, farmlands.
Like many rural areas in the South-East, Ezeagu faces threats from kidnapping and armed robbery: abductions for ransom and ritual purposes as well as banditry.
While the community naturally endowed with athletic talents, a persistent wave of insecurity—ranging from farmer-herder clashes to kidnapping and ritual-related violence—has created a climate of fear that is directly undermining the development of sports. The once vibrant sports field have been abandoned and overtaken by bushes as village and communities flee from the homes for safety.
Ezeagu’s security challenges are multifaceted. Communities such as Umumba Ndiagu, Awha Imezi and Olo have historically struggled with infrastructure neglect, including a lack of motorable roads and electricity, which provides cover for criminal elements, bandits, herdersmen and kidnappers to have unfiltered access .
Recent reports have detailed harrowing incidents, including the discovery of ritual burial sites, which have traumatized local youths. Farmers and rural dwellers often face attacks in their fields, leading to the displacement of families and the abandonment of community spaces.
Criminal activities often target the very infrastructure meant to uplift the community, such as power cables, educational and sporting facilities.
For instance, in 2012 and 2014, repeated attacks and communal clashes have left the community with massive outflow of sports talents as they flee the area for safety. Young children and school-aged persons have been left traumatised either as orphans or without relatives thus forcing them to either relocate to nearby communities or forced them to seek asylum in neighbouring countries such as Niger Republic, Cameroon, Benin Republic, Ghana, among others. Some have been left with no option than to flee abroad to save their lives.
In 2016, another attack, reportedly carried out by the bandits led to burning down of schools and churches in Olo Community and its surrounding, claiming lives and many properties uncounted for.
The intersection of crime and sports in Ezeagu has led to several critical setbacks such as restricted movement and training, facilities destroyed and young athletes now go to nearby states to train and compete for them. Sports require consistent outdoor practice. However, the risk of abduction on rural roads and lack of facilities have restricted training hours for young athletes who now prefer to compete for other states especially during the National Sports Festival, NSF. The biennial festival also tagged “Nigerian Olympic” is an elite sports competition that brings about talented sports men and women from across the country to compete for honours.
Ezeagu has produced notable athletes not just for the state but for the country, Nigeria. For instance, Miracle Ezechukwu, rising star in Nigerian athletics, a sprinter with a 200m personal best of 24.04s hails from the community. She represents Nigeria at continental an global sporting competitions
Ezeagu LGA participates actively in state-level competitions. For instance, more than 2,000 athletes from all 17 LGAs in Enugu (including Ezeagu) recently participated in the China Communications Construction Company (CCCC) Under-15 Youth Games to select representatives for the National Youth Games in 2024.
For instance, Chidera Obieze from Olo in Ezeagu competed for Rivers State during the 2024 Sports Festival in Ogun State winning two gold medals for her adopted state, this robbed her state Enugu and her community Ezeagu, of the honour and glory thereof.
A recurring debilitating situation in stifling sporting talents from Ezeagu community is parents becoming increasingly hesitant to allow children, particularly female students, to participate in extramural sports programmes due to safety concerns.
The insecurity and other times, communal crisis in Ezeagu often leads to the neglect of local stadiums and community pitches. When a region is considered a “security risk,” it fails to attract the private sector investment necessary for facility establishment and maintenance this, of course, rubs oil on the wheel of talents flights as skilled athletes from Ezeagu are migrating to urban centers or even abroad to find safer environments for training, leading to a “brain drain” of local athletic talents.
Many community-organized tournaments including local sporting events like wrestling, boxing, etc, in villages like Olo, UmunbaNdiagu among others, which serve as the primary scouting ground for talents, have been scaled back or cancelled to avoid gathering large crowds that could be targeted by the invaders or non-state actors
Sports — which often depend on schools and community institutions — are suffocated in the process.
Despite these challenges, there is a growing recognition that sports can actually be a tool for peace. For Ezeagu to reclaim its sporting glory, the restoration of security is not just a social necessity—it is the foundational requirement for the next generation of champions to emerge from the shadows of fear, tear, tears and agony.












