Survival the name of game for Gabon's pros


'Treated like dirt'
"I'm lucky to have another job besides football, but when I think of my teammates... they're treated like dirt."
"These are guys for whom people lack respect, who don't have enough money to eat or buy clothes, who have to grovel for 1,500 CFA francs to get a taxi home," says Gamamba angrily.
"Before COVID, most footballers lived in extreme financial insecurity. Now it's chaos," says Remi Ebanega, president of the Professional Football Players' Association of Gabon (ANFPG).
The problems have a long history.
In 2018, the association found that players were paid on average two months out of 12 for a total income of about 100,000 CFA francs ($183). For years, a lack of funds has inflicted long disruptions on Gabon's professional championship.
In the 2018-19 season, in a last-ditch effort, games were organized in a pool format with playoffs over two to three months.
But with the arrival of the coronavirus in March 2020, all professional sports competitions ground to a halt and players stopped receiving any income.
The ANFPG has asked the government and the country's soccer federation to start games up again-or at least to provide aid to the country's 700 or so professional players.
"We hope to start playing again while respecting health measures," the president of the Gabonese Football Federation (FEGAFOOT), Pierre Alain Mounguengui, told AFP.
But Mounguengui insists the conditions for resumption will have to be an improvement on the past.
Clubs failed to respect players' contracts, he says, for a variety of reasons-"lack of sponsorship because it's a small market, lack of an interesting competition and no support from fans."
"Then there's the delay in paying state subsidies-which, unfortunately, make up the majority of clubs' budgets."
The ANFPG is now shifting its focus to helping players retrain in new careers. "But most players have no (professional) training-they quit studying after primary school," says Ebanega.
Food bank
With the help of global players' union FIFPRO, the ANFPG has created a food bank.
Eight players each month can get a kit containing about 30,000 CFA francs worth of rice, canned goods, oil and other products.
Chicco Sassou, 32, shows up to get one on Wednesday.
"It's going to help me get by for the next three weeks," he says softly.
In spite of the uncertainty, Sassou believes in his dream.
During the week he does physical training and on weekends he plays amateur games with neighborhood teams.
"It's not the same level but you have to keep in shape," he says.
Sometimes he comes away with a small donation from his "big brothers"-20,000 to 30,000 CFA francs-a welcome boost to help feed his girlfriend and child.
"I am trying to reach out to other former players to find out if there are opportunities, gigs I can do to make a little money," he says.
"The only way to make a living from football would be to leave here."
AFP
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