Cowboy-hat
wearing Wellington Jighere from Nigeria crushed his English opponent 4-0 at the
World Scrabble Championship in Australia to become first African to bag the
word game's global title.
Jighere, 32, was among more than 120
competitors who travelled to Perth for the World English-language Scrabble Players'
Association Championship, which culminated in Sunday's best-of-seven final
against England's Lewis Mackay.
"He had to battle for four days to
emerge on top but once he got there -- maybe he was a little fresher, or got a
bit of luck -- everything fell into place for him and he won four-nil,"
Adam Kretschmer, one of the organisers of the event, said of Jighere's
effort.
The Nigerian used such high-scoring
words as "fahlores", "avouched" and "mentored" as
he puzzled his way to victory.
"It is the first time that an
African has won in these world championships," Jighere told The Guardian
after the win.
But he conceded: "Nigel is still
the master. It just happens that today was my day."
It was a reference to New Zealander
Nigel Richards who dominates English-language Scrabble, with three world
championships, five North American titles and 11 wins at the prestigious King's
Cup in Thailand, sponsored by the Thai royal family.
Richards stunned the francophone world
in July when he also won the game's French version even though he doesn't speak
the language and only spent nine weeks studying the official Scrabble
dictionary.
A trained engineer, Richards reportedly
began playing Scrabble at 28 at the request of his mother, who was frustrated
that his photographic memory was making their card games too one-sided.
But he proved dazzling at the word game,
even though he favoured mathematics at school and was never much of an English
student.
A rival New Zealand Scrabbler once said
Richards was "like a computer with a big ginger beard", while
Malaysian tournament organiser Michael Tang has called him "the Tiger
Woods of Scrabble".
On Facebook, Jighere said the Perth
tournament -- in which each player had played 32 games over four days before
the finalists were decided -- had been exhausting.
"I really must endeavour to rest
now," he posted late Sunday.
"I've not slept well in about a
week. The fact that I was able to perform in spite of the sleeplessness still
baffles me. It only goes to prove that God was deeply involved in this
matter."
Nigeria's President Muhammadu Buhari
telephoned Jighere to congratulate him while the head of the Nigeria Scrabble
Federation, Suleiman Gora, described the victory as "the climax" for
him.
Nigeria had six slots for the tournament
and Gora said the players prepared hard at seven training camps.
AFP
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