Sam Henshaw Ibiam, popularly known as “The Black Magnet” during his playing days, was a Nigerian footballer who played as a goalkeeper for the pioneer Nigerian national football team, who were regarded as the 1949 UK Tourists.
Ibiam, born in Ebonyi on April 4, 1925, came to the limelight after featuring for the Port Harcourt XI team that got to the semi-finals of the old Governor’s Cup from 1947 to 1949.

His heroics led to his call-up to represent Nigeria in the tour of the United Kingdom in 1949.
Sam Henshaw Ibiam: Nigeria’s First Goalkeeper
The 24-year-old, also known as The Cat, alongside 17 other players, boarded the RMS Apapa for Nigeria’s first venture abroad on August 16, 1949. He was Nigeria’s goalkeeper from the country’s first international match against Sierra Leone on October 8, 1949. Nigeria won the match 2-0, Ibiam’s first proper international cap, where he kept a clean sheet by failing to concede.
He did not play in Nigeria’s next international game two years later when the Jalco Cup competition was introduced between Nigeria and the Gold Coast (now Ghana).
However, Ibiam returned to the national team in a 1-0 defeat of Togo in a friendly match on October 6, 1956. He still kept a clean sheet. His next match was against Gold Coast in the annual Jalco Cup competition, where Nigeria won 3-0: another clean sheet for the shot-stopper.

The Black Magnet
Sam Henshaw Ibiam had a unique goalkeeping record. He did not concede a single goal in eight of the nine years he played for the Red Devils of Nigeria, and in all his nine years with the team, he conceded just five goals, which he did against one team, the Black Stars of Ghana.
Ibiam conceded his first international goal in eight years when Nigeria drew 3-3 with Ghana in an October 27, 1957, match in Accra, the capital of Ghana. Remarkably, that was the first time Ghana failed to win Nigeria in their home city of Accra. The following year, Sam Henshaw Ibiam had his last international appearance when Nigeria beat Ghana 3-2 in Lagos to win the Jalco Cup for the last time.
Consequently, the famed Black Magnet retired from international football in 1958.
Later Years
However, Sam Henshaw Ibiam continued in club football when he joined the Onitsha Redoubtable, a club put together by Justice Chuba Ikpeazu, who later became the Nigeria Football Association (NFA) chairman in 1965/66 and 1988/89.
In recognition of his achievements, Sam Henshaw Ibiam was awarded a trophy at the First National Sports Award for Sports Heroes and Heroines of Yesteryear in 1987.
Neglect and Death
Ibiam died on December 2, 2015, at his home in Unwana, Afikpo, Ebonyi State, Nigeria, after a protracted illness. Though he suffered neglect in his last years, he lived to be 90 years old.
Sadly, officials of Nigeria’s Sports Ministry and the Nigerian Football Federation (NFF) were not present, and they also failed to send representatives during the burial of Sam Henshaw Ibiam, the Black Magnet, Nigeria’s very first goalkeeper, in April 2016.
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Ibiam goalkeeper was my late uncle he was not recognised by the Nigerian NFA till after 2015 when he was close too 80 years old our government of Nigerian don’t recognise great men till when they are very old or dead also like my late father Elder E I O ibiam ACP Rtd was the longest serving police officer in Nigeria from 1942-1983 till now the Nigerian police authority has never remembered him for once this is too bad