Tuesday, January 27, 2026 - Kingsley Ughelumba, the father of Super Eagles and Fulham defender Calvin Bassey has made another public and emotional appeal for reconciliation with his son and his other children after nearly 18 years of separation.
Two years ago, Bassey’s father had publicly spoken about
being estranged from his children. He has made yet another tearful appeal,
saying he is “dying in silence” and desperately hoping for a chance to
reconcile.
Ughelumba, who hails from Ihiala Local Government Area
in Anambra State, explained that his first three sons, Elvis, Mathew, and
Calvin, were born in Italy, while the youngest, Michael, was born in Ireland.
According to him, the family lived together briefly in
London before marital issues led to their separation.
“We had husband-and-wife arguments. I went to work, and
before I returned, she had left with the children,” Ughelumba said in an
interview cited in Punch.
“She only reached out in 2017 when my children needed
Nigerian passports. I sent all my documents and bought all their flight
tickets. When they stayed with me then, I never told them their mum did
anything to me. She has muted me since he signed for a football club.”
Despite that brief contact, he says the relationship fell
apart again, and he has since been unable to see or communicate freely with his
children. “I have not seen my children for a long time,” Ughelumba said
emotionally.
A heartbroken Ughelumba also recounted several failed
attempts to reconnect with his children since 2020.
“I have not seen my children for a long time,” he said.
“During COVID in 2020, I drove all the way from London to
Leicester when Calvin was playing there. I wasn’t looking for him because he
was a footballer; I wanted to see my first son, but I didn’t have access
because their mother had changed everything. I didn’t have their numbers or
anything.”
“When I got to Leicester City, the club welcomed me and
called Calvin. There was a name I used to call him when he was small ‘Biggy’.
When they called him that, he responded immediately.”
“I spoke to him and he gave me an address. When I got there
and he saw me, he called his mum and afterwards he changed. He got upset and
told me to say whatever I wanted to say and leave. He said he didn’t want to
see me again and drove off.”
Ughelumba further revealed that he travelled from
Italy to Abidjan during the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations to try once more to see
his son.
“During Nigeria vs Angola, a journalist helped link me with
the football federation. They gave me tickets and I watched the match. After
that, I went to Abuja to try again, but I still didn’t see him,” he said.
“Since then, I have been dying in silence. I don’t have any
problems with my children—it’s just their mum that made me feel bad. Even if I
am a devil, I can’t be a devil where my children are.”
In July 2022, he joined Dutch side Ajax in a deal worth
€23m, the highest transfer fee in Rangers’ history at the time. A year later,
he signed for English Premier League club Fulham for €22m.
The 26-year-old made his Nigeria debut in March 2022 during
the 2022 World Cup play-off against Ghana and has since earned 43 caps,
establishing himself as a dependable defender at the last two Africa Cup of
Nations tournaments.
Before breaking into senior football, Bassey was often
listed under his father’s surname, Ughelumba, in team sheets. However, as his
career progressed, he adopted his mother’s surname and has consistently
credited her for supporting his journey.
“He’s just not in my life — we lived with him, but that was
when I was really young,” Bassey once said when asked about his father.
“Since I was six, it has been mum and us boys. I knew that
if I got the chance to put my name on the back of a shirt, I wanted it to be my
mum’s name—my way of saying thank you.”

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