Mohammed Umar Bago, Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede, and Dikko Umar Radda, Bolaji Agbede, Roosevelt Ogbonna
The lawns of Guards Polo Club in Windsor, England, have hosted some of the best polo matches for sport and to support important causes. On 12 July 2025, under sunny skies and the sound of clinking champagne glasses, a strong sense of purpose filled the air.
This occasion was the 10th annual Access Bank UK Charity Polo Day, a symbol of enduring vision where polo meets philanthropy, and where elite leadership puts its weight behind transformative causes.
As invited guests settled in, a parade of Nigeria’s most influential business leaders arrived, not in boardrooms, but in the stands, at one of the world’s most prestigious polo venues. Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede, Chairman of Access Holdings Plc; Bolaji Agbede, Acting Group CEO of Access Holdings; Roosevelt Ogbonna, Managing Director/CEO of Access Bank; and Jamie Simmonds, Managing Director of Access Bank UK, amongst other leaders of Access Group, took their seats beside world figures, diplomats, and philanthropists.
Their presence spoke volumes. This was not merely ceremonial attendance. It was a public commitment to the belief that corporate leadership must extend far beyond balance sheets.
Under a crisp British sky, Ogbonna’s words ran deep: “We believe that sustainable leadership in business must be matched by social responsibility.” There at Windsor, the mantra of success and impact converged in perfect harmony, an ethos echoed worldwide through partnerships with Fifth Chukker and UNICEF.
Over the past decade, Access Bank has funded the construction of 60 fully equipped classroom blocks and impacted on the lives of more than 14,000 children in Kaduna State alone. This year, funds raised pledged a second phase, another 60 classroom blocks underway.
What the Initiative Signifies
Aig-Imoukhuede underscored the strategic significance: “We have used polo at Guards as a platform that unites global changemakers around one common cause-investing in the future of Africa through education.” His words marked the union of sport, heritage, and legacy.
For Agbede, the message went further: “If we can build an ecosystem supporting children from basic education into economic empowerment, we are shaping entire communities.”
And Simmonds captured the bank’s broader mission: “This event reflects our vision to serve as a bridge between continents, connecting purpose with prosperity.” Education is not charity; it is strategy.
What began as a single school for 400 children has expanded into an educational network reaching 14,000 students and is planning to double again this year.
Onlookers at Windsor, England, may have seen lavish hospitality and polo prowess, but the real story was unfolding beneath the social veneer. The Access HNIs turned what might have been another social day into an intentional platform for education, accountability, and African development.
When Nigeria’s most respected business leaders show up for an afternoon of polo, they are sending a message: success carries responsibility. The event demonstrated that business acumen, when paired with generosity, can uplift entire generations.
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