Tag: Super Eagles

  • Visa hitch  disrupts Super Eagles preps for Lesotho, Benin

    Visa hitch  disrupts Super Eagles preps for Lesotho, Benin

    • Chelle, coach crew arrive
    • Training may be delayed   

    Super Eagles’ preparations  for their upcoming 2026 World Cup qualifiers against Lesotho and Benin has been hindered due to  visa issue.

    Seven newly invited players are  reportedly stranded without entry visas to South Africa, where Coach Eric Sekou Chelle and some of his technical staff are already present for this crucial assignment.

    The team’s training camp at The Ranch Hotel in Polokwane was scheduled to commence today, following its opening yesterday, but the absence of these players means full squad training will likely be delayed until the day before the match due to this organizational hiccup.

    “There’s a major organisational hiccup as it concerns entry visas to South Africa – at least seven players cannot be in that country before Wednesday because of this,” a top source reportedly told SCORENigeria. “It means there may not be full squad training until possibly a day to the match. This is catastrophic!”

    According to the  news outlet,  the majority of players from last month’s qualifiers were granted three-month multiple entry visas, the newly invited players and several recalled ones are experiencing complications.

    But our correspondent  gathered last night  that only three players might be significantly affected. However, the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) is reportedly addressing the situation to ensure the affected players can join the squad in time.

    Read Also: Osimhen celebrates daughter’s third birthday

    Among the notable names in the 23-man squad announced by Chelle are Galatasaray striker Victor Osimhen, who returns after injury, as well as prominent players like Alex Iwobi and William Troost-Ekong. Additionally, Sevilla star Akor Adams is set to make his senior debut for the national team.

    Currently, Nigeria occupies the third position in Group C, with 11 points, trailing behind leaders Benin Republic and South Africa. The Super Eagles are hopeful of securing an automatic qualification spot, particularly following FIFA’s recent penalties against South Africa for fielding an ineligible player against Lesotho.

    SUPER EAGLES’ SQUAD FOR LESOTHO, BENIN:

    Goalkeepers: Stanley Nwabali (Chippa United, South Africa), Amas Obasogie (Singida Blackstars, Tanzania), Adebayo Adeleye (Volos FC, Greece)

    Defenders: William Troost-Ekong (Al-Kholood, Saudi Arabia), Calvin Bassey (Fulham, England), Semi Ajayi (Hull City, England), Bright Osayi-Samuel (Birmingham City, England), Bruno Onyemaechi (Olympiakos, Greece), Felix Agu (Werder Bremen, Germany), Benjamin Fredrick (Dender, Belgium)

    Midfielders: Alex Iwobi (Fulham, England), Frank Onyeka (Brentford, England), Alhassan Yusuf (New England Revolution, USA), Wilfred Ndidi (Besiktas, Turkey)

    Forwards: Ademola Lookman (Atalanta, Italy), Samuel Chukwueze (Fulham, England), Victor Osimhen (Galatasaray, Turkey), Moses Simon (Paris FC, France), C Tolu Arokodare (Wolves, England), Terem Moffi (OGC Nice, France), Akor Adams (Sevilla, Spain), Olakunle Olusegun (Pari Nizhny Novgorod, Russia)

  • World Cup 2026 Race: Super Eagles offered lifeline amid ‘ides of October’

    World Cup 2026 Race: Super Eagles offered lifeline amid ‘ides of October’

    Monday’s FIFA  hammer on South Africa has  seemingly blown the  African Qualifications’ Group C of the 2026 World Cup qualifiers wide open with the docking of three points off the  Bafana Bafana offering third-placed Nigeria  and other contenders a lifeline. While the ruling revives hope, it also comes with a Herculean task for the Super Eagles  who must at least  win their upcoming two matches to have any realistic chance of either over-hauling both Benin and South Africa for the automatic ticket for the first team or finish in second place  to be able to access the play-off window for the four best losers across the nine qualifying groups.  As it was in the old  Roman empire and so it’s for the Super Eagles as they face their own ‘ides of October’ in the race for a ticket to the 2026 Mundial, writes TUNDE LIADI

    When FIFA slammed South Africa with a three-point deduction for fielding an ineligible player, Group C of the 2026 FIFA World Cup African qualifiers was suddenly thrown wide open. The sanction, which overturned Bafana Bafana’s 2–0 win over Lesotho into a 3–0 defeat, means Nigeria’s Super Eagles are back in contention.

    Nigeria, languishing in third place, now find themselves just three points behind leaders Benin and South Africa, with two games left to play. On paper, FIFA’s helping hand offers renewed hope. Yet  it is a herculean task before the Super Eagles if they are desirous of making the World Cup party after missing out  at the 2022 edition held in oil-rich Qatar.

    In fact, for most football Stakeholders,  the Super Eagles  must seize chance and gird their loins in the upcoming  contests  when they play away to  Lesotho on October 10th before concluding the race in Uyo on October 14th .

     “My concern is not Benin or South Africa but we should watch out for Lesotho and Rwanda behind us,”  former Nigeria midfielder Friday Ekpo noted in an interview on a Lagos-based Sports radio station, Brila Fm. “Nigeria not being able to win back-to-back games is a big worry.

    “We need to sit back, rethink our strategy and ensure we pick up six points from our remaining fixtures. While we are busy calculating, other teams are simply focused on winning their matches.”

    Ekpo’s sentiments  were echoed by former Flying Eagles winger Dimeji Lawal who urged for caution rather than  celebration of the misfortune that had just befell South Africa in the race to the 2026 Mundial, adding the  approach of the Super Eagles in recent times does not inspired any confidence.

     “I don’t get excited about the sanction of South Africa. One thing is to get three points taken away from them, another is for us to win our remaining games. That’s the real test,” Lawal said matter-of-factly. “The bottom line is: can we win the last two games?”

    Former left-back Ifeanyi Udeze was more direct insisting that the Super Eagles players must be made aware of the essence of what it means to play at the FIFA World Cup while adding that the awareness of this would help the Nigerian team to know how to plan for both games:

     “Both games are must-win. The players must know their lives depend on it. Even after we win, we still need South Africa to drop points. This is not a time for complacency,” he averred.

    Equally, the 1996  Atlanta Olympic  football gold medallist , Abiodun Obafemi, was even sterner in his outlook stating that the present crop of players may miss the chance to go to the World Cup if they throw this new lifeline away.

     “FIFA has given us a lifeline. If we miss this chance, this generation should forget about the World Cup. Too often, we expect our boys to rise up and they disappoint. This is a lifetime opportunity, and for many of them, it might be their last shot.”

    But for erstwhile youth international Taiwo Enegwea  who is  currently attached as an assistant coach at Heartland Football Club of Owerri,  the Super Eagles must not only win  their forthcoming two matches but they must  win with probably with cricket margins, adding that goal difference could  be the decider if all the contending teams cancelled themselves out as being speculated.

    “We must do everything humanly possible to win the last two games, especially against Benin. A good win against them may bridge the gap. We must score goals and not just settle for slim wins,” Enegwea noted.

    Enegwa’s  coaching colleague at Heartland  and former  U20 goalkeeper, Emeka Amadi,  described the sanction against South Africa  as a “morale booster” for the Super  Eagles, adding they must be on top of the two games to boost their chances of making it to the 2026 FIFA World Cup to be jointly co-hosted by USA, Canada and Mexico.

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    “It’s good news, but the important thing is to win with good goals. Goals difference may count. We still have a chance but we must take it now,” noted Amadi, a two FIFA U-17 World Cup winner as the goalkeepers’ trainer to the Golden Eaglets class of 2013 and 2015.

    Additionally, George  Aluo, a board member of the NFF agreed that  three points  taken off South Africa should be morale booster for the Super Eagles to fight to the finishing point.

     “The decision by FIFA  has  thrown  the group wide open,”  Aluo who doubles as the Chairman of the Nigeria national League (NNL), told NationSport, adding the Amavubi of Rwanda  who are currently in fourth position can be regarded as the dark horses in the race for the Group C ticket.  “ Now , it is possible for Nigeria, Rwanda and South Africa to finish on 17 points(at the end of the qualifiers) .

     “All eyes will be on what happens between Rwanda and Benin.

     “Should Rwanda win that game and we beat Lesotho, then anything, just anything can happen at the end of the race. All the four countries Nigeria, South Africa, Benin and Rwanda are all very much in contention and I know Rwanda will fight to the end against South Africa should they beat Benin at home.”

    Despite all the positives indices, Nigerian football  historian and diarist, Kunle Solaja, has yet  urged the rank  and file of the Super Eagles to take lessons from history.

    He reckoned that Nigeria’s football history is littered with reminders of the dangers of administrative or technical errors which befell South Africa, warning that attention must also be paid to details as the Super Eagles approach the double header this month.

    He noted: “In 1984, Shooting Stars were rocked before the second leg of the CAF Champions Cup final against Zamalek when Felix Owolabi was ruled ineligible due to accumulated yellow cards. Disorganized and demoralized, the Ibadan side lost 2–0 in Cairo and 3–0 on aggregate, missing out on Nigeria’s first Champions Cup title.

    “In 2018, during the Russia World Cup qualifiers, FIFA awarded Algeria a 3–0 win after Nigeria fielded Shehu Abdullahi despite his suspension. Though Nigeria had already qualified, the embarrassment highlighted NFF’s administrative lapses.”

    He argued with clear warning : discipline and paperwork matter as much as performance on the pitch.

    “The Super Eagles now walk a fine line. Twelve players are sitting on yellow cards, including Wilfred Ndidi, Alex Iwobi, Semi Ajayi, Ademola Lookman, and goalkeeper Stanley Nwabali. Any additional bookings could rule them out of the decisive final match against Benin Republic in Uyo,” he explained.

    South Africa’s costly mistake has opened the door, but walking through it depends entirely on Nigeria. The Super Eagles face Lesotho away on October 10 before hosting Benin Republic in Uyo on October 14.

    Victory in both matches is non-negotiable. Discipline, tactical sharpness, and ruthless finishing will define whether the lifeline leads to redemption or regret.

    As Obafemi bluntly put it: “If we don’t take this chance, forget about the World Cup.”

    For Eric Sekou Chelle’s men and the Nigeria Football Federation, the FIFA lifeline is a reminder that fortune only favours the prepared. This time, Nigeria cannot afford to learn the hard way.

  • Super Eagles trio suffers defeat in Europa League

    Super Eagles trio suffers defeat in Europa League

    Kelechi Iheanacho was available for the duration of Celtic’s Europa League tie with SC Braga of Portugal but he couldn’t do much as his Scottish side were beaten 2-0 at home.

    Celtic had begun the group stage with a 1-1 draw with Red Star Belgrade a fortnight ago but Braga proved to be too hot for them.

    Iheanacho scored in the first  game with Red Star Belgrade but he failed to hit target.

    Read Also: Jalla kicks over undue  FIFA ‘s intervention in NFF’s electoral process

    In another game, Fenerbahce beat OGC Nice 2-1 with the Super Eagles attacker, Terem Moffi entering the fray in the 59th minute

    Also, Super Eagles striker, Cyriel Dessers was not listed for Panathinaikos in their 2-1 home loss to Go Ahead Eagles.

    Dessers played the final 20 minutes of their last 4-1 away win at Young Boys but he was not listed for the game because of an ankle complaint.

  • Ekpo fears  Super Eagles’ 2026  World Cup chances

    Ekpo fears  Super Eagles’ 2026  World Cup chances

    By Daniel Oyekan

    Ahead of this month’s decisive  2026 FIFA World Cup qualifiers, former International  midfielder, Friday Ekpo,  has raised serious concerns about the capability of the Super Eagles  to ride their luck  in the upcoming matches against Lesotho and  Benin.

    Nigeria lie in third position  with 11 points  behind both  Benin  and South Africa on 14 points in the

    Group C of  Africa Qualifications  for  FIFA World Cup 2026 after FIFA  docked three  points from  Bafana Bafana  for fielding an ineligible player  in their previous match against Lesotho .

    Speaking on the development, Ekpo believes the group remains wide open but warned that the Super Eagles must win their next  two matches  to have a realistic chances of booking  a ticket to the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

    Read Also: Ballon d’Or: NFF congratulates Nnadozie, Madugu

     “My concern is not Benin or South Africa. We should watch out for Lesotho and Rwanda behind us,” Ekpo, who represented Nigeria between 1989 and 1993, said in an interview aired on Brila Fm.

    He  pointed out that South Africa remain a strong threat  despite recent  points deduction by FIFA, adding the Super Eagles must in the qualifiers,

    “The situation is very critical,” he said. “Nigeria not being able to win back-to-back games is a big worry. We need to sit back, rethink our strategy and ensure we pick up six points from our remaining fixtures. While we are busy calculating, other teams are simply focused on winning their matches.”

    The Super Eagles will be away to Lesotho on October 10 while the coach Eric Sekou Chelle-led  side  hosts neighbouring   Benin Republic on October 14 in Uyo.

    However, the Super Eagles will have to make do without key players Ola Aina, Fisayo Dele-Bashiru and Cyril Dessers who are all sidelined with injuries.

  • World Cup 26: Lawal dares Eagles to win remaining games amid S/Africa sanction

    World Cup 26: Lawal dares Eagles to win remaining games amid S/Africa sanction

    • By Victor Oguntade

     Former Nigerian international, Dimeji Lawal, has cautioned the Super Eagles not to get carried away by FIFA’s sanction against South Africa, stressing that the real challenge lies in their capability  to win  their remaining qualifiers against Lesotho and Benin.

    The world soccer ruling body, FIFA,  on Monday docked South Africa three points and overturned their  previous 2-0 victory over Lesotho after fielding ineligible midfielder Teboho Mokoena in a preliminary qualifier on March 21, 2025. The disciplinary ruling awarded Lesotho a 3-0 win, while South Africa was fined CHF 10,000. Mokoena also received a formal warning from football’s governing body.

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    Speaking on the development, Lawal acknowledged the significance of the ruling but insisted that Nigeria’s qualification hopes depend on the Super Eagles’ performances in their last two fixtures.

    “I don’t get excited about the sanction of South Africa  because one thing is to get three points taken away from South Africa. Another thing is for us to be able to win our remaining games,” Lawal posited. “The bottom line is: can we win the last two games?

    “That’s the question and this is the crucial part of it. I’m not so excited about removing South Africa’s points. What I am looking forward to is how we can prepare ourselves in a manner that we can  win the next two games.”

    Lawal, who represented Nigeria at both youth and senior levels before moving abroad to play in Spain, Belgium, and South Africa, emphasized that FIFA’s decision was expected given their long-standing stance on player eligibility.

    “They won’t bend their rules at that level. They will not like to undermine their own regulations. So for sure when South Africa made that mistake, I knew they were going to forfeit the three points and three goals,” he added.

  • NFF confirms Super Eagles friendlies in US

    NFF confirms Super Eagles friendlies in US

    The Nigeria Football Federation  has  confirmed  that the senior men national team, Super Eagles, will take on Venezuela and Colombia in the United States of America during the FIFA window for international friendly matches in the month of November 2025.

    NFF’s FIFA Match Agent, Jairo Pachon of Eurodata Sport, said the Super Eagles will be up against Venezuela on Friday, 14th November 2025 at the Shell Stadium in Houston, Texas, with kick-off billed for 8pm Texas time.

    On Tuesday, 18th  November 2025, the three-time African champions will confront the Los Cafeteros of Colombia at the Citi Field Stadium in Flushing Meadows, borough of Queens, New York with kick-off billed for 8pm Eastern Time (1am Wednesday, 19th November in Nigeria).

    Read Also: Aiyegbeni, Oshaniwa berate NFF for blaming  Ekong, Dessers for Super Eagles’ woes 

    In their last sojourn in the United States of America, in the summer of 2022, the Super Eagles played against Mexico at the AT&T Stadium in Dallas, Texas, losing narrowly 1-2, with Nigeria’s goal coming off a powerful header by Cyriel Dessers. It was the first match in charge for Portuguese Coach José Peseiro.

    The Eagles also took on Ecuador’s La Tricolor in New Jersey, losing by the odd goal.

  • Super Eagles: story, story…

    Super Eagles: story, story…

    I broke the story of Eric Chelle‘s appointment as Nigeria’s next Head Coach two weeks before it was made public. I knew he wouldn’t rescue our 2026 World Cup quest because those responsible for our precarious outing so far were also the brains behind his recruitment. I thought we would have truly gone for a grade A manager, and tell Nigerians that his recruitment was to reinvent the team, not to salvage our World Cup from its abyss. It would have made a lot of sense if those who brought Chelle had left him where they found him after his voyage in Mali didn’t lead the Malians anywhere.

    A grade A manager wouldn’t have been assuring us of the World Cup ticket. It would be apparent to everyone that he is rebuilding the team with every game the Super Eagles play. The grade A manager would introduce new players whose contributions would excite Nigerians during matches.

    Yes, I wrote off Chelle after the CHAN Eagles’ shambolic outing, one of which was Sudan beating Nigeria 4-0. Our team was clueless. It lacked character. Most of the players failed the basic test of trapping the ball, just as they could hardly string together six passes progressively. How can Sudan beat Nigeria using a Ghanaian coach, with due respect to the Sudanese? It is absolutely unacceptable for an age group that is awash with boys playing on grounds and streets all over the 774 Local Government Areas (LGAs) in Nigeria. All you will need to do to attract people’s attention is to bounce a brand new ball on any empty school field and see the number of people who would rush out eager to play the beautiful game.

    Drive around the country during election days, public holidays, environmental days, and see what kids and adults do on the streets playing football after voting. The CHAN age group category is where the nursery of our football resides. How do you keep a coach who couldn’t qualify out of the group stage of an age-group tourney? It is like asking an adult without a primary school certificate to teach medicine in the university because of his physique? Need I name Nigerian coaches who got to the finals of CHAN in their first attempt, though some others were awful. They were like the last group that won one group stage game?

    Had Chelle been a clever coach, then he ought to have whispered into his employer’s ears to allow the Nigerian coaches who qualified the team for the CHAN competition to complete the job and not steal their thunder. Having worked with coaches at the Super Eagles, Chelle ought to have had enough confidence to allow our coaches do the job, even if our federation’s chieftains insisted. At best Chelle should have stood his ground. He didn’t. He chose to write the rule over the Nigerian coaches. Pity.

    This is the reason we are always in Europe searching for Nigeria-born boys and girls for our national teams. However, Chelle gets my applause for introducing Benjamin Fredrick ahead of Troost Ekong in the last game in Uyo, which Nigeria won 1-0. I was, however, taken aback that Ekong started the away game against Bafana Bafana in South Africa on September 9. I had also thought that Chelle would have started his second-half team in Uyo in the next away game against  South Africa, especially with the way Tolu Arokodare played.

    Nigeria lost the best chance to beat a seemingly frightened Bafana Bafana side when Chelle didn’t stick to his winning team. The tales that he was forced to play Ekong by some people or senior members of the squad are laughable and show the quality of the coach he is. Again, we need to ask Chelle who stopped Arokodare from starting the September 9 clash against Bafana Bafana in South Africa. We need to know the other details ahead of a post-mortem. We also need to know how well or how badly Super Eagles prosecuted Nigeria’s 2026 World Cup qualifiers.

    Speaking on Nigeria’s recent qualifier against South Africa, former Nigeria international, Jonathan Akpoborie questioned the planning and logistics.

    “We played our game on a Saturday, why not on Friday? South Africa played on Friday and were already waiting for us at home. We had to travel on Sunday, then trained just once on Monday, and played on Tuesday. That’s not preparation.”

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    He dismissed complaints about the quality of the pitch in Bloemfontein: “It’s not about the field. South Africa took us to the hottest part of their Country because they know our boys play in Europe and can’t cope with the heat.

    “When we were playing, if we had a game in Zambia, we’d camp in Kenya for 10 days to adjust to the climate. What’s missing now is proper planning. These are all management issues,” Akpoborie waxed lyrically.

    May I humbly ask Akpoborie, whose duties it is to prepare the team’s plans for competitions and insist on its full implementation? Clemens Westerhoff, Johannes Bonfrere, White Witch doctor, Phillipe Troussier chose their different camping sites, with Troussier opting for Sol Beni. Westerhof made Papendal, the Netherlands, the Super Eagles’ abode in preparation for the 1994 FIFA World Cup. Papendal was Nigeria’s magical hub during his reign as the country’s Head Coach.

    Players competed for first team shirts because the parameters for picking the final 22-man list for the Mundial in 1994, were known through the rulebook. Of course, Westerhof held court in Papendal and kept his employers at arm’s length when in camp. The hallmark of good tacticians is their strength of character that drives everything they do. What drives Chelle to succeed isn’t enough to lead Nigeria to the Promised Land. Coaching Nigeria isn’t one for lilliputian managers. Most Nigerians are ‘fantastic’ coaches. To stop their tantrums, the Super Eagles’ outings must show signs of improvement. The present crop of players are lucky that Nigeria no longer plays soccer matches in Lagos. Otherwise, they would have been served the wrath of the fans in matches where their outings were awful. They got a dose of the fans’ angst after Nigeria led Sierra Leone 4-0 at half-time, only to finish the game at 4-4 inside the late Samuel Osaigbovo Ogbemudia Stadium complex in Benin City. It took the effective security architecture set up by the Edo Government and the alertness of the Nigeria Police Force to evacuate the players, coaches, and officials out of the stadium unhurt.

    One isn’t an advocate of crowd violence, but our players’ lifeless performance over time needs that kind of wakeup call for them to play with zest and determination. Nigeria has lost the fear factor associated with the Super Eagles before matches, such that minnows in African football come to Uyo to mesmerise the Super Eagles during games with Nigerians watching in trepidation. We need to use the October games to reconfigure the Super Eagles with our target being to lift the Africa Cup of Nations diadem in Morocco in December. It is doable, but not with the people ruining our sports.

     If we organise ourselves and run our soccer in a transparent, business-minded way, it will thrive enough to attract juicy corporate sponsorships. Then those firms whose sponsorship offers don’t hit the mark with soccer, could be enticed to sponsor other sports such as basketball, athletics, badminton, tennis, table tennis, to mention a few, which are also money spinners in other climes.

  • Super Eagles drop out of Africa’s  Top 5 teams 

    Super Eagles drop out of Africa’s  Top 5 teams 

    • Slide to 45th in FIFA Rankings

    Nigeria’s Super Eagles have fallen to 45th  position  in the latest FIFA world rankings released yesterday as the coach Eric Sekou Chelle-led side slipped  out of the top five teams in Africa.

    The three-time African champions have struggled to find consistency in recent outings. After edging Rwanda 1–0 in Uyo, the team was held to a 1–1 draw by South Africa in Bloemfontein. 

    The results offered little respite, doing nothing to improve their global standing or their precarious position in the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifying race.

    Nigeria now sit third in their qualifying group, six points behind leaders South Africa and three adrift of second-placed Benin, leaving their World Cup hopes hanging in the balance.

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    On the continental front, the Super Eagles have dropped to sixth place in Africa. Morocco remain the continent’s top-ranked side at 11th globally, followed by Senegal (18th ), Egypt (35th ), Algeria (38th ), and Cote d’Ivoire  (44th ), all ahead of Nigeria.

    Globally, Spain reclaimed the No. 1 spot, with France rising to second and world champions Argentina slipping to third. England and Portugal round out the top five, while Brazil sit sixth.

    Elsewhere, Slovakia were the biggest movers upward, while Zimbabwe suffered the steepest fall, dropping nine places to 125th .

    FIFA confirmed that the next rankings will be published on October 23 after Nigeria’s crunch qualifiers against Lesotho and Benin.

  • Scoring in today’s Super Eagles would be a struggle for me – Aiyegbeni

    Scoring in today’s Super Eagles would be a struggle for me – Aiyegbeni

    Former Super Eagles striker Yakubu Aiyegbeni has admitted that even he would find it difficult to score goals in the current Nigerian national team, pointing to a lack of creativity and supply from midfield as a major concern.

    Speaking as a guest on a YouTube podcast hosted by ex-teammate and Nigerian football legend Sunday Oliseh, the former Everton and Portsmouth forward expressed concern over the team’s attacking struggles, noting that the Super Eagles’ inability to consistently create chances is a key reason for their recent dip in form.

     “When we look at the team, we have too many defensive midfielders,” Aiyegbeni said while commenting on the team’s struggles in the ongoing 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifiers.

    “We don’t have a creative midfielder. If I play in this team, I’ll struggle to score goals. I’m telling you because when you look at Osimhen when he plays, he’s fighting because he knows already.

    “We don’t have a midfielder who can pass the ball. We always pass the ball sideways. We cannot string six passes or seven passes. When we pass the ball a bit, then we kick it long. We cannot build a team like this.”

    With eight matches played in Group C of the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifiers, Nigeria’s Super Eagles find themselves in a tight race — but their lack of firepower in front of goal remains a growing concern.

    So far, the Eagles have scored just nine goals and conceded seven, leaving them with a goal difference of +2 — a figure that pales in comparison to their main group rivals.

    Read Also: Aiyegbeni counsels Lookman amid Atalanta transfer row

    Group leaders South Africa (Bafana Bafana) have been more clinical, netting 14 goals and conceding six, with a healthy +8 goal difference. Benin Republic’s Cheetahs, currently second in the group, have scored 11 and conceded seven, giving them a +4 difference.

    For Nigeria, the only match in which they managed to score more than once was their 2-0 win over Rwanda in March — a game that saw Victor Osimhen bag a decisive brace.

    As the qualifiers enter a critical phase, the Super Eagles will need to rediscover their attacking edge, especially with key fixtures against Lesotho and Benin Republic scheduled for October. Those matches could prove decisive in determining who secures the group’s sole World Cup ticket.

    If Nigeria hopes to book a place at the 2026 World Cup, they’ll need to not only win, but win convincingly.

  • ‘Nothing super about Super Eagles’

    ‘Nothing super about Super Eagles’

    South African football powerbroker Natasha Tsichlas has taken a swipe at Nigeria’s Super Eagles after their laboured 1-1 draw with Bafana Bafana in Bloemfontein on Tuesday night, Soccernet.ng reports.

    Nigeria went into the game needing victory to revive their stuttering World Cup qualifying hopes but were instead left frustrated.

    William Troost-Ekong’s own goal handed South Africa the lead, before Calvin Bassey rescued a point with his first-ever international goal for Nigeria.

    The draw preserved Nigeria’s unbeaten away record against Bafana Bafana, but Tsichlas, a former Mamelodi Sundowns chief and now vice-president of the South African Football Association, argued that the aura once surrounding the Super Eagles has long disappeared.

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    “With all due respect, there’s nothing ‘super’ about the Super Eagles anymore. I remember the years when they were truly ‘super’ while playing against Bafana,” Tsichlas told KickOff.

    She was quick to highlight South Africa’s fluid attacking play in the first half as proof of their resurgence.

    “If you look at how Bafana played, especially in the first half, it was fantastic. The passing, the skills, and the moves were unbelievable. They didn’t even look when they passed to each other. It reminded me of the beautiful football we used to play. I really enjoyed that game,” she said.