Tag: Terem Moffi

  • Porto enter race for wantaway Terem  Moffi

    Porto enter race for wantaway Terem  Moffi

    Portuguese giants FC Porto have reportedly entered the race for Nigerian forward Terem Moffi as he seeks an exit from Ligue 1 side Nice.

    Moffi has not featured for Nice in recent months following an incident involving club supporters, and his attempt to terminate his contract was unsuccessful.

    While Nice remain open to reintegrating the striker, Moffi has made it clear that he wants to leave during the January transfer window.

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    Turkish club Besiktas have also been linked with the 24-year-old after his representatives offered him to the club. However, reports from Portugal suggest Porto have now emerged as his preferred destination.

    Any deal will depend on meeting Nice’s €10 million valuation, with negotiations expected to intensify in the coming weeks.

  • Moffi  gets  new trainer as Puel takes charge at Nice

    Moffi  gets  new trainer as Puel takes charge at Nice

    OGC Nice’s decision to appoint Claude Puel as head coach could mark a turning point for Super Eagles attacker, Terem Moffi, whose difficult campaign has mirrored the club’s recent instability.

    Puel replaces Franck Haise following a mutual termination of contract, ending weeks of uncertainty that had hovered over the Allianz Riviera. For Moffi, who has struggled for form, confidence and consistent minutes this season, the managerial change represents an opportunity for renewal rather than another setback.

    Under Haise, Nice endured a turbulent period marked by inconsistent results, internal restructuring and off-field tension, factors that often trickle down to affect attacking players most.

    Moffi, once one of Ligue 1’s most feared forwards, found himself isolated in games, short of service and frequently rotated, making it difficult to rediscover the ruthless edge that defined his earlier spell in France.

    Claude Puel’s return to Nice—his second stint at the club after managing them between 2012 and 2016—offers a different tactical and psychological environment.

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    Known for his structured approach and emphasis on discipline, Puel has a track record of rebuilding confidence in struggling players and restoring balance to unsettled squads.

    For Moffi, the timing could hardly be more crucial. With international expectations still high and his standing in the Super Eagles under scrutiny, a productive second half of the season is essential. Puel’s system traditionally values intelligent movement, positional awareness and work rate from his forwards—qualities Moffi possesses when fully fit and mentally sharp.

    The appointment of Julien Sablé as assistant further signals a hands-on technical reset at Nice, one that could see underperforming players reassessed on merit rather than reputation. For Moffi, that clean slate may be exactly what is required to reignite his season.

    As Nice look to stabilise their campaign, all eyes will be on how Puel re-integrates his attacking options. For Terem Moffi, this change of guard could be the defining chapter of his season—either a revival or a final test of resilience at the top level.

  • Moffi celebrates Super Eagles recall with first goal of season

    Moffi celebrates Super Eagles recall with first goal of season

    Terem Moffi scored his first goal of the new Ligue 1 season to celebrate his call-up to the Super Eagles after a long absence.

    Moffi came off the bench to score for Nice to beat Auxerre 3-1.

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    The striker lost most of last season to ACL injury soon after he was part of the Super Eagles squad to the delayed 2023 AFCON.

    Fellow Super Eagles star Gabriel Osho featured for Auxerre.

  • Moffi reflects on one-goal  for Nice last season

    Moffi reflects on one-goal  for Nice last season

    Super Eagles striker Terem Moffi said  it  was crucial to have scored a goal in the just ended French Ligue 1 season at the back of the serious knee injury he returned back from.

    Moffi was a relieved man after finding the net in Nice’s 6-0 emphatic win over Brest — his first goal in over a year following a lengthy recovery from a serious knee injury.

    Moffi suffered an Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) tear during training shortly after OGC Nice’s preseason friendly against Spanish outfit Leganés in July 2024. The injury sidelined him for more than eight months, with the Nigerian striker only returning to training during the March international break this year.

    He made his return to competitive action as a substitute in Nice’s 2-1 Ligue 1 loss to Monaco at the Stade Louis-II in Monaco. Since then, he was gradually eased back into action, making brief appearances off the bench against Nantes, Strasbourg, and Reims.

    His breakthrough moment finally came against Brest, where he was once again brought on as a substitute — this time replacing Evann Guessand in the 78th minute. Just four minutes later, Moffi made an instant impact, scoring Nice’s fifth goal in a dominant 6-0 victory.

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    Reacting on his Instagram story, the 25-year-old shared his emotions with fans, describing the goal as a major personal relief: “It was pure relief, I mean look at my face,” he wrote in response to a supporter’s question.

    Moffi also reflected on the difficult road to recovery, admitting it was the toughest period of his career: “Getting an ACL and meniscus surgery has to top the list, difficult times,” he said. “I accepted it and took it day by day, although some days were frustrating. I had good people around me and my faith helped me a lot. A lot to say, but I’ll keep it brief.”

    With the worst seemingly behind him, Moffi can now look forward to a new chapter as Nice prepare for European football next season. The club’s fourth-place finish in Ligue 1 earned them a spot in the third qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League, setting the stage for what could be the Nigerian striker’s debut in Europe’s elite competition.

  • Official:  Terem Moffi returns to training  at Nice

    Official:  Terem Moffi returns to training  at Nice

    Nigeria International striker Terem Moffi yesterday  finally returned to first team training at his French Ligue 1 club, OGC  Nice.

    Only on  Monday,  the NationSports reported that the 25-year-old  striker  would presumably  return to training   this week  following  an exclusive revelations  by one of his close confidants.  

    Moffi suffered an unfortunate Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL)  injury last August  during pre-season and  consequently missed the entirety of the current campaign.

    Initially expected  to return in March but the player’s ally emphatically hinted about his return to training  this week.

     “Terem is fine now,” the often reliable  source  told NationSport but pleaded anonymity. “He will resume training this week with the rest of the team.

    “ He is in high spirit,” he added.

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    Yesterday, L’Équipe journalist Romain Lafont, confirmed  that  Moffi along with his injured teammate, Morgan Sanson, returned  to  first team training with  Nice  at their  Le Gym’s training ground, after been absent since the start of the current  campaign.

    Lafont wrote on his X (formerly Twitter) handle: “Terem Moffi and Morgan Sanson present at the Nice collective training this Wednesday.”

    The club would also celebrate  the  return of Moffi  by splashing  images of the Nigeria’s striker at his  first team training along  with his mates  on its website .

    Moffi had a stand-out  performance  last season and was Nice’s top scorer with an impressive 11 goals.

    His return to fitness  would certainly  be  good news  for  both  Nice  and  Super Eagles  new coach, Eric Sekou Chelle as  the former Lorient forward is regarded  as of  the nifty strikers around on his good day.

    Apart from  his impressive outing  for Nice last season, Moffi  was in the thick of action for the Super Eagles  at the delayed AFCON 2023 in Abidjan  particularly in the semi-final  against  South Africa.

  • Fit-again Moffi  begins training with  Nice this week

    Fit-again Moffi  begins training with  Nice this week

    Super Eagles semi-final heroes  at the  2023 Africa Cup of Nations, Terem Moffi, is expected to return to action for Nice this week  after being out  at the start of the season   after sustaining an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)  injury.

    Moffi had a stand-out  performance  last season and was Nice’s top scorer with an impressive 11 goals but the  Nigeria International copped  an ACL injury during the club’s pre-season training camp  ahead of this current campaign  last  August.

    Initially expected  to return in March but a close confidant of the former Lorient  striker has told NationSport that he would most likely  return to training  all things being equal. 

     “Terem is fine now,” the often reliable  source  told NationSport but pleaded anonymity. “He will resume training this week with the rest of the team.

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    “ He is in high spirit,” he added.

    Moffi’s return to fitness  would certainly  be  good news  for  both  club and country  as  the 25-year-old  is regarded  as of  the nifty strikers around on his good day.

    Apart from  his impressive outing  for Nice last season, Moffi  was in the thick of action for the Super Eagles  at the delayed AFCON 2023 in Abidjan  particularly in the semi-final  against  South Africa.

    New coach  Eric Sekou Chelle is currently in Europe  visiting the  Super Eagles  for the  upcoming  FIFA World Cup  2026  qualifiers against Rwanda and Zimbabwe but  it is not certain  Moffi is part of  his itineraries.  

  • Scoring 50th Ligue 1 goal makes me special, says Moffi

    Scoring 50th Ligue 1 goal makes me special, says Moffi

    Time and time again, Terem Moffi, the OGC Nice’s Nigeria international  striker, has proved that he can score goals in anybody’s company. Totalling over 180 goals  across clubs in Lithuania, Belgium and France, the 24-year-old, who last weekend scored a landmark 50th goal in the French Ligue 1, shared  the joy of the moment in an exclusive conversation with Sports  Editor, MORAKINYO ABODUNRIN

    OGC Nice’s Nigeria international striker  Terem Moffi  believes  his 50th  goal in the French Ligue  has given him a sense of accomplishment  even as he looks forward to scoring more for both  club and country – despite that fleeting showmanship at the last Africa Cup of Nations(AFCON) in Cote d’Ivoire.    

    Though weaned on the streets of Calabar, Moffi has left no one in doubt about his proficiency in front of the goalposts since  he began  his adventure in Europe  in Lithuania, first with Kauno Zalgiris, from  where he  eventually joined Riteriai. He would  score 20 goals in 29 leagues games for Riteriai before  being  transferred to Belgian club Kortrijk in January 2020, and scored an impressive five goals in just  nine games en route the French Ligue 1 side Lorient  on 1st  October 2020.

    With Lorient, Moffi cracked  34 goals in 87 Ligue 1 games (35 goals  in 90 games in all competitions) before moving to  Nice  on the last day of the January Transfer Window in 2023. In his first season (2022/23) with Nice, he scored just six goals  in 16 Ligue 1 matches  but has scored an impressive 10 goals in 23 Ligue 1 games in the ongoing  campaign.

    Last weekend, he scored his 10th  goal of the season and  his fourth since  returning from the AFCON 2023 where he helped  the Super Eagles to win the silver medal, but  that particular goal in a shock 2-1 home loss to relegation-threatened  FC  Nantes was significantly  his 50th  since he arrived in the French League.

     “Though, I am not the first Nigerian to reach this mark (50th) in the French league because  I have read reports that John Utaka scored 59 goals while Victor Ikpeba scored 55,” the meticulous  24-year-old Moffi  told Nation Sports  in an exclusive interview. “How does it make me  feel? It gives me a feeling of accomplishment, especially as I am being mentioned along with great names like John Utaka and Victor Ikpeba.

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     “Having said this,  I will like to point out that I didn’t even realise that I was approaching the fifty goal mark until the eve of the game  when  my eldest brother told me on phone to go and make it fifty.  I didn’t understand what he was driving at.

     “He had to explain that I had forty-nine goals going into last weekend’s game.”

    Incidentally, Moffi has been in a rich vein of form with an impressive  four goals in six Ligue 1 matches since after the 2023 AFCON in Cote d’Ivoire, where he sat out most of the matches until that  semi-finals against the Bafana Bafana of South Africa.

     “Secret (of scoring goals)?” the 24-year-old in his usual frankness asked rhetorically. “There is no secret.

     “The difference is that during the AFCON I hardly had playing time. I had less than fifteen minutes playing time throughout. If what happened after I was introduced into the semi-final  game against South Africa didn’t happen, very few people would have remembered that I even played in the AFCON.

     “I am talking about the red card issued to the South African defender after he hacked me down to prevent me from scoring what could possibly have been the winning goal and the first penalty I opted to take and scored for the team during the penalty shootout.

     “In contrast,  in my club I play week after week and get the chances to score and I score. There is therefore no secret but a matter of opportunity,” noted a  fond admirer of both Chelsea’s Ivorian legend Didier Drogba and former Arsenal and Manchester United’s Dutch striker, Robin Van Persie.

    For anyone who saw Moffi  during his formative years, especially  when he  competed for a spot in  the national  U-17  team  with the likes of  Napoli forward and African Footballer of the Year, Victor Osimhen,  and Milan’s Samuel Chukwueze, it’s not a surprise  that he has turned out  to be crafty as a fox  in front of the goalposts because his scoring intelligence is indeed second to none amongst his contemporaries.

     “Growing up, I  had great admiration for Didier Drogba and Robin Van Persie and I wanted to be like them; they inspired me a lot,” he further said.“As for Messi, Ronaldo and Mbappe, these are great players  and I have a lot of respect for them. I have played against Messi and Mbappe a number of times while for Ronaldo our paths have never crossed. They all remain players that rank among the very best.”

    As some said, no two strikers are the same and different  strikers  have different  drives  behind their  proficiency as such Moffi  is not an exemption to the rule as he claimed  scoring goals makes him feel like a lion.

     “What motivates me is simply the joy I give the fans when I score and when we win games, be it at club or national team level,”  he explained. “No feeling equals hearing the fans screaming your name or you hear your name over the stadium loud speakers.

     “This kind of turns you into a lion,” he affirmed as he exhaled on  the performance of the Super Eagles  at the 2023 AFCON in Cote  d’Ivoire.

    He continued: “Before the AFCON, very few people gave us a chance and that was understandable.  Even we the players knew we were not getting it right and we were determined to improve.  The coaches worked hard and found a formula that gave the team stability.

     “We got our bearing and made it to the final. We were disappointed that we did not win the final game but we appreciate the government and people of Nigeria who celebrated us even after we came out second best.

     “As for my personal performance,  with the little playing time I got I forced the South Africans to get a red card and that took away the pressure we were under before that. I went ahead to score in the penalty shootout, which we won and for two weeks that modest contribution to our victory was trending online. I can never forget that best (part),” he disclosed.

    Noted for his likeable personality and humane disposition, Moffi is not unmindful of the importance of the national  honours bestowed on him  and  his Super Eagles teammates after  the second-place finish at the AFCON, adding that it has placed on them additional responsibilities.

     “National honours are not honours that people get every day; they are not commonplace,” he noted. “They are very significant. While they can open doors for people who are so honoured, they also place responsibility on the person honoured.

     “I see myself as an ambassador of the country, not just on the football field  but off it. It is an honour I treasure very much together with the land and house promised by the government.

     “It is a call for the entire team to work harder and win bigger laurels for the country.”

    Yet Moffi has his own personal targets  both on and off the  field as he sets his eyes  on playing in some other hallowed grounds in Europe  as well as  helping the not-so-privileged in his  native Ogoja, in the northern part of Cross Rivers State in Nigeria.   

     “The English league holds a special attraction for me,” the  former apprentice at the Buckswood Football Academy at Hastings, East Sussex,  further told NationSport. “When I was growing up back in Nigeria, we followed the English league and supported one team or the other.

     “It is still the same situation today. I also like the other big European leagues. I am a realist and believe that where I go after Nice will depend on the circumstances of the time.”

    Though enjoying  cosy living  and cosmopolitan  outlook in France, Moffi is not oblivious of the circumstances of his  ‘poor cousins’ consequently he has instituted a medical outreach  to cater for their welfare.  

     “The medical outreach has come to stay and it will be a yearly thing,” he assured. “That is the least we can do in memory of my grandfather, who himself was also a footballer.

     “Many people do not know that I am a third generation footballer in my family.  After my grandfather who played for his alma mater, Mary Knoll College,  Ogoja, and for the Ogoja Town Team, then known as The Rangers, my father played for his University and professionally in the Nigerian league (Rangers International of Enugu).

     “The main reason for this outreach is to keep the flame of reaching out to others burning. My grandfather in his life time raised and trained over eighty children who were not his children.

     “My dad and mom are continuing with that trend. I believe my grandfather deserves the honour we are giving unto him,” adding that his immediate family is certainly his  most prized possession.

    He disclosed: “Nothing makes me happier than seeing people around me happy. That thing that will make me cry is the thing that  hurts my family. I can go to any length to confront anything that threatens their well-being.”

    While some of his Super Eagles teammates have settled  down  into marital life, Moffi still keeps that aspect of his life close to his chest, saying  the world will indeed know when  he will tie the proverbial knots.

    “When the time comes for the wedding bells, you will be one of the first to hear,” he sounded.

  • Moffi holds medical outreach in honour of grandad

    Moffi holds medical outreach in honour of grandad

    Super Eagles and OGC Nice striker Terem Moffi has kicked off a medial outreach for his local community in Nigeria.

    The free medical checks and care for over a thousand people is dedicated to the memory of his grandfather, Chief Alada Moffi.

    A cross section of beneficiaries of medical outreach sponsored by Moffi

    History was therefore made on Saturday, March 30, 2024, when people of his ancestral home, Ishibori, in Ogoja Local Government Area of Cross River State thronged into the town hall.

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    Following the checks, the beneficiaries consulted the doctors who were on hand to attend to them. Drugs were prescribed and dispensed to them on a wide-range of medical conditions.

    The elderly were the first set to be attended to, after which others took their turn.

    The community service also had participants go home with bags of rice and other food items for the Easter.

    Before the commencement of the event, one of the community leaders, Dr. Ikani Wogar, addressed the teeming crowd and took the opportunity to tell them that the programme was put together by one of their sons, Terem Moffi, in memory of his late grandfather, Chief Alada Moffi.

    He told them that Terem decided to give back to the community where he is from and to honour the memory of his grandfather, who was a respected son of the community.

    In the course of the exercise, many of the participants were thankful to their son, Terem, for his kindness.

    A lot of them offered prayers to God, wishing Terem greater heights in his career.

    In particular, one of the leaders of the community who made himself available to see to the organisation of the event, Joe Ishaka, lauded Terem for the initiative, which he described as the first of its kind.

    He said he was delighted to see the sheer joy on the faces of hundreds of the people.

    Organisers promised that this medical outreach will be a regular event.

  • Nice coach unfazed by Terem Moffi’s lack of goals

    Nice coach unfazed by Terem Moffi’s lack of goals

    Following the inability of Terem Moffi to find the back of the net in Nice’s goalless draw against Brest, Coach Francesco Farioli is not bothered by the lack of goals from the Nigerian.

    Asked why he did not substitute Moffi after he failed to score against the visitors, Farioli said: “Once again, Terem had an important match. I would have liked to make some changes to the attacking players earlier, but we had to substitute Todibo, who had a slight calf issue, so we had to rethink our plans. It wasn’t easy today to play against two central defenders who were so aggressive.

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    We lacked a bit of fluidity, not only for Terem but also in certain choices in terms of our build-up play, within the game. To come back to the first part of the question: Terem’s performance was once again positive. Now, we move forward, focused on the next match. I hope he will find the back of the net and pick up assists, as he did in the previous matches.”

    He however, expressed optimism that the Nigerian would rediscover his scoring mojo in subsequent matches in the French Ligue 1.