Sports
U-20 AFCON: Five Reasons Why F’Eagles Crashed Out

Nigeria’s Flying Eagles
will not be in Zambia next year to defend the U20 AFCON trophy they won last year after they were shocked out of the qualifiers by Sudan.
After beating the Sudanese 2-1 away, the Flying Eagles on Saturday fell 3-4 to the visitors, who finished the game with 10 players in Lagos to lose out on away goal rule with 5-5 aggregate scores.
Below are perhaps, five major reasons behind yet another monumental disaster in Nigeria football.
Again, the U17 World Cup curse
The excitement of having won a record fifth U17 World Cup in Chile in November got the better of coach Emmanuel Amuneke, his assistants and even the players, who felt they have arrived on the world football stage after what they had achieved in South America.
They probably equated the demands of U17 football to what is expected of a team at a higher U20 level, where the players are a lot more matured with some even knocking on the door of the full international side.
Such thinking almost derailed coach Manu Garba last year, before he welcomed superior ideas to open his team to players outside those he has previously worked with at the U17 cadre.
The wrong assumption that there is not much difference between U17 and U20 has affected over time the appointment of the coaches for the Flying Eagles as well as the faulty selection of players for the country’s youth team.
Poor tactics
On a day the rains poured down on Lagos, Amuneke got his tactics totally wrong by still insisting on the boys playing his passing game on a waterlogged pitch, while the more experienced and bigger Sudanese chose the more practical kick and rush style to their advantage.
The Flying Eagles lack of size certainly did not help their cause as they always played second best to their opponents even after they were reduced to 10 men midway in the second half.
When it was 3-3, Amuneke should have shut the game down as a draw was enough to qualify Nigeria.
Is Amuneke really the tactical genius he has been packaged as?
Team not good enough
The Flying Eagles Class of 2016 did not have the quality and had they managed to advance to Zambia 2017, they would have been badly exposed by better teams at the AFCON finals.
Even at the U17 level, what got them going was their raw determination, the goals of Victor Osimhen as well as their conditioning.
The team were shut out from other players even after a much-advertised screening exercise as Amuneke insisted on working with only the players he tinkered at the U17 level.
This killed the competitive spirit in the team as players in Amuneke’s U17 pool were always considered ahead of those who were outside this group.
Team selection was biased and there was hardly a serious consideration for the physical size of the players especially in key positions like goalkeeper, defensive midfield and central defence.
It must say something about the quality in this team that after all the hype and expectations, only a handful of these players have since secured contracts overseas.
Goalkeeper Akpan Udoh was safe at U17 level, but was clearly exposed at a higher level, the team’s defence was below average, skipper Kelechi Nwakali failed to shine after he was named MVP at the U17 level and Osimhen could not reproduce the magic that fetched him a pro deal a top Bundesliga club Wolfsburg.
Both players, coaches lost focus
At last year’s U17 World Cup, these same boys had fought like wounded lions to make a name for themselves even when they had not received any allowances and bonuses.
Their character and focus were praised, but only eight months later, it was a different story altogether after it got out to the media that they threatened to boycott Saturday’s match over unpaid monies.
Attitude and discipline were sacrificed for immediate financial gains.
“They lost the game even before they kicked the ball because suddenly they lost their focus and drive,” a top former international told newsmen.
It was also understood that several of these players openly challenged the instructions of their coaches with Amuneke also angling to be Super Eagles coach after he was brought on board in an interim capacity for the AFCON qualifiers against Egypt in March.
For Amuneke, it was not about qualifying for the AFCON, but winning the elusive U20 World Cup in South Korea next year.
It is possible nobody really told him that you first have to qualify for the AFCON before you could start targeting the World Cup.
Inexperience and lack of exposure
At the U20 level, experience is a major factor and these Flying Eagles lacked it because most of the players are still with academies with not one of them playing even in the lower Nigeria National League.
It was only three years ago that the likes of Paul Pogba and Kurt Zouma helped France to win the U20 World Cup in Turkey and today they have established themselves at Juventus and Chelsea, respectively.
Amuneke’s team prepared for these qualifiers by playing mediocre academies around Abuja with their only tough test games being against the country’s U23 team.
Matches against Premier League sides like FC IfeanyiUbah, which could have toughened them and got them the much-needed experience and exposure, were rejected outrightly.
The Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) would have done better by arranging for test matches in neigbouring countries like Benin and Ghana as was the case in previous years.
Probably, these big wins in their friendlies mostly at their training base deluded them into thinking they were unbeatable until Sudan delivered the sucker punch right in front of their home fans.
Culled from
Africanfootball.com
Sports
RSG Pledges To Develop Baseball
Sports
CAFCL : Rivers United Arrives DR Congo
Rivers United FC of Port Harcourt contingent, comprising players, technical crew, backroom staff, and officials, depart the Murtala Mohammed International Airport in Lagos State on Wednesday, bound for Kinshasa, DR Congo.
The team is set to face FC Les Aigles du Congo in the first-round first-leg match of the CAF Champions League.
This was contained in a press release signed by the media officer of the club, Charles Mayuku and made available to Tidesports on Wednesday.
He said that the highly anticipated match is scheduled to take place at the 80,000-capacity Kinshasa-Complexe Omnisports Stade des Martyrs on morrow with kickoff slated for 3:30pm.
According to the statement the encounter marks the first-ever meeting between both sides in any competition, adding that an air of excitement and unpredictability to the fixture.
“As the Pride of Nigeria embarks on this crucial journey, the team is determined to return with a decent result that will set them up favorably for the second leg on Sunday, 28th September” the statement said.
Sports
FIFA rankings: S’Eagles drop Position, remain sixth in Africa
The new rankings, released via FIFA’s official X handle on Thursday, reflect the team’s continued struggles under Coach Eric Chelle amid a stuttering 2026 World Cup qualifying campaign.
This marks a second consecutive decline after the Nigerian side dropped from 43rd to 44th in August on the back of poor outings in recent international matches.
Despite Nigeria’s setback, several African teams made progress. Morocco remains the continent’s highest-ranked side, sitting 11th in the world after winning eight of their last nine matches. Senegal, Egypt, Algeria and Côte d’Ivoire complete Africa’s top five.
Lesotho slipped to 153rd place, while Benin Republic, Nigeria’s upcoming opponent, climbed to 93rd. South Africa’s Bafana Bafana, who held the Super Eagles to a 1-1 draw in June, rose to 55th, strengthening their bid for World Cup qualification.
Zimbabwe had the biggest slide down the ranking table, dropping nine places to 125th position in the world.
The rankings highlight Nigeria’s struggle to regain form on the global stage as key rivals continue to surge ahead.
Similarly, the Super Falcons of Nigeria remain 36th best in the world], while the Spanish female national team replaced the USA at the top of the women’s ranking.
-
Sports1 day ago
FIFA rankings: S’Eagles drop Position, remain sixth in Africa
-
Sports1 day ago
NNL abolishes playoffs for NPFL promotion
-
Sports1 day ago
NPFL club name Iorfa new GM
-
Sports1 day ago
CAFCL : Rivers United Arrives DR Congo
-
Sports1 day ago
Kwara Hopeful To Host Confed Cup in Ilorin
-
Sports1 day ago
NSF: Early preparations begin for 2026 National Sports Festival
-
Sports1 day ago
RSG Award Renovation Work At Yakubu Gowon Stadium
-
Sports1 day ago
RSG Pledges To Develop Baseball