The Nigeria national football team, nicknamed the Super Eagles, is the national team of Nigeria and is controlled by the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF). According to FIFA's rankings, Nigeria, at 27th, are currently the fourth best team in the African continent, behind Cameroon (12th), Egypt (22nd) and Ghana (25th). The highest position ever reached on the ranking was 5th in April 1994.
History
Nigeria played their first game in October 1949, whilst still a
British colony. The team played warmup games in England against various amateur teams like
Dulwich Hamlet,
Bishop Auckland F.C. and
South Liverpool. The team's first major success was a gold medal in the
2nd All-Africa games, with 3rd place finishes in 1976 and 1978's
African Cup of Nations to follow. In 1980 the team had such players as
Leyton Orient's
John Cheidozie and the
Tunji Banjo, and the
Christian Chukwu-led Super Eagles won the Cup for the first time in
Lagos. In 1984 and 1988, Nigeria reached the Cup of Nations final, losing both times to
Cameroon. Three of the four African titles won by Cameroon have been won by defeating Nigeria. Missing out to Cameroon on many occasions has created an intense rivalry between both nations. Two notable occasions; narrowly losing out on qualification for
1990 World Cup and then the controversial final of the
2000 African Nations Cup where a goal scored by
Victor Ikpeba during a penalty shoot out was disallowed by the referee.
World Cup 1994
Nigeria reached the
World Cup for the first time in
Football World Cup 1994.They were managed by
Clemens Westerhof who is commonly considered to be the best coach to have ever lead Nigeria. Nigeria topped their group which included Argentina, Bulgaria, and Greece. In their first game Nigeria defeated Bulgaria 3-0, lost to Argentina 2-1, and qualified for the second round after a 2-0 defeat of Greece. In the second round Nigeria played Italy and took the lead with a goal from Amunike at 25 min. Nigeria were within 1 minute of qualifying for the Quarter finals of 1994 World Cup in the game against
Italy but
Roberto Baggio scored to take the game to extra time. He also scored the eventual winning goal.
World Cup 1998
In 1998 Nigeria returned to the World Cup alongside Cameroon, Morocco, Tunisia, and South Africa. Optimism was high due to their manager Bora Milutinovc and the return of most 1994 squad members. In the final tournament Nigeria were drawn into group D with Spain, Bulgaria, Paraguay. Nigeria scored a major upset by defeating Spain 3-2 after coming back twice from being 1-0 and 2-1 down. The Eagles qualified for the second round with win against Bulgaria and loss to Paraguay. Their hopes of surpassing their 1994 performance was shattered after a 4-1 loss to Denmark.
World Cup 2002
The 2002 FIFA World Cup in Korea Japan, saw Nigeria again qualify with optimism. With a new squad and distinctive pastel green kits the Super Eagles were expected to build on their strong performances in the 2000 and 2002 African Cup of Nations. Nigeria were drawn into group F with powerhouses Sweden, Argentina, and England. They started their first game against Argentina with a strong defence and kept the first half scoreless. However in the 61st minute Gabriel Batistuta breached the Nigerian defense to put Argentina in the lead 1-0 and win the game. Nigeria's second game against Sweden saw them take the lead but later lose 2-1. There was little consolation when Nigeria drew 0-0 with England and bowed out in the first round.
Nigeria missed out on qualification for the 2006 World Cup to Angola. Both teams finished level on points in the group but Nigeria even with a greater goal difference missed out due to their inferior head to head record against Angola.
Nigeria won the African Nations Cup twice (1980 and 1994).
Nigeria Football Achievements
World Cup record
- 1930 to 1958 - Did not participate
- 1962 - Did not qualify
- 1966 - Withdrew to protest the allocation of spots.
- 1970 to 1990 - Did not qualify
- 1994 - Round 2
- 1998 - Round 2
- 2002 - Round 1
- 2006 - Did not qualify
African Cup of Nations record
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'' |
| - 1984 - Second place
- 1986 - Did not qualify
- 1988 - Second place
- 1990 - Second place
- 1992 - Third place
- 1994 - Champions
- 1996 - Withdrew from tournament
- 1998 - Disqualified for failure to participate in 1996
- 2000 - Second place
- 2002 - Third place
- 2004 - Third place
- 2006 - Third place
- 2008 - Quarterfinals
|
Current squad
The following players were called for the
2010 FIFA World Cup qualification against
Equatorial Guinea on
June 21.