Nigerian Football
Super Eagles Set for Poland, Portugal Friendlies as June Window Beckons
Nigeria’s senior national team, the Super Eagles, will rekindle rivalries with Poland and Portugal in high-profile international friendlies scheduled for June, marking only the second time the Nigerian team will meet the two nations at the senior level.
The fixtures come on the back of Nigeria’s recent international outings in Antalya, Turkey, where they defeated Iran and held World Cup-bound Jordan to a 2-2 draw, signalling renewed optimism within the squad despite missing out on qualification for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
According to the Nigeria Football Federation, the Super Eagles will first take on Poland on June 3 at the PGE Narodowy Stadium in Warsaw, before travelling to Portugal for a second clash on June 10 at a venue yet to be confirmed.
Renewing Rivalries
Nigeria’s previous encounter with Poland remains a positive memory. On March 23, 2018, the Super Eagles secured a 1-0 victory in Wroclaw, courtesy of a 61st-minute penalty converted by Victor Moses after he was fouled in the box. The match served as preparation for the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia.
However, their only senior meeting with Portugal tells a different story. On November 17, 2022, Nigeria suffered a heavy 4-0 defeat to the European side in Lisbon, with Bruno Fernandes scoring twice, while Gonçalo Ramos and João Mário added further goals in a dominant display.
That result remains one of Nigeria’s most crushing defeats the Super Eagles have ever suffered since the 1998 5-1 loss to the Netherlands.
Portugal’s World Cup Tune-Up
The upcoming clash will also serve as a crucial preparatory fixture for the Portugal national football team, who will head into the game as part of their final build-up to the 2026 FIFA World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
For Nigeria, however, the matches represent an opportunity to test themselves against elite opposition and rebuild confidence after missing out on the global showpiece.
Beyond the June friendlies, the Super Eagles are also scheduled to participate in the Unity Cup Tournament in London from May 26 to 30, where they will defend their title. The traditional teams of the tournament include Ghana and Jamaica.
The combination of competitive fixtures and high-level friendlies is expected to provide the head coach and technical crew with a broader platform to assess players and refine tactics ahead of future international engagements.
With mixed results in recent outings but flashes of promise, the upcoming matches against Poland and Portugal could prove pivotal in shaping Nigeria’s next phase on the international stage.
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Nigerian Football
Thirty-Six Years After Professionalism, NPFL Still Battles Old Challenges

By Kunle Solaja.
Thirty-six years after professional football was introduced in Nigeria, the country’s top-flight league continues to grapple with many of the same structural problems critics warned about decades before the professional era began.
The Nigerian Professional Football League officially commenced on May 12, 1990, following nearly 40 years of debate over whether the country was prepared for the financial realities of professional sports.
When professionalism was first proposed in the 1950s, opponents questioned whether Nigerian clubs could survive the burden of player salaries, stadium maintenance and administrative costs.
Former football administrator Derby Allen warned in 1953 that most clubs lacked suitable stadiums and sustainable revenue streams to operate professionally.
More than seven decades later, many NPFL clubs are still heavily dependent on state government funding, while issues such as poor infrastructure, irregular player welfare, low commercial returns and weak marketing continue to limit the league’s growth.
Despite these challenges, the league has survived political transitions, administrative crises and financial instability to become one of Africa’s longest-running domestic competitions.
The league’s history has featured remarkable moments and strange twists.
Kwara United F.C. endured a 14-match losing streak in 2000, while Udoji United F.C. controversially emerged champions in 1996 following boardroom decisions.
Traditional giants have also suffered dramatic declines. Bendel Insurance F.C., one of the pioneer clubs of the 1972 National League, were relegated for the first time in 1995 and later spent a decade outside the top division after another relegation in 2008.
Defending champions Shooting Stars SC suffered relegation in 1999, becoming the first title holders to fall out of the top flight, while Bayelsa United F.C. repeated the unwanted feat in 2010 and has now suffered another drop.
Even continental giants, Enyimba F.C., once experienced relegation in 1991. Another relegation looms large at the end of this season.
Only Enugu Rangers have maintained an unbroken stay in the top division since the National League era began in 1972.
Administrative instability has equally shaped the NPFL’s story. In 2005, the league left direct NFA control with the establishment of the Nigeria Premier League. The League Management Company later emerged after a court ruling declared the NPL illegal in 2012/13.
Today, the Nigeria Premier Football League board oversees the competition, which continues to seek improved television coverage, sponsorship and stronger club structures.
As the league celebrates its 36th anniversary, many observers believe its future success will depend on finally resolving the same financial and organisational issues identified long before professionalism arrived in 1990.
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Nigerian Football
NPFL at 36: From Long Debate to Nigeria’s Football Showpiece

By Kunle Solaja.
Nigeria’s top-flight football league this Tuesday marks 36 years of professionalism, closing another chapter in a journey that transformed the domestic game from an amateur pastime into a supposedly commercial sporting enterprise.
Professional football officially kicked off in Nigeria on May 12, 1990, when Stationery Stores F.C. hosted Heartland, then known as Iwuanyanwu Nationale, at the waterfront Onikan Stadium, now renamed Mobolaji Johnson Arena.
That historic encounter produced several milestones. Iwuanyanwu Nationale won 2-1 to become the first club to record a victory in Nigeria’s professional era, while defender Ben Iroha etched his name into history as the scorer of the first goal in the professional league.
The launch of professional football came 102 years after England pioneered the concept, following decades of arguments over whether Nigeria possessed the financial and organisational capacity to sustain a professional league.
Ironically, many of the objections raised in the 1950s centred on issues that still challenge the Nigerian game today, poor infrastructure, inadequate funding and weak club administration.
Former NFA chairman Derby Allen had argued in 1953 that Nigerian clubs lacked the facilities and financial strength required for professionalism. At the time, the old King George V Stadium in Lagos, now Mobolaji Johnson Arena, was virtually the only major football ground in the country.
Critics feared clubs would struggle to pay players, maintain stadiums and manage operational costs.
Yet supporters of professionalism insisted it was the only pathway to football development.
Coach Peter ‘Eto’ Amaechina famously argued in 1969 that Nigeria could never attain World Cup standard without adopting professional football. His prediction proved prophetic as Nigeria qualified for its first FIFA World Cup in 1994, barely four years after the professional league began.
The pioneer professional league featured 16 clubs, among them Enugu Rangers, Shooting Stars SC, Bendel Insurance F.C., Enyimba F.C. and Julius Berger F.C.
Administrators also experimented with innovations to encourage attacking football. Between 1990 and 1994, score draws earned two points while goalless draws attracted only one.
Over the years, the league has experienced dramatic highs and lows — from the fairy-tale triumph of Eagle Cement F.C. in 1997 to the shocking relegation of defending champions Shooting Stars in 1999.
The competition has also undergone several administrative transformations, evolving from NFA control to the Nigeria Premier League, then the League Management Company, and now the Nigeria Premier Football League.
As the NPFL clocks 36, the league remains both a symbol of Nigeria’s football passion and a reminder of the unfinished journey towards building a truly stable and commercially vibrant domestic competition.
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Nigerian Football
Best Tribute to Henry Nwosu Is Revival of School Football, says NSC boss, Dikko

Chairman of the National Sports Commission, Shehu Dikko, has declared that the revival of school football competitions across Nigeria would be the most appropriate way to immortalise late Green Eagles legend, Henry Nwosu.
Dikko made the statement while receiving members of Nwosu’s family, representatives of Imo State Concerned Sports Stakeholders and members of the football icon’s burial committee at his office inside the Moshood Abiola National Stadium.
Paying tribute to the late winger, Dikko described Nwosu as one of the most gifted and exciting footballers of his generation, recalling how the former Green Eagles star rose from school football to become a national hero at a young age.
“Henry Nwosu MON started playing for the national team at a very young age. The history of school sports, particularly the Principals Cup, will not be complete without his name,” Dikko said.
“At that very young age, he featured for Nigeria at the AFCON in 1980. He is an example to every aspiring young athlete that it is possible to get to the highest level.”
The NSC chairman noted that Nwosu’s journey from grassroots football to continental glory serves as inspiration for the commission’s renewed emphasis on discovering and nurturing talents through school sports programmes.
According to him, the late footballer should be immortalised in a manner that reflects both his exploits with the national team and his deep roots in school football.
“At the Federal level and in conjunction with the Imo State Government, something should be captured to make sure that his name is engraved in our schools’ sports history,” Dikko added.
“For instance, a school sports tournament should be named after him. It is a huge loss for the nation, and we will do all we can to ensure that his labours are not forgotten.”
Dikko also pledged the commission’s support for all activities lined up for Nwosu’s burial and assured that the NSC would collaborate with the Imo State Government and the Nigeria Football Federation to ensure the late football legend receives a befitting honour.
Chairman of the National Sports Commission, Shehu Dikko, has declared that the revival of school football competitions across Nigeria would be the most appropriate way to immortalise late Green Eagles legend, Henry Nwosu.
Dikko made the statement while receiving members of Nwosu’s family, representatives of Imo State Concerned Sports Stakeholders and members of the football icon’s burial committee at his office inside the Moshood Abiola National Stadium.
Paying tribute to the late winger, Dikko described Nwosu as one of the most gifted and exciting footballers of his generation, recalling how the former Green Eagles star rose from school football to become a national hero at a young age.
“Henry Nwosu MON started playing for the national team at a very young age. The history of school sports, particularly the Principals Cup, will not be complete without his name,” Dikko said.
“At that very young age, he featured for Nigeria at the AFCON in 1980. He is an example to every aspiring young athlete that it is possible to get to the highest level.”
The NSC chairman noted that Nwosu’s journey from grassroots football to continental glory serves as inspiration for the commission’s renewed emphasis on discovering and nurturing talents through school sports programmes.
According to him, the late footballer should be immortalised in a manner that reflects both his exploits with the national team and his deep roots in school football.
“At the Federal level and in conjunction with the Imo State Government, something should be captured to make sure that his name is engraved in our schools’ sports history,” Dikko added.
“For instance, a school sports tournament should be named after him. It is a huge loss for the nation and we will do all we can to ensure that his labours are not forgotten.”
Dikko also pledged the commission’s support for all activities lined up for Nwosu’s burial and assured that the NSC would collaborate with the Imo State Government and the Nigeria Football Federation to ensure the late football legend receives a befitting honour.
Earlier, Nwosu’s eldest sister, Mrs. Ijeoma Onyewuchi, expressed the family’s grief over the passing of the former international, describing him as the only son among four children whose absence would leave a huge vacuum.
She praised his immense contribution to Nigerian football and appealed to the NSC to support the family in organising a successful burial ceremony.
Speaking on behalf of Imo State Concerned Sports Stakeholders, Dr. Geoffrey Ogu called on the Federal Government and the Imo State Government to immortalise Nwosu through football programmes and projects that would inspire future generations.
Ogu also appealed for a state burial for the late football icon, noting that such recognition would determine the level of honour, funding and participation from both governments.
He further requested official approval for national honours during the burial rites, including draping the casket with the Nigerian flag, the recitation of the national anthem and the observance of a minute’s silence.
Nwosu, a member of Nigeria’s victorious 1980 Africa Cup of Nations squad, died on March 14, 2026, at the age of 62.
The former Green Eagles star is scheduled to be buried on June 6, 2026, in his hometown of Naze, Imo State, with several activities already planned in his honour.
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