CAF Confederation Cup
Four Chances, Four Heartbreaks: How Ikorodu City’s Continental Dream Slipped Away Again
From Kunle Solaja, New York
For most football clubs, missing out on continental football can be explained by one bad result, one costly mistake, or one unfortunate afternoon.
For Ikorodu City, however, the story of the last two seasons has become one of repeated near-misses, painful twists, and opportunities that seemed within touching distance before suddenly disappearing.
Saturday’s 1-0 defeat to El Kanemi Warriors in the President Federation Cup final in Asaba was more than just the loss of a trophy. It was the latest chapter in what is increasingly becoming a cruel Confederation Cup jinx for one of Nigeria’s most ambitious football projects.
Traditionally, the winner of the President Federation Cup claims Nigeria’s second ticket to the CAF Confederation Cup. For El Kanemi Warriors, the victory opened the door to continental football. For Ikorodu City, it slammed shut yet another window that had appeared wide open.
The defeat marked the fourth major opportunity lost by the Lagos club in just two seasons.
A Pattern of Agonising Near-Misses
What makes the latest setback particularly painful is that it follows a familiar script.
Last season, Ikorodu City appeared poised to secure a historic continental qualification through the Nigeria Premier Football League. Entering the final day with destiny in their own hands, they travelled to Ikenne to face eventual champions Remo Stars.
The match began perfectly.
Ikorodu City took the lead and briefly looked set to claim the result they needed. But football can be unforgiving. Remo Stars responded emphatically, winning 4-1 and pushing the Lagos side down to fourth place, just outside the continental qualification spots.
That was opportunity number one.
The club then turned its attention to the President Federation Cup, hoping to secure a continental berth through the alternative route.
Again, they came agonisingly close.
A tense semi-final against Abakaliki FC ended goalless before Ikorodu City suffered heartbreak in the ensuing penalty shootout. Another route to Africa had vanished.
That was opportunity number two.
The Rangers Setback
This season offered another chance to rewrite the narrative.
Ikorodu City once again found themselves in contention for a top-three league finish that would have guaranteed continental football. Everything appeared to be moving in the right direction until a damaging home defeat to Enugu Rangers altered the equation.
The 2-1 loss in Lagos proved costly beyond the immediate result.
Not only did it derail Ikorodu City’s ambitions, it ultimately paved the way for Shooting Stars to secure continental qualification and return to African club competition for the first time in 27 years.
The defeat represented a third missed opening.
Ironically, the victory became one of the defining moments of Rangers’ title-winning campaign. Under enormous pressure on the final day, the Flying Antelopes demonstrated championship character, defeating Ikorodu City and finishing with 68 points to secure one of the closest league triumphs in recent memory.
For Rangers, it was glory.
For Ikorodu City, it was another reminder of how thin the margins can be.
The Fourth Door Closes
With the league campaign over, the President Federation Cup offered one final lifeline.
A victory over El Kanemi Warriors would have erased the disappointment of the league season and delivered the coveted CAF Confederation Cup ticket.
Instead, another painful ending awaited.
El Kanemi’s solitary goal settled the contest and ensured that the Maiduguri-based club would represent Nigeria on the continent next season.
For Ikorodu City, the final whistle in Asaba sounded like the closing of a fourth door.
Four opportunities.
Four disappointments.
No continental ticket.
A Club That Keeps Knocking
Yet amid the frustration lies another story.
Not long ago, Ikorodu City were far removed from conversations about continental qualification. Today, they are regularly competing for major honours, challenging established clubs, and finding themselves within touching distance of Africa’s club competitions.
That progress should not be overlooked.
The disappointment hurts precisely because expectations have risen dramatically. The club is no longer merely participating; it is competing.
What remains elusive is the final step.
The challenge for Ikorodu City now is psychological as much as tactical. Teams that repeatedly come close often face a difficult question: how do they turn promise into achievement?
History shows that many successful clubs endured similar periods before eventually breaking through. The difference between heartbreak and glory is often persistence.
For now, however, the statistics are painful reading.
Across two seasons, Ikorodu City have watched four separate routes to the CAF Confederation Cup disappear at the very moment qualification seemed attainable.
The defeat to El Kanemi Warriors was not simply the loss of a cup final.
It was the latest episode in a growing tale of opportunities missed, dreams deferred, and a continental ticket that continues to remain just beyond the reach of the Lagos club.
Until that jinx is broken, Ikorodu City’s pursuit of African football will remain one of the most compelling unfinished stories in Nigerian club football.
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CAF Confederation Cup
USM Alger Edge Zamalek SC On Penalties to Win CAF Confederation Cup

Algerian club USM Alger were crowned CAF Confederation Cup champions for the second time after edging Egyptian giants Zamalek SC 8-7 on penalties in a dramatic final at the Cairo International Stadium on Saturday night.
Zamalek won the second leg 1-0 through an early penalty by Oday Dabbagh, but the tie ended 1-1 on aggregate following USM Alger’s first-leg victory in Algiers last weekend. The Algerians then held their nerve in the shootout to secure the continental title, adding to the trophy they first won in 2023.
The hosts made a dream start, levelling the aggregate score within five minutes. Adam Kaied was brought down inside the penalty area by Che Malone Junior, prompting the referee to point to the spot. Dabbagh calmly converted to hand the White Knights a 1-0 lead on the night.
Zamalek, however, suffered an early setback when goalkeeper Al Mahdi Soliman was forced off injured before the half-hour mark and replaced by Mohamed Awad.
Before his substitution, Soliman had produced an important save to deny Islam Merili’s long-range effort that appeared destined for the top corner. Despite dominating possession for long spells, USM Alger struggled to create clear-cut opportunities in a tense and scrappy first half.
The visitors nearly found a crucial away goal shortly after the restart when Ahmed Khaldi fired wide from the edge of the box.
As the match progressed, nerves and tension intensified on and off the pitch, with several heated exchanges adding pressure on the match officials as the prospect of penalties drew closer.
Zamalek almost settled the contest late on when substitute Nasr Mansy connected with a cross from the right, but goalkeeper Oussama Benbot made a vital save to tip the header over the bar in the 85th minute.
With the aggregate score locked at 1-1 after full time, the final went straight to penalties. The two sides converted 14 consecutive spot kicks before Zamalek’s Mohamed Shehata blasted his effort over the bar. Glody Likonza then converted the decisive penalty to hand USM Alger a famous triumph.
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CAF Confederation Cup
Zamalek Face Uphill Battle Against Confident USM Alger in CAF Confederation Cup Final

Egyptian giants Zamalek SC will attempt to overturn a first-leg deficit when they host USM Alger in the decisive second leg of the CAF Confederation Cup final at Cairo International Stadium on Saturday night.
Zamalek trail 1-0 after a tense first leg in Algiers last weekend and must now produce another memorable continental comeback in front of an expected capacity crowd in Cairo.
The Egyptian side will draw confidence from an impressive home record in the competition, having lost only once in 24 Confederation Cup matches on home soil. They have also never conceded more than one goal at home in the tournament.
However, USM Alger arrive in Cairo with growing belief and momentum.
The Algerian club are unbeaten in their last three Confederation Cup matches against Egyptian opposition, winning two and drawing one while keeping clean sheets in all three encounters.
They also carry the form of a side that has lost only once in their last 19 matches in the competition, underlining why they are now just 90 minutes away from another continental title.
Saturday’s final is expected to provide another dramatic chapter in a rivalry already marked by controversy, late tension and tactical intensity.
Zamalek will be encouraged by another significant statistic — the club has never lost back-to-back matches in the Confederation Cup across 50 games played in the competition. That record will now be severely tested against a disciplined USM Alger side that frustrated them repeatedly in the first leg.
The Algerians created numerous opportunities in Algiers, attempting 23 shots — the highest by any team in a Confederation Cup final since records began in the 2016-17 season.
Much of USM Alger’s attacking threat has come from midfielder Ahmed Khaldi, who is joint top scorer in this season’s competition with four goals. Three of his last four goals have come from the penalty spot, highlighting the Algerian side’s efficiency in pressure situations.
For Zamalek, defensive midfielder Mohamed Ismaeil produced one of the standout individual performances of the first leg with seven tackles, one of the highest totals ever recorded in a Confederation Cup final.
The match will be officiated by Gabonese referee Pierre Atcho.
With continental glory at stake and the aggregate score delicately poised, Saturday’s showdown in Cairo is shaping into one of the most finely balanced CAF Confederation Cup finals in recent years.
For Zamalek, it is a chance to add another famous African night to their rich history. For USM Alger, it is an opportunity to confirm their emergence as one of the continent’s most resilient and dangerous cup sides.
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CAF Confederation Cup
Shooting Stars, Ikorodu City, in Winner-Takes-All Quest for Confederation Cup ticket

By Kunle Solaja.
The battle for the Nigeria Premier Football League’s remaining CAF Confederation Cup ticket will go down to the wire on the final day of the season, with Shooting Stars and Ikorodu City locked in a tense race for third place.
While title contenders, Enugu Rangers International and Rivers United, have already secured Nigeria’s slots in next season’s CAF Champions League, the contest for the Confederation Cup place remains delicately poised.
Shooting Stars currently occupy third position with 60 points, holding a narrow two-point advantage over fourth-placed Ikorodu City, who sit on 58 points ahead of the 24 May decisive fixtures.
The Ibadan side is in pole position and needs only to avoid defeat away to Niger Tornadoes to confirm a return to continental football next season.
However, Ikorodu City still has a fighting chance of snatching the ticket.
The Lagos-based club must defeat title-chasing Rangers and hope Shooting Stars stumble against Niger Tornadoes to overturn the deficit and leapfrog the Oluyole Warriors into third place.
Their clash against Rangers is expected to rank among the standout fixtures of the final day, with both teams carrying huge ambitions into the encounter.
For Ikorodu City, the situation revives painful memories from last season when they chased a continental ticket from two fronts but ended up empty-handed.
The club narrowly missed out on third place after suffering a heavy 4-1 defeat to eventual champions Remo Stars in Ikenne on the final day, despite taking the lead in the encounter. The result pushed them down to fourth position.
Their hopes of reaching the continent through the Federation Cup also ended in heartbreak after a penalty shootout loss to Abakaliki FC in the semi-finals following a goalless draw.
Now, with another opportunity within reach, Ikorodu City will hope fortune finally smiles on them as they seek what would be a historic continental qualification.
With the title race, continental qualification battle, and survival struggles all still unresolved, the final day of the NPFL season is set to deliver tension and drama across the country.
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