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Morocco’s Football Revolution: A Wake-Up Call for Nigeria

At the majestic Prince Moulay Abdellah Sports Complex in Rabat, moments before Morocco’s national team dismantled Niger Republic to become the first African team to pick a World Cup qualifying ticket, a banner stretched proudly across the stands: “This time, the trophy is our dream.”
It wasn’t mere fan bravado or dream. It was a declaration rooted in vision, planning, and national purpose — the same qualities that turned Morocco into the first African and Arab country to reach the World Cup semi-finals at Qatar 2022.
It was a statement of purpose that have made Morocco the most progressive football nation in Africa.
While other nations celebrated qualification or occasional victories, Morocco quietly built an empire. From a visionary royal blueprint in 2008 to the creation of the Mohammed VI Football Academy in 2009 and the world-class Mohammed VI Football Center a decade later, Morocco’s rise has been deliberate, scientific, and inclusive.
For many observers, Morocco’s historic run at the 2022 World Cup was an African triumph. But as subsequent developments have shown, Morocco’s rise was no accident of fate or lucky tournament run.
It was the product of deliberate policy, state investment, and institutional consistency — everything Nigeria once had the potential to build, but never quite did.
From Royal Vision to National Revolution
Morocco’s transformation began not on the pitch, but in the palace. In 2008, King Mohammed VI presented a detailed vision for the country’s sports and youth development. It wasn’t rhetoric; it was a roadmap.
By 2009, the Mohammed VI Football Academy was born — a state-of-the-art institution designed to raise homegrown talent to international standards. Players like Azzedine Ounahi, Nayef Aguerd, and Anas Zniti — stars of the 2022 World Cup — all passed through its corridors.
“The academy embodies the philosophy of professionalism and scientific development,” explained Fouzi Lekjaa, President of the Royal Moroccan Football Federation (FRMF) and a cabinet minister. “It places the Moroccan player in an environment that matches the best global standards.”
But Morocco’s football revolution didn’t end with players. The system also trained coaches, analysts, referees, and administrators — all nurtured within a unified ecosystem at the Mohammed VI Football Center, opened in 2019. The center stands today as one of the most advanced football facilities in the world.
This institutional backbone has powered Morocco’s domination across Africa: 29 finals reached in recent years, with 25 trophies won across men’s, women’s, and club football.
As Fouzi Lekjaa, President of the Royal Moroccan Football Federation (FRMF), puts it on Sky News Arabia’s Counter-Attack Program: “Our success is not by coincidence but the fruit of a strategic vision King Mohammed VI launched in 2008. The national team’s achievements are a continuation of institutional work with clear objectives.”
Beyond the World Cup: Morocco’s Complete Football Ecosystem
The world took notice when Morocco stunned global football by becoming the first African and Arab nation to reach the World Cup semi-finals at Qatar 2022.
That historic $25 million prize — the highest ever by any African team — was just one of many rewards of Morocco’s long-term investment in football.
But Morocco’s success does not stop at the national team. The country’s domestic clubs are now benefiting massively from FIFA’s Club Benefits Programme (CBP) — a global scheme that compensates clubs whose players participate in the World Cup.
Eighteen African clubs received a total of $4,569,981.49 from the CBP.
Two Moroccan giants — Wydad Casablanca and Raja Casablanca — took the lion’s share, together earning $1,437,244.58, or nearly a third of the entire continent’s total.
Wydad Casablanca alone pocketed $1,405,305, the highest by any African club.
They were followed by Esperance of Tunisia ($525,620), Al Ahly of Egypt ($420,679), Club Africain ($312,087), and Etoile du Sahel ($262,810) — proof of the dominance of North African clubs with structured domestic systems and player development pathways.
The Moroccan league’s inclusion of home-based players in the national setup is now paying off — both in glory and in dollars.
The Nigerian Paradox: Talent Without Structure
Nigeria’s football story, by contrast, remains one of potential without permanence. The country that once inspired Africa’s football dreams now struggles to define its identity. Africa’s most populous nation, has long been a fountain of raw football talent.
From the golden era of the 1990s to the global exploits of players like Jay-Jay Okocha, Kanu Nwankwo, and now Victor Osimhen, Nigerian footballers have dazzled the world.
Yet, despite its vast human resources, Nigeria remains a sleeping giant of world football — powerful in potential, weak in planning.
The Super Eagles may still qualify for the 2026 World Cup — and likely will — but there will be no financial gain for any Nigerian club from the FIFA Club Benefits Programme. Why?
Because all Super Eagles players are sourced from foreign clubs.
No Nigerian Premier Football League (NPFL) player is close to the national team radar. This means while nations like Morocco, South Africa, Egypt, and Tunisia continue to earn from their investments in domestic football, Nigerian clubs — once nurseries of raw talent — have been reduced to bystanders in global football’s reward structure.
It is an indictment of a system that glorifies imported talent but neglects homegrown development.
Unlike Morocco, Nigeria lacks a unified development system. The domestic league, once vibrant, now suffers from chronic underfunding, administrative instability, poor infrastructure, and minimal media visibility.
Young talents often leave prematurely, not because they’re ready, but because they must escape stagnation at home.
How Morocco Did It — and What Nigeria Can Learn
Morocco’s success didn’t come overnight. It was engineered through planning, political will, and policy alignment.
In 2008, King Mohammed VI issued a National Sports Vision, calling for the integration of sports into national development.
A year later, the Mohammed VI Football Academy opened its doors, producing stars like Azzedine Ounahi, Nayef Aguerd, and Yassine Bounou — names that dazzled the world at Qatar 2022.
By 2019, Morocco inaugurated the Mohammed VI Football Center, one of the world’s most advanced football facilities — a nerve centre for player training, coaching, analytics, and administration. With many playing fields, the centre is the theatre of the ongoing FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup.
Today, Morocco’s national teams — from the U-17s to the senior level — are all coached by locally trained professionals, graduates of the same system that produced their players. As Lekjaa proudly noted:
“Generation passes to generation. All categories work according to one philosophy. Every player knows his path before reaching the top.”
If Nigeria truly desires to become a football powerhouse — not just in Africa but globally — it must go back to the foundation.
What Nigeria Must Do — Urgently
For Nigeria to become not just an African force but a global football powerhouse, it must learn from Morocco’s disciplined, data-driven model and stop relying on chance and nostalgia.
Here’s what must change:
- Develop a National Football Masterplan — and Enforce It:
Nigeria must adopt a legally backed national sports development framework, binding on successive administrations, with clear funding, timelines, and accountability. - Invest in Youth Academies and Infrastructure:
Each geopolitical zone should host a modern football academy linked to schools and communities — not token facilities, but genuine centres of excellence like Morocco’s. - Reform and Commercialize the NPFL:
A vibrant league is the foundation of a strong national team. The NPFL must become transparent, media-driven, and investor-friendly. Clubs must be empowered to run professionally, not politically. - Empower Local Coaches and Technical Experts:
Nigeria needs to develop its own Walid Regraguis — homegrown tacticians capable of leading at the highest levels, supported by continuous education and exposure. - Integrate Home-Based Players into the National Team:
The gap between the NPFL and the Super Eagles must close. Incentives and structured scouting should ensure the best local players compete for national team slots. - Treat Football as a Socioeconomic Driver:
Morocco’s royal vision turned football into an engine for youth empowerment, national unity, and economic growth. Nigeria must adopt the same approach — seeing football as nation-building, not just recreation.
A Call to Action
The lesson is clear: Morocco built; Nigeria borrowed. Morocco planned; Nigeria hoped.
The result is that Morocco now earns — in prestige, infrastructure, and FIFA dollars — while Nigeria remains a footballing giant in name only.
Dreams do not win trophies. Systems do.
As Morocco continues its ascent — from the World Cup semi-finals to the top of African football and global recognition — Nigeria must ask itself a hard question:
Will it continue outsourcing its football glory to foreign clubs, or finally invest in its own?
Because until Nigeria strengthens its domestic league and empowers its own football ecosystem, the nation will keep watching others — like Morocco — reap both the glory and the rewards of African excellence.
–Kunle Solaja has visited Morocco many times
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Israel facing potential UEFA suspension vote as political pressure mounts

UEFA appears poised for an emergency vote on suspending Israel from European competition next week, with national federations scrambling to position themselves amid mounting political pressure following calls for action.
The brewing crisis intensified this week when United Nations experts called for Israel’s suspension from international football amid the unfolding genocide in occupied Palestinian territory.
A source confirmed that Europe’s soccer body could potentially decide next week to vote on whether to suspend Israel from European competition.
Should UEFA vote to ban Israel, it would put the organisation on a collision course with the government of the United States — co-hosts for the 2026 World Cup — which is vehemently against such a motion.
“We will absolutely work to fully stop any effort to attempt to ban Israel’s national soccer team from the World Cup,” a spokesperson for the U.S. state department told Sky News.
But even though UEFA has the power to suspend Israel or its clubs from their competitions, it may not be able to stop them from competing in World Cup qualifiers, which fall under the ambit of global soccer body FIFA.
The general secretaries of all UEFA national associations are meeting this week in Marbella, where Israel is not officially on the agenda, but officials expect UEFA to call an emergency vote next week.
FIFA did not respond to a Reuters request for comment while UEFA declined to comment.
Palestinian Football Association president Jibril Rajoub said Israelis should not be allowed to participate in any matches, whether they are under UEFA or FIFA.
“Israel has violated the principles, values and FIFA’s statutes. Therefore, I believe that Israel should be sanctioned,” Rajoub told TV2.
“The sanctions should come from UEFA and FIFA.”
WORLD CUP QUALIFIERS
Israel’s national team are set to face Norway and Italy, the top two teams in their World Cup qualifying group, next month.
“We don’t have any indications that we are facing such an act (UEFA suspension),” a spokesperson for the Israel Football Association told Reuters.
“We are focusing on our international matches against Norway and Italy.”
Norwegian broadcaster NRK reported the Norwegian Football Federation (NFF) is one of the member associations that have been the driving force behind calling for a meeting on the Israel situation. The NFF declined to comment.
Lise Klaveness, the president of the NFF and a member of the UEFA Executive Committee, has also been vocal about the crisis in Gaza ahead of her country’s home game against Israel on October 11.
“Neither we nor other organisations can remain indifferent to the humanitarian suffering and disproportionate attacks that the civilian population in Gaza has been subjected to for a long time,” Klaveness said in a statement last month.
“We want to donate the proceeds (from the game) to a humanitarian organisation that saves lives in Gaza every day and provides active emergency aid on the ground.”
The Dutch football federation (KNVB) said it knows nothing about a vote to suspend Israel.
“As soon as the football association receives a message about this, it will take a position,” the KNVB told Dutch outlet NOS.
Last week, Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said Israel should be banned from international sports competitions. However, officials from the Spanish FA (RFEF) have kept a low profile on the matter.
Israel maintains that its war is not against the population of Gaza but against the Hamas militant group whose fighters led the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel that killed 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies, and precipitated the war.
The subsequent war in Gaza has killed more than 65,000 people, according to local health officials.
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WAFU-B U17 Championship: Golden Eaglets rout Baby Cheetahs 4-1 in Yamoussoukro

A hat-trick from George Agha and a sublime free-kick goal from David Edeh ensured a comfortable start for five-time world champions Nigeria in the WAFU-B U17 Championship, as the Golden Eaglets routed Baby Cheetahs of Benin Republic 4 -1 in Yamoussoukro on Wednesday.
Agha converted from the spot three minutes into the game after Boluwatife Thompson was hacked inside the box.
Edeh displayed fantastic football artistry to score from a free-kick in the 5th minute of the encounter.
The Eaglets were in cruise control as Agha bagged his brace in the 14th minute. The charges of Manu Garba were very dominant with a three-goal advantage.
Warris Soumanou in goal for Benin Republic was caught napping and his error of judgement gave the Eaglets another goal after a beautiful exchange of passes and dribbles between Thompson and Edeh, which set up Agha for his hat-trick in the 32nd minute.
It was raining goals and it was the turn of the Beninoise in the 45th minute, as a low drive from Jeremy Zannou gave the Baby Cheetahs a consolation goal.
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Last-gasp Salah penalty earns below-par Liverpool dramatic victory at Burnley

Mohamed Salah’s dramatic stoppage-time penalty ensured Liverpool maintained their winning start to the Premier League season with a 1-0 victory at promoted side Burnley on Sunday.
With British record signing Alexander Isak forced to wait for his Liverpool debut having been left out the squad for the trip to Lancashire, the champions struggled to break down a dogged home side in the first half.
After a regroup at the break, the visitors upped the ante in the second half, with Dominik Szoboszlai finally forcing a fine save from Martin Dubravka in the Burnley goal.
Burnley were holding on for a well-earned point with ease, before the ball agonisingly struck substitute Hannibal Mejbri’s arm in the penalty area and Salah slotted the spot kick into the net in the 95th minute to break home hearts.
Liverpool are still to really get going this season, requiring a winner in the last 10 minutes of all four of their league victories so far. The goal that clinched an undeserved success at Turf Moor was certainly the most fortunate.
After one of the longest transfer sagas in Premier League history finally reached its expected conclusion, Liverpool supporters were forced to wait two weeks for their first glimpse of their 125-million-pound ($169.45-million) goal machine due to the international break.
While coach Arne Slot said this week that Isak would have to be utilised carefully due to his previous injuries and lack of action so far this season, the Swede was still expected to at least be on the bench at Turf Moor.
The wait goes on as, without their expensive new forward, Liverpool mustered just one shot on target in the first half, from left-back Andrew Robertson.
Burnley, who conceded the fewest goals in English football league history last term to earn them promotion, otherwise frustrated the champions with ease. Even Lesley Ugochukwu’s red card for two bookings in the 84th minute did not seem to fluster them.
Even without Isak, Liverpool still had much attacking talent on the Turf Moor pitch but they just could not find that killer pass.
Salah was especially below par but he made no mistake in the most pressurised moment after Hannibal had stuck up an arm to block Jeremie Frimpong’s cross
The champions’ impressive Premier League goalscoring streak stretches to 38 games nonetheless, their longest such run in the competition.
-Reuters
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