World Cup
The beginning of the end of 2026 World Cup dream
BY KUNLE SOLAJA.
While some other contending teams are asserting their status and having goal feast and harvest of points, the Nigerian national team, the Super Eagles are demonstrating what they are best known for – Consistently Inconsistent – apologies to the late Professor Ayodele Awojobi.
Cote d’Ivoire Nigeria’s main group opponents in the forth coming Africa Cup of Nations spoke loud and clear as they demolished Seychelles 9-0 in their World Cup qualifiers. Egypt dismantled Djibouti 6-0. Tunisia hammered Sao Tome &Principe 4-0, the same result Senegal had over South Sudan.
Those big teams did not leave anything to chances. The big scores will later count in their favour if their is need for tie-breaker.
Nigeria’s Super Eagles only laboured to 1-1 draw in their two opening matches against lower ranked teams – Lesotho and Zimbabwe. Their World Cup qualifying hopes are thus put on life support.
It has been a disaster that had waited to happen. Since José Vítor dos Santos Peseiro, the Portuguese journeyman took over, his only emphatic success had been in encounters with Sao Tome & Principe, the 50th ranked among CAF’s 53 affiliates.
Against other teams, even lower ranked ones, it had been very arduous. The once glamorous African team has turned a laborious side under Peseiro.
Consider Africa’s 26th ranked Guinea-Bissau beating Nigeria at home. Peseiro’s laborious outfit had to depend on the lottery of penalty kick to be back on track for Africa Cup of Nations qualification.
It was almost an horror outsmarting Sierra Leone in the two legged encounters of the Afcon qualifiers. Whatever the outcome of South Africa’s second match, Nigeria will certainly be trailing Bafana Bafana when both clash in Matchday 3 next year.
The unfolding results is not only an indicative of what to expect at the end of the 10-match series of the World Cup qualifiers, it is an harbinger to what will happen in January at the Africa Cup of Nations.
If the Super Eagles cannot beat lowly rated Lesotho and Zimbabwe, what is the expectation in the duel with giants, Cote d’Ivoire on their home soil? It was a struggle aided by the lottery of penalty kick against Equatorial Guinea last March.
Shall we expect another penalty to upstage Guinea-Bissau when they face the Super Eagles on Monday January 22?
It will be double jeopardy for Jose Peseiro to continue to handle the Super Eagles. His appointment should be terminated immediately, no matter the repercussion.
Why is it that clubs and national teams find it easy to sack coaches and managers, but it turned to a Greek puzzle if Nigeria were to do the same?
It is well known for a long time that goalkeeping is the major problem afflicting our national team.
Logically, you expect a reasoning coach to experiment with all his invited three goalkeepers in the two-match 180 minute friendly matches.
But as if afflicted with myopic reasoning, Peseiro insisted on off-form and possibly ageing Francis Uzoho who in seven consecutive matches has now conceded seven goals.
One of the most damaging ones was the 30 yard freekick that the goalkeeper ought to have seen the ball sailing from afar.
Undoubtedly, Uzoho’s psyche is damaged and is not psychologically tuned to be first choice goalkeeper. He needs to be rested while Peseiro needs a red card.
With two points from obtainable six, and with prospects of South Africa getting the maximum before facing the Super Eagles next year, we need to act fast.
World Cup
Last-gasp Luiz Henrique effort gives Brazil 2-1 win at Chile
Lacklustre Brazil pulled off a last-gasp 2-1 away victory over Chile in the South American World Cup qualifiers on Thursday, thanks to a goal by substitute Luiz Henrique in the 89th minute.
Off the back of a disappointing loss to Paraguay and losing four of their last five qualifiers with a series of poor performances, Brazil had to recover from a goal down as Eduardo Vargas put the locals in front with a fine header from a Felipe Loyola cross in the second minute.
Chile wasted chances to extend their lead, but Brazil managed to find the equaliser in added time before the break, when Savinho made a good run down the right and crossed to Igor Jesus who nodded a towering header past the goalkeeper, scoring on his first call-up for the national team.
Brazil controlled the second half and found a duly deserved winner late with a fine effort by Jesus’ teammate at Brazilian league leaders and Copa Libertadores semi-finalists Botafogo Luiz Henrique, who slotted a curling strike from the edge of the box to rescue the five-time World Cup champions three much needed points.
The victory lifted Brazil to fourth in the standings with 13 points, two behind Uruguay and eight from leaders Argentina. Chile are second from bottom on five points.
Earlier on Thursday, leaders Argentina were held to a 1-1 draw against Venezuela in Lionel Messi’s return to international duty from an injury.
The Argentine captain brilliantly assisted Nicolas Otamendi on a drenched pitch to open the scoring 13 minutes after kick-off, but a relentless Venezuela fought back to equalise with a Salomon Rondon’s header in the second half.
In-form Bolivia grabbed a gritty 1-0 win, their third successive victory, handing second-placed Colombia their first loss in the qualifiers.
Trying to end a 13-game winless run against their opponents, Bolivia started well but had to play most of the game with 10 men as Hector Cuellar was sent off with a straight red card for bringing striker Roger Martinez down as the last man in the 20th minute.
However, the fierce locals managed to find the winner in a stunning strike by Miguel Terceros, who dominated near the right touchline, cutting inside to beat two Colombian defenders before unleashing a fine left-footed strike that flew into the top-left corner in the 58th minute
Argentina are on top of the standings on 19 points, three ahead of Colombia and four from third-place Uruguay, who have a game in hand and will face last-placed Peru on Friday.
Brazil climbed to fourth, leapfrogging Ecuador, who are in fifth place on 12 points following a goalless draw against Paraguay.
Bolivia are behind Ecuador on goal difference in sixth, followed by Venezuela with a point behind in seventh. Only the top six are guaranteed a berth at the 2026 finals.
-Reuters
World Cup
Venezuela hold Argentina to 1-1 draw on Messi’s return
Argentina were held to a 1-1 draw against Venezuela on Thursday in Lionel Messi’s return to international duty in the South America’s World Cup qualifiers.
Captain Messi, 37, fully recovered from an injury sustained in the Copa America final against Colombia in July, was brilliant in setting up Otamendi on a drenched pitch to open the scoring 13 minutes after kick-off, which was delayed by half an hour due to heavy rain.
Argentina goalkeeper Geronimo Rulli, filling in for Emiliano ‘Dibu’ Martinez, who is serving a two-match ban for offensive behaviour, produced a fine performance to keep out Salomon Rondon’s first-half efforts.
However, the determined Venezuelan striker equalised in the second half with an exceptional header from a Yeferson Soteldo’s cross to temporarily move his team to sixth in the standings with 11 points.
Argentina sought a winner after boss Lionel Scaloni introduced Leandro Paredes and Lautaro Martinez five minutes from time, but the soggy pitch only increased the World Cup winners’ shortcomings.
“It was an ugly match. We couldn’t even make two passes in a row, the ball stopped because of the water on the pitch. It is difficult to play in these conditions, the pitch did not help,” Messi told TyC Sports after the game.
“The best conditions for us to play is that there is a good pitch, good weather, that the ball runs. We don’t ask for much, do we?” added defender Rodrigo De Paul.
Argentina remain top of the standings with 19 points and will face Bolivia on Tuesday, while Venezuela visit Paraguay.
-Reuters
World Cup
Depleted Brazil brace for must-win World Cup qualifiers
Brazil are in unfamiliar territory, grappling with mounting pressure and uncertainty as they prepare for crucial World Cup qualifiers against Chile and Peru, without the help of key players sidelined by injuries.
After losing four of their last five qualifiers with a series of poor performances, the record five-times World Cup winners are fifth in the standings on 10 points, ahead of Venezuela on goal difference in sixth. Only the top six are guaranteed a berth at the 2026 finals.
Paraguay and Bolivia are one point behind and another slip-up by Brazil could leave them out of the qualification places and at risk of missing out on the World Cup for the first time in their history.
Manager Dorival Jr, who was appointed in January after the team spent a year under two caretaker coaches as the Brazilian FA tried and failed to lure Italian Carlo Ancelotti from Real Madrid, has won only two competitive games.
Following a lacklustre Copa America campaign, when they were knocked out in the quarter finals by Uruguay, Brazil snatched a narrow home win over Ecuador last month.
Yet they came crashing back to earth days later with another poor performance, losing 1-0 to a Paraguay side who had only scored once in their previous seven qualifiers.
The inconsistency that has plagued Brazil since they let coach Tite go following a penalty shootout defeat to Croatia in the Qatar World Cup quarter-finals has continued with the side winning only four of their last 14 games.
Dorival was forced to make five changes to his initial squad for the games against Chile in Santiago on Thursday and against Peru in Brasilia on Tuesday, after goalkeeper Alisson, defenders Bremer, Eder Militao and Guilherme Arana, and forward Vinicius Jr all suffered injuries.
On Wednesday, the coach made the surprise announcement that Botafogo forward Igor Jesus would start up-front against Chile on his first call-up for the national team, leaving Real Madrid teenager Endrick on the bench.
“What I see is that Igor’s moment is very interesting, Endrick is still getting to know his new club, he’s arriving at the biggest club in world football with a lot of competition,” Dorival told reporters.
The 23-year-old Jesus has been a stand-out talent for the Brazilian league leaders and Copa Libertadores semi-finalists since signing for Botafogo from Emirati club Shabab Al-Ahli in July, scoring seven goals in 19 games.
“I think that Igor’s own experience and the moment he’s living is a little different,” Dorival added. “Maybe it’s important to have players with this profile for a game of this magnitude and at this time.
“Sometimes we can’t replicate on the pitch everything that we do in training, but on Tuesday we had another training session that filled us with great expectation. Maybe this is the moment to find the balance we want.”
Chile are ninth in South America’s World Cup qualifying standings on five points, two points ahead of last-placed Peru.
Brazil team to face Chile: Ederson; Danilo, Marquinhos, Gabriel Magalhaes, Abner; Andre, Lucas Paqueta; Savinho, Raphinha, Rodrygo, Igor Jesus.
-Reuters
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