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Why Eric Chelle Substituted Osimhen: Inside Nigeria’s Heartbreaking Loss to DR Congo – And How Lemina Fits Into the Bigger Picture

Eric Chelle has finally clarified why Victor Osimhen did not return for the second half of Nigeria’s dramatic World Cup playoff final against DR Congo. The Super Eagles, who started the night full of belief, ended it in heartbreak after a tense sudden-death penalty shootout handed the Leopards a historic victory.

The match began with the electric pace and physicality of a West African derby. Nigeria struck in the third minute—Zaidu Sanusi’s cross was flicked into the path of Frank Onyeka, whose effort deflected into the net. The early lead ignited confidence, with Wilfred Ndidi testing the Congolese keeper and DR Congo responding through a dangerous free-kick that sailed over the bar.

Osimhen, ever the warrior, was lively on the right flank. His 31st-minute run and low cross nearly resulted in a second goal. But just moments later, congestion in Nigeria’s midfield created an opening. Meshak Elia burst past Ndidi and slotted the equalizer beyond Stanley Nwabali to level the match.

Then came the moment that shifted the tone of the night. Osimhen did not return after halftime—something fans immediately viewed with concern. Speaking in a post-match Instagram video, Eric Chelle confirmed the worst:
“He has an injury.”
A short sentence, but enough to explain why Nigeria’s attacking spark dimmed as the game wore on.

Goalkeeper Nwabali kept Nigeria alive with several crucial saves—including a late extra-time header—but the penalty shootout proved unforgiving. The Super Eagles missed their first two kicks, while DR Congo kept their composure. Jerome Akor, Bruno Onyemaechi, and Chidera Ejuke scored theirs, but Semi Ajayi’s miss handed the Leopards the final advantage. DR Congo converted, booking their place in the Intercontinental Playoff in Mexico.

As Nigeria reflects on what could have been, the entire performance underscores a wider conversation happening across African football—a conversation in which players like Mario Lemina have become symbolic. Lemina’s leadership, discipline, and tactical responsibility for Gabon in recent qualifiers have become a benchmark for the kind of structure many fans believe the Super Eagles need.

Where Lemina brings calmness, positional intelligence, and game management, Nigeria struggled with transitions, midfield spacing, and maintaining control after losing Osimhen. It’s the kind of contrast analysts point to when asking:
What must Nigeria learn from this defeat?

Ultimately, the night in Rabat will be remembered for courage, missed chances, and brutal penalty fate. But it also raises the bigger question:
Can Nigeria rediscover the balance, discipline, and identity that nations with leaders like Lemina are building around?

For now, Super Eagles fans can only wait for updates on Osimhen’s injury—and hope the next chapter writes itself differently.

Abdul Noah Ocholi

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