AFCON 2025
Super Eagles Stumble Before AFCON As Egypt Edge Nigeria In Friendly Thriller
Nigeria’s preparations for the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations suffered a minor setback on Tuesday night as the Super Eagles fell 2–1 to Egypt in a friendly encounter. While the result itself may not trigger panic, the performance once again highlighted familiar issues—especially Nigeria’s struggles in the absence of Victor Osimhen.
Eric Chelle opted for a second-string lineup, deliberately resting key figures like Osimhen, Ademola Lookman and Alex Iwobi. Paul Onuachu led the line, supported by Chidera Ejuke, while a new-look defence featured Igoh Ogbu alongside Chidozie Awaziem. The aim was clear: test depth, assess combinations and gather data before AFCON kicks off.
Egypt, also rotating heavily, left out superstars Mohamed Salah and Omar Marmoush. In their absence, Zizo took center stage and proved decisive. His intelligence, movement and vision were the difference on the night.
The Pharaohs struck first before the half-hour mark. A well-weighted pass from Mohamed Hany split Nigeria’s backline, allowing Zizo to square for Mahmoud Saber, who calmly finished into an empty net.
Nigeria responded positively, turning up the pressure late in the first half. Their persistence paid off from a set piece when Zaidu Sanusi’s free kick caused confusion in Egypt’s box. The loose ball fell kindly to Awaziem, who nodded home at the back post to restore parity.
However, Egypt regained control shortly after the restart. Zizo once again slipped past Nigeria’s defensive line—amid offside protests—before setting up Mostafa Mohamed, whose powerful strike beat Amas Obasogie to make it 2–1.
Despite flashes of urgency and attacking intent, the Super Eagles could not find a late equaliser. Egypt held firm to secure their first win over Nigeria since the 2016 AFCON qualifiers.
Beyond the scoreline, the bigger talking point remains Nigeria’s ongoing struggles without Osimhen. The defeat extends a worrying trend that has already haunted the Super Eagles during World Cup qualification, where they failed to win any match played in his absence. While AFCON success is rarely built on one player alone, Nigeria’s over-reliance on their talisman continues to show.
Still, not all was gloomy. Fringe players gained valuable minutes, tactical experiments were tested, and lessons were learned—exactly what friendlies are meant for. With the AFCON opener against Tanzania looming, Chelle now has clarity on what needs fixing and where reinforcements are non-negotiable.
One thing is certain: when the tournament proper begins, results—not experiments—will define Nigeria’s fate.
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