ARTICLE AD BOX
By Tony Ubani
The world has turned its eyes to the beautiful game of football as the Federation of International Football Association, FIFA World Cup continues to generate interests from USA, Mexico and Canada, the three countries co-hosting the expanded World Cup of 48 national teams.
For billions of fans across the globe, the tournament represents the pinnacle of sporting competition — unity, passion, and fair play on the grandest stage.
For Nigerians, the World Cup will always carry a deeper resonance.
The Super Eagles’ inability to secure a spot at the global tournament has diminished the international marketability of Nigeria’s top talent and stunted the growth of the domestic game.
NFF must be overhauled, depoliticised – stakeholders, sporting icons
Stakeholders and sporting icons have repeatedly emphasised that until the NFF is overhauled and depoliticised, the country’s immense footballing talent will continue to waste.
The Nigeria Football Federation’s, NFF, chronic administrative and logistical incompetence is widely cited as the root cause of the Super Eagles’ consecutive failures to qualify for the FIFA World Cup. Pervasive mismanagement, delayed player bonuses, and chaotic coaching appointments have devastated the team’s momentum.
This failure represents something far deeper than poor performance on the pitch. It is the inevitable culmination of years of institutional rot, a systemic collapse engineered by a football federation that has perfected the art of self-sabotage.
From financial mismanagement and chronic player neglect to the abject decay of youth development structures, Nigerian football has been methodically stripped of its competitive edge by the very federation meant to nurture it.

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