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The Super Eagles of Nigeria will meet Jamaica in the Unity Cup final after the Reggae Boyz defeated India 2‑0 in Wednesday’s semi‑final at The Valley in London, Afrik‑Foot reports.
Jamaica’s victory was secured by goals from defender Courtney Clarke and forward Kaheim Dixon, who scored in front of a lively crowd at Charlton Athletic’s home ground, setting up a repeat of last year’s dramatic final against Nigeria.
India, playing on English soil for the first time in 24 years, showed flashes of energy under coach Khalid Jamil, but the Caribbean side’s physical strength and attacking speed proved too much over 90 minutes.
Jamaica opened the scoring through Clarke after a strong spell of pressure, before Dixon added the second goal to extinguish India’s hopes of a comeback. The Reggae Boyz managed the closing stages comfortably and now head into Saturday’s final full of confidence.
Super Eagles. Copyright: xNewsxImagesx IMAGONigeria secured their place in the final on Tuesday after beating Zimbabwe 2‑0 at the same venue. Millwall forward Femi Azeez was the star of the night, scoring twice on his senior debut for the Super Eagles. His first goal arrived inside the opening five minutes, and he completed the win in the 62nd minute from a pass by Terem Moffi.
Goalkeeper Arthur Okonkwo also impressed on his debut as coach Eric Chelle watched his side dominate possession and keep Zimbabwe quiet for most of the contest.
Super Eagles vs Jamaica: Rematch of the 2025 final awaits
Saturday’s meeting between Nigeria and Jamaica will be a direct rematch of the 2025 Unity Cup final. That encounter ended 2‑2 after regulation time before the Super Eagles won 5‑4 on penalties to keep their perfect record in the competition intact.
Femi Azeez and the Super Eagles at the Unity Cup. Copyright: xToyinxOshodix IMAGONigeria remain the most successful side in the tournament’s history, having won every previous edition in 2002, 2004 and 2025. The Super Eagles are also aiming to defend the trophy successfully for the second straight edition since the competition returned after a long break.
This year’s tournament has again turned The Valley into a colourful celebration of African and Caribbean football culture, with large Nigerian and Jamaican communities in London creating a carnival atmosphere around the games.
The final is scheduled for Saturday, May 30, with kick‑off set for 7:30 pm BST (8:30 pm Nigerian time). Before then, India and Zimbabwe will meet in the third‑place play‑off on Friday.

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