Painful absence for Nigeria as 2026 World Cup Draw unfolds

Painful absence for Nigeria as 2026 World Cup Draw unfolds


The world will turn to Washington, D.C., today (Friday) as FIFA conducts the Final Draw for the 2026 World Cup.

Unfortunately, one of the sport’s traditional heavyweights is missing from the excitement — Nigeria.

FIRST BANK AD



PT WHATSAPP CHANNEL

For the second consecutive time, the Super Eagles will watch the biggest showpiece from afar, reduced to spectators while nations with far fewer resources take their place on the global stage.

A draw without the Super Eagles

Today’s ceremony at the John F. Kennedy Centre brings together global stars, coaches and officials as 42 already-qualified teams and those still in contention discover their group-stage opponents.

In a tournament expanded to 48 teams — the largest in history — Nigeria’s absence stands out sharply.

Africa now enjoys nine automatic qualification slots and a potential tenth through playoffs.

MTN ADVERT


Do you live in Ogijo

Yet despite a population of over 220 million and a deep pool of elite football talent, Nigeria stumbled once again.

Their qualifying campaign ended in Rabat after a dramatic 4–3 penalty loss to DR Congo.

That result opened the door for others to make history. Haiti qualified for the first time since 1974, while Curaçao — a nation of fewer than 200,000 people — earned a World Cup berth for the first time ever.

John Obi Mikel (PHOTO CREDIT: @mikel_john_obi on Instagram)
John Obi Mikel (PHOTO CREDIT: @mikel_john_obi on Instagram)

‘Enough Is Enough,’ Says Mikel Obi

The failure reignited frustration at home, prompting intense criticism from many, including former Super Eagles captain John Mikel Obi.

Speaking on The Obi One Podcast, he condemned what he described as years of mismanagement by the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF).

“For the past eight years, this NFF have deprived the common Nigerian the chance to watch our team… on the biggest stage,” he said.

“It’s still gonna be the same result, which is failure, because they don’t know how to do it… What they are interested in is what comes in and is put in their pockets.”

Mikel, emphasising football’s unifying power, urged urgent reform:

“Football is the one thing that holds people together… Enough is enough, stop and take a break; just do the right thing.”

Izamoje: ‘We have lost the brand, the planning, the excitement’

Veteran broadcaster and Brila Group Chairman Larry Izamoje echoed the concerns, arguing that Nigeria’s football failure is rooted not just in tactics, but in a collapsed system.

“We have not built a brand. Let’s see how we can make the Super Eagles a brand people will associate with… Even the fans themselves are not excited,” he said at the Big Sports Dialogue in Lagos.

He lamented the lack of continuity, modern tools and technical preparation:

“A small club like Southampton has more analysis tools. What do we have written in the dressing room of the Eagles before matches?”

According to him, the emotional connection between the team and its supporters has weakened:

“As small as Uyo is, we still don’t fill the stadium. Something is amiss.”

He called for strategic rebuilding rooted in planning and professionalism:

“We need experts in strategy, image-building and planning. We must start spending money the right way.”

Keep hope alive-D.G

National Sports Commission Director General, Bukola Olopade, urged temperance and unity, insisting that the failure should not descend into a blame game.

“This is not the time to start talking about who did what… We need to go back, sit down and recalibrate,” he said.

“These are heroes… At this time, we cannot turn our backs on them.”

NFF president Ibrahim Gusau
NFF president Ibrahim Gusau (CREDIT: NFF)

NFF promises yet another reform drive

The NFF, in a familiar tone, offered apologies and a new pledge to fix longstanding problems.

“We will evaluate the technical, administrative, and structural gaps… We will rebuild trust. We will restore pride,” the federation stated.

But many Nigerians remain sceptical, having heard similar assurances after past setbacks.

Why Haiti and Curaçao Succeeded

Analysts highlight contrasting approaches:

Haiti and Curaçao benefited from steady coaching, clear football direction, sustained diaspora engagement and stable youth pathways.

Nigeria’s own journey was marked by coaching changes, internal disputes — including a bonus row in Rabat — and a lack of continuity or coherent planning.

Modern football rewards organisation, not reputation.

FIFA World Cup Draw (CREDIT: FIFA World Cup X Page)
FIFA World Cup Draw (CREDIT: FIFA World Cup X Page)

Draw procedure

According to the Final Draw procedures, hosts Canada, Mexico and the USA will be placed in Pot 1, alongside the highest-ranked qualified teams. The 39 remaining teams will be allocated across four pots of 12 teams each based on the FIFA/Coca-Cola Men’s World Ranking of 19 November 2025. In addition, the two FIFA World Cup 2026 Play-off Tournament placeholders and the four European play-off placeholders will all be placed in Pot 4.

Pot 1: Canada, Mexico, USA, Spain, Argentina, France, England, Brazil, Portugal, Netherlands, Belgium, Germany

Pot 2: Croatia, Morocco, Colombia, Uruguay, Switzerland, Japan, Senegal, IR Iran, Korea Republic, Ecuador, Austria, Australia

Pot 3: Norway, Panama, Egypt, Algeria, Scotland, Paraguay, Tunisia, Côte d’Ivoire, Uzbekistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, South Africa

Pot 4: Jordan, Cabo Verde, Ghana, Curaçao, Haiti, New Zealand, European Play-Off A, European Play-Off B, European Play-Off C, European Play-Off D, FIFA Play-Off Tournament 1, FIFA Play-Off Tournament 2

For the draw itself, all Pot 1 teams will be assigned first, placed sequentially into Groups A to L. The process will then continue with Pot 2, followed by Pot 3, and finally Pot 4, completing the allocation for all 48 teams.

Eyes now on AFCON 2025

With the World Cup dream over, attention shifts to the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco, where Nigeria sits in Group C alongside Tunisia, Uganda and Tanzania.

President Bola Tinubu has urged a reset:

“Now is the time to focus all efforts on the Cup of Nations. Our Super Eagles must recover the lost glory.”

A global stage without Nigeria

As stars gather in Washington for a glitzy draw hosted by Heidi Klum, Kevin Hart, Andrea Bocelli, Robbie Williams and others, Nigeria remains on the sidelines.

READ ALSO: LALIGA Africa celebrates ten years of partnership, development, football culture

Curaçao and Haiti will step proudly into the spotlight. Nigeria, meanwhile, watches and reflects.

The message is clear: nations that plan progress. Nations that rely on reputation fall behind.

The next four years will determine whether the Super Eagles return to world football’s centre stage — or drift further into the shadows.





Source: Premiumtimesng

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *