U-20 FOOTBALL
Fact File as Nigeria, Egypt battle for bronze medal at U20 AFCON

Nigeria and Egypt meet in the third-place play-off at the Under-20 Africa Cup of Nations on Sunday, with a clash at the 30 June Stadium in Cairo (18:00 local time / 15:00 GMT).
This will be the sixth meeting between the two nations at the U-20 AFCON finals since 1993.
Nigeria have won three previous encounters, including group stage victories in 2009 (2-0) and 2023 (1-0), as well as the 2005 final (2-0). Egypt’s only win came in the 2013 semi-final, where they triumphed 2-0, while their 2007 group stage clash ended 1-1.
This marks the second time Nigeria face Egypt as tournament hosts, having defeated them 1-0 in the 2023 group stage. It will also be the ninth time Nigeria take on the host nation at the tournament.
Their record in such fixtures is six wins and two losses from eight previous games.
In all eight of those matches, only the winning side has scored, and Nigeria have kept six clean sheets.
They have won their last four matches against host nations, beating Senegal twice in 2015 (group stage and final), and overcoming Niger and Egypt in 2019 and 2023 respectively. This is the fourth straight tournament where Nigeria face the hosts.
Nigeria’s two losses to host nations came in finals: a 1-0 defeat to Ghana in 1999 and a similar scoreline against Congo in 2007.
Their 4-0 win over Tunisia in the 2023 third-place play-off remains the largest margin of victory recorded in this fixture.
The third-place game has gone to penalties on four occasions: in 2003, 2005, 2019, and 2021. Only twice has it ended 0-0 after regulation time – South Africa’s shootout win over Nigeria in 2019 and Gambia’s penalty triumph over Tunisia in 2021.
NIGERIA FACTS
· At the 2025 edition, Nigeria have won only one game in open play – their opening 1-0 victory over Tunisia. They drew their next two group games, 0-0 against Morocco and 2-2 with Kenya.
· Their quarter-final clash against Senegal also ended goalless, with Nigeria advancing via penalties, before losing 1-0 to South Africa in the semi-finals.
· With just three goals scored, this is Nigeria’s lowest goal tally in any U-20 AFCON tournament where they’ve played at least five matches.
· They’ve failed to score in three of five games but have kept three clean sheets and conceded only two goals – the joint-best defensive record alongside Morocco among the semi-finalists.
· Nigeria are contesting their sixth third-place match, having won it four times previously – in 1995, 2009, 2013, and 2023.
· They beat Mali 1-0 and 2-1 in 1995 and 2013, defeated South Africa 2-1 in 2009, and crushed Tunisia 4-0 in 2023. Their only defeat in this game came in 2019, when they lost to South Africa on penalties after a 0-0 draw.
· This is Nigeria’s third consecutive appearance in the third-place match. They have now reached the semi-finals in each of their last eight participations, winning the title in 2005, 2011, and 2015, finishing runners-up in 2007, third in 2009, 2013, and 2023, and fourth in 2019.
· A win would mark Nigeria’s 14th top-three finish, with a record of seven titles, two runner-up finishes, and four third-place results.
EGYPT FACTS
· Egypt arrive at the third-place play-off after losing to Morocco in the semi-finals, having edged Ghana on penalties in the quarter-finals.
· Of the four semi-finalists, Egypt have conceded the most goals – seven in six matches. They’ve kept three clean sheets but allowed three goals across their two knockout games.
· This is Egypt’s fourth appearance in a third-place play-off. They have won all three of their previous matches in this fixture, beating Ethiopia 3-0 in 1993 and 2-0 in 2001, and overcoming Mali 1-0 in 2011.
· Egypt have never conceded a goal in a third-place match and have scored six.
· They are the fifth host nation to play in a third-place game. In the four previous instances, hosts won twice and lost twice. Nigeria beat Mali 1-0 in 1995, Egypt defeated Ethiopia 3-0 in 2001, Burkina Faso lost on penalties to Mali in 2003 after a 1-1 draw, and Benin beat Morocco on spot kicks in 2005 following a 1-1 draw. Egypt’s 3-0 win over Ethiopia in 2001 remains the heaviest defeat for a host in a third-place match.
· Egyptian goalkeeper Abdel Monem Tamer has made 18 saves, the second-highest total in the tournament behind South Africa’s Fletcher Lowe (24).
· Tamer has also conceded the most goals among all goalkeepers at the finals with seven.
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U-20 FOOTBALL
Nigeria, Argentina Renew Rivalry as Flying Eagles Target Quarter-Final Spot in Chile

It is a transcontinental rivalry that is fast spreading across all competitions. From the FIFA World Cup to the football tournament of the Olympics, the King Fahd Intercontinental Cup later redesignated as Confederation Cup, the U-17 World Cup, the U-20 World Cup and friendly matches – Argentina and Nigeria are fast becoming fierce rivals.
And so, for the third time in history, Nigeria and Argentina will go head-to-head at the FIFA U-20 World Cup, as they clash in a highly anticipated Round of 16 encounter at the Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos in Santiago, Chile, on Wednesday. Kickoff is set for 8:30 p.m. Nigerian time.
The Flying Eagles delegation arrive in Santiago
The fixture rekindles one of youth football’s most captivating rivalries, with both nations boasting rich histories at the global stage.
Their most recent meeting came two years ago when Nigeria stunned hosts Argentina 2-0 in the Round of 16 — a result that sent shockwaves across the tournament. Goals from Ibrahim Muhammad and Haliru Sarki sealed that famous win, propelling the Flying Eagles into the quarter-finals before they bowed out to the Republic of Korea after extra time.
The rivalry dates back decades. In the 2005 final in the Netherlands, Argentina triumphed 2-1 over Nigeria thanks to two penalty goals from Lionel Messi, while Chinedu Ogbuke Obasi struck a memorable goal for the Flying Eagles.
Argentina remain the most successful nation in the tournament’s history with six titles, while Nigeria have reached the final twice (1989 and 2005) and claimed bronze in 1985.
Despite the Albiceleste’s pedigree, the Flying Eagles — seven-time African champions — will take to the pitch in Santiago with belief and determination, buoyed by a strong group-stage showing. Coach Aliyu Zubair’s men collected four points from their three matches, including a spirited 1-1 draw with Colombia, in which Nigeria struck the crossbar three times before captain Daniel Bameyi coolly converted a late penalty.
That performance, built on resilience and attacking flair, has strengthened confidence within the Nigerian camp. However, Zubair will have to make at least one change in attack as Suleman Sani is suspended after receiving two yellow cards in the group stage.
The Flying Eagles arrived in Santiago from Talca on Monday evening and will hold a final training session on Tuesday ahead of their showdown with the South American giants.
With history, pride, and a place in the quarter-finals at stake, Wednesday’s clash promises another thrilling chapter in the long-running Nigeria–Argentina football rivalry.
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U-20 FOOTBALL
Nigeria Face Must-Win Battle Against Colombia in Chile

Nigeria’s Flying Eagles will take to the pitch in a make-or-break Group F encounter against Colombia at the ongoing FIFA U20 World Cup in Chile on Sunday night in Chile, but Monday morning in Nigeria.
The game carries huge stakes for both teams. Nigeria must win to secure a top-two finish and automatic passage to the Round of 16. A draw or defeat would confine them to third place, leaving qualification dependent on results from other groups.
Colombia, on the other hand, need only a draw to confirm their place in the knockout stage after a steady start to their campaign.
The South Americans are expected to approach the match with caution, aware that avoiding defeat will be enough to advance.
Nigeria’s coach Aliyu Zubairu is expected to rally his players for one final push, knowing that victory is the only guarantee for survival in the competition. Fans back home will be watching closely in the early hours of Monday, hoping the Flying Eagles can rise to the occasion and keep their World Cup hopes alive.
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U-20 FOOTBALL
Othmane Maamma: Morocco’s breakout star lighting up the U-20 World Cup

Morocco’s return to the FIFA U-20 World Cup after two decades has found a face: Othmane Maamma.
In two group matches the 19-year-old has provided the decisive moments that have taken the Atlas Cubs from dark horses to group winners, first shredding Spain down the right and then stunning Brazil with a scissor-kick of rare audacity. If this is a tournament that forges futures, Maamma looks forged already.
The Watford forward (signed from Montpellier in July) has been Morocco’s spearhead and safety valve in Chile: a direct runner on the shoulder, happy to carry 30 metres in transition, and ruthless when the window opens.
Against Spain he turned defence into incision, burning his full-back to square for Gessime Yassine’s clincher in a 2-0 win.
Four days later, with Brazil squeezing, he improvised the goal of the night — opening his body to acrobatically volley in Gessime’s deep cross — and tilted a heavyweight contest Morocco’s way in a 2-1 victory that sealed qualification.
Maamma’s impact has been as much about tone as numbers. Morocco have been compact and pragmatic without the ball, then startlingly vertical when it’s won. That suits a winger who relishes space and duels.
“I like to sit on the shoulders of the defenders and exploit space. I like one-on-ones, when I can use my acceleration to gain that extra space,” he explained earlier in the week in an interview with FIFA.com.
It’s exactly what head coach Mohamed Ouahbi has asked for: narrow lines to deny passing lanes, then release the wide players quickly and with purpose.
Just as striking has been the teenager’s calm. “Football is football. It doesn’t matter where or who you’re up against,” Maamma said after the Spain game. “You just need to keep a cool head and your emotions in check.”
The message never changed ahead of Brazil either. “I speak of Brazil just as I spoke of Spain. It’s going to be another big game. We’ll do absolutely everything we can to win.” The delivery matched the rhetoric.
Technically, Maamma mixes old-school winger values with modern versatility. He can start wide right and drive outside to cross, drift infield to combine off the nine, or attack the back post from the far side — the movement that produced his bicycle-style strike against Brazil.
At 1.82m, he carries aerial threat and protects the ball better than many pure sprinters; his first touch is typically forward, his second decisive.
This tournament has also underlined how carefully Morocco have built a pathway. Maamma debuted for Montpellier in May 2024, collecting 14 Ligue 1 appearances (two goals, one assist) before Watford moved in the summer, seeing a profile to develop rather than a finished article.
In Chile he has been deployed with clarity. The system demands defensive shifts, then trusts him to decide the transition: carry or combine. His assist versus Spain and finish versus Brazil are two sides of the same coin.
Around him, a coherent team is growing. Yassir Zabiri has provided punch in the inside-left channel, Yassine’s volume of work has made others quicker, while the back line has absorbed pressure with mature discipline.
Ouahbi has tried to keep a lid on the mood — “We’re happy. But it’s only three points, we haven’t achieved anything yet… We want more. Confidence is growing, but we’re going to try to stay humble,” he said after beating Spain — yet even he will recognise how the right talent in the right structure can accelerate belief.
Where does this go next? In the short term, to a last-16 tie with a very different kind of pressure: expectation. Opponents will drop five yards deeper, full-backs will be less adventurous, and the space Maamma feasted on may shrink.
The next step in his tournament will be about variety — receiving to feet and combining in tighter corridors, drawing fouls, and making set plays count. Through two tests, he’s shown the decision-making to adapt.
In the longer view, it’s hard not to project forward. Morocco’s senior side has set a new standard for North African football in recent years; the conveyor belt below them is the point.
A winger who can both hurt elite opponents in transition and contribute in structured possession is a profile every national coach covets. On Chilean evidence, Maamma belongs in that conversation sooner rather than later.
For now, the brief remains simple: keep doing what’s working. Beat your man. Choose the moment. Trust the plan.
In a World Cup that often belongs to the cool-headed, Othmane Maamma has already shown he can decide games without hurry. Morocco have a star for this tournament — and, just maybe, a pillar for the next decade.
-CAFonline
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