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Poor Pitch Forces Venue Change from Ibadan to Abeokuta for Falconets’ U20 World Cup Qualifier
The Confederation of African Football (CAF) has approved a request by the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) for a change of venue for the 2026 FIFA U20 Women’s World Cup third-round qualifying match between Nigeria and Senegal.
The first-leg encounter, scheduled for Saturday, February 7, 2026, will now be played at the MKO Abiola Sports Complex in Abeokuta, Ogun State, instead of the Lekan Salami Stadium in Ibadan.
NFF Director of Competitions, Ruth David, confirmed the development, explaining that the request was necessitated by the deteriorating condition of the pitch at the Lekan Salami Stadium, which had earlier been approved to host the fixture.
“The playing surface has deteriorated,” David said, noting that the Ibadan venue had also staged the Falconets’ second-round, second-leg qualifier against Rwanda in September last year.
Following the venue change, Nigeria’s U20 women’s team, the Falconets, who have been camping and training in Ibadan, are expected to relocate to Abeokuta in the coming days to acclimatise to the turf at the MKO Abiola Sports Complex ahead of the crucial qualifier.
The Falconets, two-time FIFA U20 Women’s World Cup silver medallists, booked their place in the third round after overpowering Rwanda 5-0 on aggregate in the previous round of the African qualifying series.
The Nigeria–Senegal tie is a key step in the race for a place at the 2026 FIFA U20 Women’s World Cup. The winner over two legs will advance to the final round of African qualifiers, where they will face the winner of the tie between Guinea-Bissau and Malawi for a ticket to the global tournament scheduled to hold in Poland from September 5 to 27, 2026.
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CAF Confirms Disciplinary Measures against Algeria

The Confederation of African Football (CAF) has handed down a series of disciplinary sanctions to Algeria following the fallout from their tense Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) Morocco 2025 encounter against Nigeria.
The CAF Disciplinary Board met on 10 January 2026 to deliberate on incidents arising from the match between the two African heavyweights, and its decisions affected players, officials, the Algerian Football Federation (FAF) and supporters.
Goalkeeper Luca Zidane was suspended for two CAF official matches with the Algerian senior national team after being found guilty of misconduct. Defender Rafik Belghali received a four-match suspension for aggressive and intimidating behaviour towards the match referee at the end of the game. However, CAF ruled that two of the four matches would be suspended on a one-year probationary basis, effective from the date of the decision.
The Disciplinary Board also imposed a series of financial penalties on the Algerian Football Federation. FAF was fined USD 5,000 for the conduct of the senior national team after Algeria accumulated five yellow cards during the match, in violation of Article 130(a) of the CAF Disciplinary Code.
A further fine of USD 25,000 was imposed for the inappropriate behaviour of Algerian players and officials after the final whistle, actions which CAF said brought the match into disrepute, contrary to Articles 82 and 83 of the CAF Disciplinary Code.
Supporter-related incidents also attracted heavy sanctions. CAF fined the Algerian FA USD 5,000 for the use of smoke devices by its supporters and another USD 5,000 for the throwing of objects. An additional USD 10,000 fine was imposed for failure to comply with security measures after supporters attempted to force security barriers.
The most severe penalty came in the form of a USD 50,000 fine for offensive and abusive gestures by Algerian supporters, including the display of banknotes towards match officials, an act CAF described as unacceptable and disrespectful.
The sanctions underline CAF’s zero-tolerance stance on misconduct involving players, officials and supporters, particularly at major tournaments, as it seeks to protect match officials and preserve the integrity of the Africa Cup of Nations.
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Lookman Looks Confident as Nigeria Eye Algeria Test

Ademola Lookman says Nigeria’s confidence continues to build at the Africa Cup of Nations, with the Super Eagles “improving every single game” as they prepare to face Algeria’s Desert Foxes — the 2019 champions — on Saturday in Marrakech.
The Atalanta forward has been Nigeria’s most influential player at the tournament and was again central to their attacking play, earning his second Man of the Match award.
Lookman has now registered three goals and five assists at this AFCON, taking his overall Africa Cup of Nations tally to seven goals.
“It’s been great,” Lookman said after their last match. “The team is improving every single game. It’s all goals today, so that’s positive for us.”
Operating in a fluid attacking trio, Lookman has combined effectively with Akor Adams and Victor Osimhen, helping Nigeria maintain a constant threat in the final third.
Despite a brief verbal exchange with Osimhen in the previous match, Lookman was quick to dismiss any suggestion of tension within the squad.
“Nothing happened, just a discussion on the pitch. That’s it,” he said. “In football, these things happen, and you move on.”
Asked whether such moments can strengthen the team, Lookman again played down their significance.
“I don’t know what the big issue is,” he added. “These things happen in football and you move on.”
Lookman says the responsibility of wearing the national colours continues to drive his performances.
“I get the opportunity to represent my country, and I know how much weight that bears,” he told reporters. “So I try to use that pressure and try to perform.”
With the Super Eagles now firmly focused on Saturday’s quarter-final against the Desert Foxes, Lookman is expecting a stern examination against one of the continent’s most experienced sides.
“The quarterfinals of the AFCON is something to look forward to,” he said. “Another big battle awaits us, so we need to be ready.”
He also highlighted the physical and tactical demands of the competition.
“Everyone is physically strong,” Lookman explained. “It’s about meeting them on the field, being intelligent, and being ready.”
“Same mentality from the team,” he said. “Same mentality to win, to be aggressive on the ball.”
Lookman offered words of encouragement to supporters and those facing challenges beyond the tournament.
“Keep on focusing, keep on believing in yourself,” he said. “Good things will come.”
Nigeria will once again look to Lookman’s inspiration as they chase a place in the AFCON semi-finals against the team that defeated them in 2019 in Egypt.
-Cafonline
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AFCON 2025 and the Quiet Triumph of African Coaches

By Sola Fanawopo, Fes
I dedicate today’s Observatory to our guys on the touchline—the African coaches, breaking the glass ceiling with authority and results at AFCON 2025. Take your flowers. You are representing.
AFCON 2025 is doing something African football has struggled to achieve for decades: it is winning an argument without raising its voice.
As the tournament reaches the crucial phases in Morocco, attention naturally gravitates toward star players and dramatic score lines.
Yet the deeper story—the one that will outlive goals and trophies—is unfolding on the touchlines. For the first time in decades, African coaches are not merely present at the Africa Cup of Nations; they are the dominant force shaping it.
At the Africa Cup of Nations 2025, 13 of the 24 teams are led by African head coaches, while 11 are managed by foreign tacticians. That numerical shift alone marks a historic correction. But numbers only matter when they perform—and African coaches are not filling slots. They are setting the tone, the pace, and the psychology of the tournament.
AFCON Is an Ecosystem, not a Theory Class
AFCON has always punished rigid thinking. It is not a laboratory for ideal football models; it is an ecosystem defined by climate, emotion, compressed recovery cycles, refereeing rhythms, and the weight of national expectation. This was precisely why African federations once believed only European coaches could “study” and master the tournament’s complexity.
AFCON 2025 has exposed the flaw in that logic.
African coaches do not analyse this ecosystem from the outside. They are shaped by it. Their teams are built to survive turbulence, absorb pressure, manage transitions, and win moments rather than possession statistics. AFCON does not ask who dominated the ball—it asks who dominated the moment.
Trust Has Changed Hands
One of the most revealing images of the tournament came during Nigeria’s group-stage match against Uganda. Victor Osimhen, Africa’s most recognisable striker, sprinted to the touchline during an injury stoppage to receive tactical instructions from his African coach.
It was a simple act—but a profound one.
This is the quiet psychological revolution of AFCON 2025. African players—many raised in Europe’s elite academies—no longer see African coaches as stopgap appointments. They see authority, clarity, and cultural understanding. Trust has become discipline. Discipline has become execution. The evidence is visible in compact defending, tactical obedience, and emotional control under pressure.
Institutional Memory as a Competitive Weapon
African coaches also arrive with something rarely acknowledged in global football analysis: institutional memory.
They understand federation politics, logistical uncertainty, late disruptions, and the emotional weight of national expectation. They plan not only for opponents, but for chaos. Foreign coaches often encounter these realities for the first time at AFCON. African coaches have already adapted to them.
That difference does not always show in possession charts—but it shows in knockout matches.
The Cote d’Ivoire Moment That Changed Everything
The philosophical turning point did not begin in Morocco. It began at the Africa Cup of Nations 2023.
Cote ‘Ivoire started that tournament under a French coach, Jean-Louis Gasset. After two matches marked by tactical confusion and emotional disconnection, he was dismissed. The federation turned inward and appointed Emerse Faé.
What followed was not a miracle. It was an alignment.
Tactical clarity returned. Confidence surged. The dressing room reconnected with the nation. Cote d’Ivoire went on to win the AFCON, collapsing a decades-old argument that African coaches needed foreign supervision to succeed. AFCON 2025 is the harvest of that lesson.
A New African Coaching Identity
From Walid Regragui on home soil, to Éric Chelle with Nigeria, to Pape Thiaw, a clear archetype has emerged: African-rooted, tactically educated, emotionally intelligent, and globally competent.
CAF licensing reforms, years of assistantship under foreign managers, and accumulated tournament experience have finally converged. African coaches are no longer imitating Europe. They are interpreting Africa—and winning with it.
The Verdict—and the Next Test
African coaches are not dominating AFCON 2025 because Africa suddenly became generous to its own. They are dominating because the tournament now rewards what they have always mastered: context, adaptability, authority, and emotional intelligence.
AFCON 2025 is not an upset. It is a recalibration.
The next question is unavoidable: When will European clubs trust African coaches the same way AFCON now does?
If football truly believes the world is flat, then opportunity must finally follow performance. African coaching is no longer catching up. It is setting the terms.
Sola Fanawopo is a journalist and Chairman Osun Football Association writes from Morocco
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