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"The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup - Sports (18372) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumEntertainmentSports"The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup (17782707 Views)

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Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by charlesemeka85(m): 1:24pm On Dec 18, 2025
QueenJazz:
Almost like Osasu, SoccerNittyGritty is another learned scholar and someone whom I value his opinion greatly when it comes to football politics and football itself.

This hope una dey give us, I go swear for una if this thing no materialize o. 🤧
my dear super eagles dey go World Cup

It’s done and dusted!!
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by elyte89: 1:26pm On Dec 18, 2025
charlesemeka85:
my dear super eagles dey go World Cup

It’s done and dusted!!
Jamaica looking at u 🙄
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by charlesemeka85(m): 1:26pm On Dec 18, 2025
Imagine a whole Congolese team no come get players wey dey do bleaching? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

When I saw their team against super eagles I suspected fowl play cus it’s abnormal to see a Congolese team with no player with a bleached skin 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by charlesemeka85(m): 1:27pm On Dec 18, 2025
elyte89:
Jamaica looking at u 🙄
forget bob marley and sons we go win them
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by semid4lyfe(mod): 1:32pm On Dec 18, 2025
Goke7:
That’s why for so many years DRC mostly feature home based players especially in Afcon and have struggled to qualify for the World Cup despite having so much talent in the diaspora. The one they have managed to achieve has exposed their criminal and corrupt tendencies.
True. Most of their players were from TP Mazembe, AS Vita Club and DC Motema Pembe due to that dual-nationality restriction.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by Goke7: 1:32pm On Dec 18, 2025
charlesemeka85:
Imagine a whole Congolese team no come get players wey dey do bleaching? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

When I saw their team against super eagles I suspected fowl play cus it’s abnormal to see a Congolese team with no player with a bleached skin 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
All those TP Mazembe boys abi 😂 😂 😂
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by Goke7: 1:34pm On Dec 18, 2025
semid4lyfe:
True. Most of their players were from TP Mazembe, AS Vita Club and DC Motema Pembe due to that dual-nationality restriction.
Yeah AS Vita I remember dem wella Dey beat naija clubs anyhow those days o!
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by Kog45(m): 1:37pm On Dec 18, 2025
semid4lyfe:
Why does FIFA take so long to decide cases though?

Emilie Nsue made his debut for Equatorial Guinea in 2013 but it wasn't until 2024 that FIFA came out with their ruling that he was ineligible.

The SA-Mokoena issue, as open and shut as it was, it took months before SA were docked the 3 points and 3 goals.

Now this Malaysia issue, the petition was filed in June but FIFA just released their ruling December 17.

What are they investigating and verifying that takes so long? Make dem sha do fast in this DR Congo case make we know our fate by the end of January latest.
I'm screenshot this comment to someone very important.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by Kog45(m): 1:39pm On Dec 18, 2025
No
NasirIbnLaAhad:
Start rant.

Okay,

Like I always say, certain people on this thread tend to be overly emotional and clueless when discussing salient issues. Why do you have to keep reminding us that Nigeria don't "deserve" to qualify for the World Cup as if we didn't all watch how shambolic their campaign was? We played terribly in the qualifiers - that's undeniable. The Super Eagles were embarrassing, and under normal circumstances, we have no business being anywhere near the World Cup after that performance. But what I don't get is why people can't see that this isn't about whether we "deserve" it based on our football. This is about the integrity of the competition. I'm not a legal expert so I can't say how valid this protest is but let's make one thing very clear: FIFA has rules for a reason. When you sign up to play international football, you're agreeing to follow those rules. DR Congo, like every other nation, submitted their players for eligibility checks through FIFA's official system. FIFA approved these players. That's the process.

But now we're finding out that these approvals may have been based on incomplete information. If DR Congo's own constitution says their citizens must renounce other nationalities by age 21, and these players didn't actually do that, then how can they legitimately represent DR Congo? You can't have it both ways - you can't use your passport to claim FIFA eligibility while simultaneously not following your own country's laws about who can hold that passport.

This isn't Nigeria being opportunistic. What were doing here is holding everyone to the same standard, because I can promise you, if the situation were reversed and Nigeria had fielded players who weren't properly cleared under our own laws, other nations will challenge it and be ready to die on that hill. So why the **** are people on this thread playing pretend and acting holier-than-thou with this issue? If DRC is proven guilty in this case, how is it our fault?

People say we're trying to qualify "through the backdoor,"... My brother the REAL backdoor is fielding players who aren't legally eligible and hoping nobody notices. If you get caught cheating on an exam, you don't get to keep your grade just because you already celebrated passing. The fact that the match already happened doesn't make the rules suddenly not matter.

Nigeria absolutely did not deserve to qualify based on how we played. Our football was atrocious, our preparation was poor, and we have nobody to blame but ourselves for being in this position. The NFF has been a disaster for years. But - and this is crucial - DR Congo may not have deserved to qualify either, if they did so by breaking the rules. Two things can be true at once. We can be terrible AND they can be ineligible. The question isn't "Does Nigeria deserve another chance?" The question is "Were the rules followed?" If they weren't, then the result should be overturned, regardless of how badly we played or how cynical our motivations might be.

FIFA needs to investigate this properly. If DR Congo can prove all their players were legally cleared under both FIFA regulations AND Congolese law, then fair play to them - they won fair and square, and we should accept our elimination with grace.

But if they can't prove that, if there was genuinely deception in the eligibility process, then the result should be voided.

There's nothing shameless about that. That's just how rules-based competition is supposed to work.

End rant.
Nice one bro
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by QueenJazz(f): 1:46pm On Dec 18, 2025
charlesemeka85:
Imagine a whole Congolese team no come get players wey dey do bleaching? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

When I saw their team against super eagles I suspected fowl play cus it’s abnormal to see a Congolese team with no player with a bleached skin 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
What's your problem? 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by minfelix(m): 1:50pm On Dec 18, 2025
Literature book
Title: WORLDCUP TWANYTI TWANTI SIS
(CAF ZONE BROUHAHA)

Nigeria: Fifa we have come again ooo, we smell something fishy oo
FIFA : Oooooooooooohm chineke!! Nigeria wetin happen again naaaa

DRCsad drags Nigeria to a quiet corner), plsssss big brother plssss😭😭😭 let’s negotiate plsss na big brothers plsssss

SAsadlaughing hysterically) hehehehehe hahahahaha hohohoho, DRC una go feel the hit from this crase 9ja people….the section of our neck dey pressed for months has not healed oo, we have been going to the hospital to do check up.

Ghanasadfuming) this our west african brothers shaaaa want to play at the world cup

Libyasadhisses and laughs simultaneously) DRC we are behind you, but you guys will collect hot pressured wotowoto


Cameroon: make una dey fight una fight, we sef wanted to petition DRC but we follow tiff d same tiff, so no point

Burkina Fasosadcitizens cry to their president) Mr President plsss is there a way we can just start up w@r against Nigeria….sir plsss just bomb this people plss mr President give orders plssss these Nigerians are pain in africa’s neck


Eritrea: hahahahahahahahhahahaha😂🤣😂😂 we caused this, if we had not pulled out this eba republic would have knowm their position since after group stage

Benin/Gabon: (pacifying each other after 4 goals smashing)
Gabon to Benin: “bro how your swollen lips na”?
Benin to Gabon : oga the lips has dried up but the thing tear under, Gabby bro my own blockos tear oo…. that their useless osimhen showed us shege


Jamaicasadshouts from afar carribean) plssssss ooooo FIFA dont let Nigeria come here ooo, even if we beat them they will still win us with one ghosted issue, plss we prefer DRC ooo…..FIFA plss allow DRC come oo

CAF: Tufiakwa for this country Nigeria, we go las ls shift them to Asia

FIFAsad sweating profusely from nyash,armpit and every corner)


🤣🤣😂😂
Literature written by
MinFelix
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by charlesemeka85(m): 2:00pm On Dec 18, 2025
Goke7:
All those TP Mazembe boys abi 😂 😂 😂
exactly my brother 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by charlesemeka85(m): 2:01pm On Dec 18, 2025
QueenJazz:
What's your problem? 🤣🤣🤣🤣
but na true na, u too reason the matter 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by solonnachi: 2:02pm On Dec 18, 2025
elyte89:
Same analysis here https://www.instagram.com/reel/DSZD0kNEY_2/?igsh=MTk1eW15ZHgwY2o0aA==
'If Nigeria qualify and the world cup tire you, off your TV set'.
So funny grin
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by solonnachi: 2:06pm On Dec 18, 2025
semid4lyfe:
I believe the NFF has a legal department.

I believe the NFF consulted experienced and reputable lawyers before filing this petition.

I also believe those lawyers advised that the petition had merit and a reasonable chance of success. You do not file at this level on vibes.

It is telling that the petition rests on DR Congo misleading FIFA into clearing ineligible players, and not domestic constitutional rules on dual nationality. Clearly, this no be beer-parlour talk or social media noise. NFF did not wake up bored. Lawyers were involved. Strategy was mapped out. Risks were weighed.

FIFA now sits in a tight corner. If the ruling favours DR Congo, FIFA effectively opens the door for players from countries that prohibit dual nationality to ignore domestic nationality laws without consequence.

If FIFA rules in Nigeria’s favour, it will be forced to confront a loophole it has tolerated for years and tighten enforcement around nationality declarations and clearance processes.

Either way, FIFA ends up shaping the rules, not hiding behind procedure and the world awaits..........
And see the confidence at which NFF President went for FIFA world cup draws and shine teeth for camera. They were assured that Nigeria will qualify
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by charlesemeka85(m): 2:07pm On Dec 18, 2025
minfelix:
Literature book
Title: WORLDCUP TWANYTI TWANTI SIS
(CAF ZONE BROUHAHA)

Nigeria: Fifa we have come again ooo, we smell something fishy oo
FIFA : Oooooooooooohm chineke!! Nigeria wetin happen again naaaa

DRCsad drags Nigeria to a quiet corner), plsssss big brother plssss😭😭😭 let’s negotiate plsss na big brothers plsssss

SAsadlaughing hysterically) hehehehehe hahahahaha hohohoho, DRC una go feel the hit from this crase 9ja people….the section of our neck dey pressed for months has not healed oo, we have been going to the hospital to do check up.

Ghanasadfuming) this our west african brothers shaaaa want to play at the world cup

Libyasadhisses and laughs simultaneously) DRC we are behind you, but you guys will collect hot pressured wotowoto


Cameroon: make una dey fight una fight, we sef wanted to petition DRC but we follow tiff d same tiff, so no point

Burkina Fasosadcitizens cry to their president) Mr President plsss is there a way we can just start up w@r against Nigeria….sir plsss just bomb this people plss mr President give orders plssss these Nigerians are pain in africa’s neck


Eritrea: hahahahahahahahhahahaha😂🤣😂😂 we caused this, if we had not pulled out this eba republic would have knowm their position since after group stage

Benin/Gabon: (pacifying each other after 4 goals smashing)
Gabon to Benin: “bro how your swollen lips na”?
Benin to Gabon : oga the lips has dried up but the thing tear under, Gabby bro my own blockos tear oo…. that their useless osimhen showed us shege


Jamaicasadshouts from afar carribean) plssssss ooooo FIFA dont let Nigeria come here ooo, even if we beat them they will still win us with one ghosted issue, plss we prefer DRC ooo…..FIFA plss allow DRC come oo

CAF: Tufiakwa for this country Nigeria, we go las ls shift them to Asia

FIFAsad sweating profusely from nyash,armpit and every corner)


🤣🤣😂😂
Literature written by
MinFelix
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by solonnachi: 2:13pm On Dec 18, 2025
NFF oya start cross checking the Jamaican team for any ineligibility status grin grin
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by QueenJazz(f): 2:20pm On Dec 18, 2025
Okay, so this is a bookmarked conversation I had with Grok concerning the issue on ground. My words are in green. Grok's are in red. Plus it's slightly edited for more convenient reading. I'll leave you guys to draw your own conclusions from the chat.

*****************************************

ME: What conditions must Nigeria meet to win their FIFA case against DR Congo and vice versa?

GROK: Background on the FIFA Case

Nigeria's Super Eagles were eliminated from the 2026 FIFA World Cup African qualifiers after losing 4-3 on penalties to DR Congo's Leopards in the CAF playoff final on November 16, 2025, in Rabat, Morocco (1-1 after extra time). DR Congo advanced to the intercontinental playoffs in March 2026, where they are drawn against the winner of New Caledonia vs. Jamaica for a chance to join Group K (with Portugal, Uzbekistan, and Colombia).

On December 16, 2025, the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) filed a formal petition with FIFA alleging that up to nine DR Congo players (including Aaron Wan-Bissaka and Axel Tuanzebe) were ineligible due to violations of Congolese nationality laws. Cameroon had filed a similar complaint earlier after their semifinal loss to DR Congo.

FIFA has acknowledged the petition and is investigating, with a decision expected before the March playoffs.The core dispute revolves around FIFA's player eligibility rules (outlined in Articles 5-9 of the FIFA Statutes and the Regulations Governing the Application of the Statutes) versus DR Congo's domestic laws. FIFA prioritizes "sporting nationality" (proof via passport or official documents showing legal nationality), while Nigeria claims DR Congo submitted fraudulent documents, misleading FIFA.

Nigeria's Case: Conditions to Win

Nigeria must prove that DR Congo fielded ineligible players in the playoff final, triggering sanctions under FIFA's disciplinary code (e.g., forfeiture of the match, expulsion from playoffs, or points deduction).

THINGS NIGERIA MUST PROVE...

1. Nigeria must demonstrate that DR Congo knowingly provided false documents to FIFA, such as passports obtained without players renouncing prior nationalities (e.g., British for Wan-Bissaka). Congolese law (Article 10 of the 2006 Nationality Code) requires exclusive nationality for adults, and a 2007 moratorium allows dual citizenship for minors but not adults without formal renunciation. NFF claims 6-9 players (born in Europe) retained EU passports without renouncing, deceiving FIFA. Precedent: Malaysia's 2025 sanction for forged documents in naturalization cases.

2. Evidence that ineligible players directly influenced the result (e.g., Wan-Bissaka's defensive role in the penalty shootout).
Wan-Bissaka and Tuanzebe started and played full matches; Mbemba (eligible) scored the winning penalty, but FIFA could rule the game a 3-0 default win for Nigeria if multiple ineligible players are confirmed.

3. Show FIFA's pre-match clearance was based on incomplete info, not FIFA's fault (FIFA doesn't enforce domestic laws).
NFF General Secretary Mohammed Sanusi stated: "FIFA was deceived... it is not FIFA’s responsibility to interpret Congolese regulations."

4. Filed within 14 days of the match (met on Dec. 16); Nigeria as direct opponent has locus standi. Similar to Cameroon's earlier filing; joint complaints strengthen the case.

If successful, DR Congo could be disqualified, with Nigeria reinstated to the intercontinental playoffs (or a playoff rematch with Cameroon based on rankings).

DR Congo's Case: Conditions to Win (or Defend Successfully)

DR Congo (via Fecofa) must affirm that all players met FIFA's sporting eligibility criteria, dismissing Nigeria's claims as sour grapes. FIFA typically defers to the issuing country's documents unless fraud is proven.

THINGS DRC MUST PROVE...

1. All players hold valid Congolese passports issued by the government, satisfying FIFA's "legal nationality" requirement (FIFA Statutes, Art. 6). Dual citizenship issues are domestic, not FIFA's purview. Fecofa submitted passports pre-match; Director Hérita Ilunga stated: "FIFA reasons in terms of sporting nationality, not legal nationality." Precedent: FIFA's deference in diaspora-heavy teams like Algeria or Morocco.

2. Prove no intentional deception; any dual status stems from a 2007 moratorium or administrative oversight, not malice. Players acquired citizenship via parental/grandparental links (FIFA Art. 7). No revocation of passports by DR Congo government; passports are "legit" per Fecofa. X discussions note sovereign right to issue citizenship.

3. Compliance with Switch Rules
Players under 21 at switch or without senior caps for prior nation (e.g., Wan-Bissaka never played senior England).
All switches approved by FIFA's Players' Status Committee; no post-21 competitive matches for original countries.

4. Argue petition lacks merit and is time-barred or frivolous; seek dismissal and potential counter-sanctions on Nigeria.
Fecofa's response: "If you can't win on the pitch, don't try the back door... Not with lawyers' tricks." Precedent: Dismissals in similar cases (e.g., South Africa's 2025 points deduction was for a suspended player, not nationality).

If successful, FIFA dismisses the case, DR Congo retains their spot, and Nigeria's World Cup hopes end (focusing on AFCON 2025).

Likely Outcome: DR Congo appears favored, as FIFA rarely overturns clearances without ironclad fraud evidence (e.g., forged docs), and domestic laws like Congo's aren't binding on sporting eligibility. Nigeria's case hinges on unproven deception, which experts (e.g., on X and in analyses) call "slim." A decision could come by late January 2026, potentially reshaping Africa's final World Cup spot.


ME: If domestic laws aren't binding on sporting eligibility then it opens the floodgates for countries to field players who aren't recognized as citizens by the parent country. Don't you think that's a problem?

GROK: You’re absolutely right — and that’s exactly the core tension in this case (and many others like it).

FIFA’s eligibility rules are deliberately designed not to depend on the strict domestic nationality laws of the country in question. Instead, they operate on a much lower threshold:

If a player holds a valid passport of Country X (issued by that country’s government), and

If the player meets one of the objective sporting connections in Article 7 (born on the territory, parent/grandparent born there, or residency), and

If any nationality switch complies with the one-time switch rule,

then FIFA considers the player eligible — full stop.

FIFA does not police whether that passport complies with every nuance of the issuing country’s own nationality code. That creates exactly the loophole you identified: a country can theoretically issue passports to diaspora players even if its domestic law says those people aren’t “true” citizens (or lost citizenship automatically by holding another one).Real-world examples where this has already happened:

Qatar (2010s–2020s)
Issued passports to dozens of South American, African, and European players (e.g., Sebastián Soria, Afonso Alves). Many never lived in Qatar and kept original citizenship. FIFA accepted them; Qatar played them for years.

Cape Verde
Regularly fields Portugal-born players with Cape Verdean passports despite Cape Verde’s constitution historically limiting dual citizenship.
FIFA never intervened.

Algeria & Morocco
Issue passports to French-born players; France recognizes dual citizenship, but the Maghreb countries sometimes don’t in practice.

FIFA ignores the domestic contradiction.
DR Congo (current case)
Issued passports to Wan-Bissaka, Tuanzebe, etc. Congolese law says adults must have exclusive nationality, but the government still issued the passports anyway.
FIFA’s likely stance: “You issued the passport → your problem, not ours.”

Why FIFA refuses to get involved in domestic law

FIFA’s official position (repeated in dozens of CAS and Disciplinary Committee decisions) is: It is a private association, not a court that interprets sovereign states’ nationality laws.
Requiring FIFA to adjudicate every country’s domestic citizenship code would make eligibility impossible to administer (200+ different legal systems).

The only workable system is to accept the passport as prima-facie evidence of nationality.

The only time FIFA steps in is when there is clear fraud — forged documents, bribes to immigration officials, or the issuing government itself revokes the passport and tells FIFA “these are invalid.” None of that has happened with DR Congo yet.

Bottom line. Yes, the rules absolutely allow a country to “cheat” its own domestic laws by simply issuing passports to diaspora players. FIFA will almost always look the other way unless the fraud is blatant and provable beyond reasonable doubt.That’s why most legal experts following the Nigeria–DR Congo case believe Nigeria’s chances are very slim: they would need to prove actual document forgery or government revocation, not just “these passports violate Congolese law.” The latter argument has been tried many times before — and almost always fails.


ME: So basically it has to be proven that the passports were falsified/forged. That's the only way Nigeria wins this case?

GROK: Yes, in practice that’s almost exactly right. Nigeria wins only if they can prove one of the following two things to FIFA’s satisfaction (and the burden of proof is on Nigeria):

1. The passports themselves are forged or fraudulently obtained (e.g., bribes paid to immigration officials, fake birth certificates submitted, forged signatures, etc.). This is the classic “document fraud” route. If proven, FIFA will declare the players ineligible and sanction DR Congo (forfeiture, disqualification, etc.).

OR

2. (extremely rare, but possible)
The DR Congo government officially revokes the passports and informs FIFA that they were issued in error or illegally
Once the sovereign state says “these people are not our citizens and the passports are invalid,” FIFA has no choice but to accept that.


Everything else — “Congolese law says adults can’t have dual nationality,” “they never formally renounced British citizenship,” “the 2007 moratorium doesn’t apply,” etc. — is irrelevant to FIFA. Those are violations of Congolese domestic law, not FIFA regulations. FIFA has rejected that exact argument dozens of times (see Ecuador vs. Byron Castillo, Qatar’s naturalized players, etc.).

Current reality check (as of December 18, 2025). There is zero public evidence of forged documents or bribes in Kinshasa. The DR Congo government has not revoked any of the passports and is publicly defending the players.
The passports were accepted by FIFA’s Players’ Status Department months ago when the switches were approved.

So unless Nigeria (or Cameroon) drops a smoking-gun document in the next few weeks — actual proof of forgery or an official Congolese revocation letter — DR Congo will keep the playoff spot. Legal experts following the case on X and in African football circles put Nigeria’s realistic chances at under 10 %.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by charlesemeka85(m): 2:31pm On Dec 18, 2025
solonnachi:
NFF oya start cross checking the Jamaican team for any ineligibility status grin grin
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by Odunayaw(m): 2:37pm On Dec 18, 2025
solonnachi:
NFF oya start cross checking the Jamaican team for any ineligibility status grin grin
grin Most countries will frantically be searching the books right now.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by Goke7: 2:51pm On Dec 18, 2025
Odunayaw:
grin Most countries will frantically be searching the books right now.
Expect more revelations soon especially within Africa, both CAF and FIFA go tire. Even in this afcon every country go Dey analyse all their opponents player for player, any infractions men go hala 😂
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by Karlovich: 2:57pm On Dec 18, 2025
Goke7:
Expect more revelations soon especially within Africa, both CAF and FIFA go tire. Even in this afcon every country go Dey analyse all their opponents player for player, any infractions men go hala 😂
grin Tanzania doesn't allow dual citizenship and they have 2 English-born players, if we fail to beat them the NFF should equally report them to CAF and FIFA.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by Odunayaw(m): 2:59pm On Dec 18, 2025
Goke7:
Expect more revelations soon especially within Africa, both CAF and FIFA go tire. Even in this afcon every country go Dey analyse all their opponents player for player, any infractions men go hala 😂
😆😆

FIFA seems to be in a dilemma to me. If they sanction DRC, they can expect a flurry of petitions. If they don't, everybody hires mercenaries.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by solonnachi: 3:00pm On Dec 18, 2025
QueenJazz:
Okay, so this is a bookmarked conversation I had with Grok concerning the issue on ground. My words are in green. Grok's are in red. Plus it's slightly edited for more convenient reading. I'll leave you guys to draw your own conclusions from the chat.

*****************************************

ME: What conditions must Nigeria meet to win their FIFA case against DR Congo and vice versa?

GROK: Background on the FIFA Case

Nigeria's Super Eagles were eliminated from the 2026 FIFA World Cup African qualifiers after losing 4-3 on penalties to DR Congo's Leopards in the CAF playoff final on November 16, 2025, in Rabat, Morocco (1-1 after extra time). DR Congo advanced to the intercontinental playoffs in March 2026, where they are drawn against the winner of New Caledonia vs. Jamaica for a chance to join Group K (with Portugal, Uzbekistan, and Colombia).

On December 16, 2025, the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) filed a formal petition with FIFA alleging that up to nine DR Congo players (including Aaron Wan-Bissaka and Axel Tuanzebe) were ineligible due to violations of Congolese nationality laws. Cameroon had filed a similar complaint earlier after their semifinal loss to DR Congo.

FIFA has acknowledged the petition and is investigating, with a decision expected before the March playoffs.The core dispute revolves around FIFA's player eligibility rules (outlined in Articles 5-9 of the FIFA Statutes and the Regulations Governing the Application of the Statutes) versus DR Congo's domestic laws. FIFA prioritizes "sporting nationality" (proof via passport or official documents showing legal nationality), while Nigeria claims DR Congo submitted fraudulent documents, misleading FIFA.

Nigeria's Case: Conditions to Win

Nigeria must prove that DR Congo fielded ineligible players in the playoff final, triggering sanctions under FIFA's disciplinary code (e.g., forfeiture of the match, expulsion from playoffs, or points deduction).

THINGS NIGERIA MUST PROVE...

1. Nigeria must demonstrate that DR Congo knowingly provided false documents to FIFA, such as passports obtained without players renouncing prior nationalities (e.g., British for Wan-Bissaka). Congolese law (Article 10 of the 2006 Nationality Code) requires exclusive nationality for adults, and a 2007 moratorium allows dual citizenship for minors but not adults without formal renunciation. NFF claims 6-9 players (born in Europe) retained EU passports without renouncing, deceiving FIFA. Precedent: Malaysia's 2025 sanction for forged documents in naturalization cases.

2. Evidence that ineligible players directly influenced the result (e.g., Wan-Bissaka's defensive role in the penalty shootout).
Wan-Bissaka and Tuanzebe started and played full matches; Mbemba (eligible) scored the winning penalty, but FIFA could rule the game a 3-0 default win for Nigeria if multiple ineligible players are confirmed.

3. Show FIFA's pre-match clearance was based on incomplete info, not FIFA's fault (FIFA doesn't enforce domestic laws).
NFF General Secretary Mohammed Sanusi stated: "FIFA was deceived... it is not FIFA’s responsibility to interpret Congolese regulations."

4. Filed within 14 days of the match (met on Dec. 16); Nigeria as direct opponent has locus standi. Similar to Cameroon's earlier filing; joint complaints strengthen the case.

If successful, DR Congo could be disqualified, with Nigeria reinstated to the intercontinental playoffs (or a playoff rematch with Cameroon based on rankings).

DR Congo's Case: Conditions to Win (or Defend Successfully)

DR Congo (via Fecofa) must affirm that all players met FIFA's sporting eligibility criteria, dismissing Nigeria's claims as sour grapes. FIFA typically defers to the issuing country's documents unless fraud is proven.

THINGS DRC MUST PROVE...

1. All players hold valid Congolese passports issued by the government, satisfying FIFA's "legal nationality" requirement (FIFA Statutes, Art. 6). Dual citizenship issues are domestic, not FIFA's purview. Fecofa submitted passports pre-match; Director Hérita Ilunga stated: "FIFA reasons in terms of sporting nationality, not legal nationality." Precedent: FIFA's deference in diaspora-heavy teams like Algeria or Morocco.

2. Prove no intentional deception; any dual status stems from a 2007 moratorium or administrative oversight, not malice. Players acquired citizenship via parental/grandparental links (FIFA Art. 7). No revocation of passports by DR Congo government; passports are "legit" per Fecofa. X discussions note sovereign right to issue citizenship.

3. Compliance with Switch Rules
Players under 21 at switch or without senior caps for prior nation (e.g., Wan-Bissaka never played senior England).
All switches approved by FIFA's Players' Status Committee; no post-21 competitive matches for original countries.

4. Argue petition lacks merit and is time-barred or frivolous; seek dismissal and potential counter-sanctions on Nigeria.
Fecofa's response: "If you can't win on the pitch, don't try the back door... Not with lawyers' tricks." Precedent: Dismissals in similar cases (e.g., South Africa's 2025 points deduction was for a suspended player, not nationality).

If successful, FIFA dismisses the case, DR Congo retains their spot, and Nigeria's World Cup hopes end (focusing on AFCON 2025).

Likely Outcome: DR Congo appears favored, as FIFA rarely overturns clearances without ironclad fraud evidence (e.g., forged docs), and domestic laws like Congo's aren't binding on sporting eligibility. Nigeria's case hinges on unproven deception, which experts (e.g., on X and in analyses) call "slim." A decision could come by late January 2026, potentially reshaping Africa's final World Cup spot.


ME: If domestic laws aren't binding on sporting eligibility then it opens the floodgates for countries to field players who aren't recognized as citizens by the parent country. Don't you think that's a problem?

GROK: You’re absolutely right — and that’s exactly the core tension in this case (and many others like it).

FIFA’s eligibility rules are deliberately designed not to depend on the strict domestic nationality laws of the country in question. Instead, they operate on a much lower threshold:

If a player holds a valid passport of Country X (issued by that country’s government), and

If the player meets one of the objective sporting connections in Article 7 (born on the territory, parent/grandparent born there, or residency), and

If any nationality switch complies with the one-time switch rule,

then FIFA considers the player eligible — full stop.

FIFA does not police whether that passport complies with every nuance of the issuing country’s own nationality code. That creates exactly the loophole you identified: a country can theoretically issue passports to diaspora players even if its domestic law says those people aren’t “true” citizens (or lost citizenship automatically by holding another one).Real-world examples where this has already happened:

Qatar (2010s–2020s)
Issued passports to dozens of South American, African, and European players (e.g., Sebastián Soria, Afonso Alves). Many never lived in Qatar and kept original citizenship. FIFA accepted them; Qatar played them for years.

Cape Verde
Regularly fields Portugal-born players with Cape Verdean passports despite Cape Verde’s constitution historically limiting dual citizenship.
FIFA never intervened.

Algeria & Morocco
Issue passports to French-born players; France recognizes dual citizenship, but the Maghreb countries sometimes don’t in practice.

FIFA ignores the domestic contradiction.
DR Congo (current case)
Issued passports to Wan-Bissaka, Tuanzebe, etc. Congolese law says adults must have exclusive nationality, but the government still issued the passports anyway.
FIFA’s likely stance: “You issued the passport → your problem, not ours.”

Why FIFA refuses to get involved in domestic law

FIFA’s official position (repeated in dozens of CAS and Disciplinary Committee decisions) is: It is a private association, not a court that interprets sovereign states’ nationality laws.
Requiring FIFA to adjudicate every country’s domestic citizenship code would make eligibility impossible to administer (200+ different legal systems).

The only workable system is to accept the passport as prima-facie evidence of nationality.

The only time FIFA steps in is when there is clear fraud — forged documents, bribes to immigration officials, or the issuing government itself revokes the passport and tells FIFA “these are invalid.” None of that has happened with DR Congo yet.

Bottom line. Yes, the rules absolutely allow a country to “cheat” its own domestic laws by simply issuing passports to diaspora players. FIFA will almost always look the other way unless the fraud is blatant and provable beyond reasonable doubt.That’s why most legal experts following the Nigeria–DR Congo case believe Nigeria’s chances are very slim: they would need to prove actual document forgery or government revocation, not just “these passports violate Congolese law.” The latter argument has been tried many times before — and almost always fails.


ME: So basically it has to be proven that the passports were falsified/forged. That's the only way Nigeria wins this case?

GROK: Yes, in practice that’s almost exactly right. Nigeria wins only if they can prove one of the following two things to FIFA’s satisfaction (and the burden of proof is on Nigeria):

1. The passports themselves are forged or fraudulently obtained (e.g., bribes paid to immigration officials, fake birth certificates submitted, forged signatures, etc.). This is the classic “document fraud” route. If proven, FIFA will declare the players ineligible and sanction DR Congo (forfeiture, disqualification, etc.).

OR

2. (extremely rare, but possible)
The DR Congo government officially revokes the passports and informs FIFA that they were issued in error or illegally
Once the sovereign state says “these people are not our citizens and the passports are invalid,” FIFA has no choice but to accept that.


Everything else — “Congolese law says adults can’t have dual nationality,” “they never formally renounced British citizenship,” “the 2007 moratorium doesn’t apply,” etc. — is irrelevant to FIFA. Those are violations of Congolese domestic law, not FIFA regulations. FIFA has rejected that exact argument dozens of times (see Ecuador vs. Byron Castillo, Qatar’s naturalized players, etc.).

Current reality check (as of December 18, 2025). There is zero public evidence of forged documents or bribes in Kinshasa. The DR Congo government has not revoked any of the passports and is publicly defending the players.
The passports were accepted by FIFA’s Players’ Status Department months ago when the switches were approved.

So unless Nigeria (or Cameroon) drops a smoking-gun document in the next few weeks — actual proof of forgery or an official Congolese revocation letter — DR Congo will keep the playoff spot. Legal experts following the case on X and in African football circles put Nigeria’s realistic chances at under 10 %.
So QueenJazz..... This thing wey no talk now..... Na waya oooo
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by semid4lyfe(mod):
To be clear, the major thrust of NFF's petition is that DR Congo FA knowingly withheld relevant information (lying by omission) and misled FIFA into clearing those players. Spot and know the difference.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by charlesemeka85(m): 3:10pm On Dec 18, 2025
Odunayaw:
😆😆

FIFA seems to be in a dilemma to me. If they sanction DRC, they can expect a flurry of petitions. If they don't, everybody hires mercenaries.
we die here 😊😆😆👊👊👊
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by semid4lyfe(mod):
Odunayaw:
😆😆

FIFA seems to be in a dilemma to me. If they sanction DRC, they can expect a flurry of petitions. If they don't, everybody hires mercenaries.
Hmmm, the mercenaries must still have ties to the countries they're switching to. But you're right.

I think allowing DRC to go through, and years later quietly strengthening the eligibility requirement when the whole furore has died down is the better option.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by yinkeys(m): 3:14pm On Dec 18, 2025
CapitalCee:
BREAKING NEWS:💥🔥🔥🔥

FIFA has penalised Malaysia with three 3-0 defeats for fielding ineligible players, the country’s football authorities said Wednesday, the latest punishment in a simmering scandal.

Friendly wins over Palestine and Singapore, and a draw against Cape Verde, all at home this year, have been overturned, the Football Association of Malaysia (FAM) said.
FIFA has already suspended seven foreign-born national team players over forged documents that claimed they had Malaysian ancestry.
The FAM, previously fined $440,000, has now been hit with a further $12,500 punishment.
A FIFA disciplinary committee meeting on Friday ruled that “Malaysia is declared to have lost 3-0 in all three matches”, the FAM said.
FIFA launched an investigation after receiving a complaint following Malaysia’s 4-0 win against Vietnam in June in an Asian Cup qualifier.

Two of the seven players scored.
Its investigation showed none of Hector Hevel, Jon Irazabal, Gabriel Palmero, Facundo Garces, Rodrigo Holgado, Imanol Machuca, or Joao Brandao Figueiredo had a parent or grandparent born in Malaysia, a requirement for selection to a national team.


https://www.channelstv.com/2025/12/17/fifa-sanctions-malaysia-over-forged-documents-for-foreign-born-players/?fbclid=IwdGRjcAOv-T5leHRuA2FlbQIxMQBzcnRjBmFwcF9pZAo2NjI4NTY4Mzc5AAEemNqEURblC2vN1dgkPTvKY_TKv_tGXMQUiJOfmLgucr-NkunYQp3G5Ataw6E_aem_jWTK9MoUQ1e3e2yJdaZRDQ
Prime VO9 must play in this World Cup by God’s grace
Osimhen carry anointing oil for head
Osimhen 🔥
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by yinkeys(m): 3:17pm On Dec 18, 2025
Odunayaw:
grin Most countries will frantically be searching the books right now.
But why didn’t they do it after the South Africa deduction
We learnt our mistake against Algeria years ago
It probably took Lookman almost 2 years to get cleared by FIFA
I was shocked when I heard we were gonna be up against Wan Bissaka lol
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by semid4lyfe(mod):
In all this, I'll apportion most of the blame to the players.

We had so many lifelines during the qualifiers.

1. SA fielding an ineligible player, and the anticipated 3 points and 3 goals deduction. The team just had to win against Zimbabwe but we blew that chance.

2. Beat SA away. They couldn't do that too.

3. Win the African Play-Off qualifiers but they blew that too.

I doubt they even care as much as we the fans do about going to the world cup.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by yinkeys(m): 3:34pm On Dec 18, 2025
semid4lyfe:
In all this, I'll apportion most of the blame to the players.

We had so many lifelines during the qualifiers.

1. SA fielding an ineligible player, and the anticipated 3 points and 3 goals deduction. The team just had to win against Zimbabwe but we blew that chance.

2. Beat SA away. They couldn't do that too.

3. Win the African Play-Off qualifiers but they blew that too.

I doubt they even care as much as we the fans. do about going to the world cup.
They let DRC control the game totally once Osimhen came off
Alex Iwobi caused the goal we conceded, I think he was tired in the game. If players are in an unsettling position the best solution was to kick the ball to throw in (break opposition momentum) rather than lose the ball when the team was off balance.
Can’t we play very well without high presser Osimhen ?
I don’t even think Akor Adams can function as a lone high pressing striker, there has to be someone with him
I don’t think Dessers would shine against rugged African teams
I haven’t seen any fantastic performance from Onuachu for Nigeria, I’d have preferred Arokodare but relégation bound Wolves need him more right now
Creative Central midfield & Defense could be the downfall of this team. No quality bench options
Cameroun & Jamaica stand in our FIFA WC ticket
We aren’t even confident of beating both to get to the mundial
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2027, 2028 And 2030 World Cup by QueenJazz(f): 3:37pm On Dec 18, 2025
semid4lyfe:
In all this, I'll apportion most of the blame to the players.

We had so many lifelines during the qualifiers.

1. SA fielding an ineligible player, and the anticipated 3 points and 3 goals deduction. The team just had to win against Zimbabwe but we blew that chance.

2. Beat SA away. They couldn't do that too.

3. Win the African Play-Off qualifiers but they blew that too.

I doubt they even care as much as we the fans. do about going to the world cup.
The lethargy and slow pace of their gameplay, capped off with their r3 tarded backpassing pisses me off more than anything. Even in the Benin game, if it wasn't for Osimhen (and Chukwueze to an extent), we won't even be talking about playoffs. It was three goals he hustled that boosted our chances before Onyeka scored that final crucial goal.

Whenever they score, they sit back and start lazying about, like there's nothing at stake.

The most annoying part is that I can't really blame them. The NFF have mishandled things so poorly that these players might low-key feel like we need them more than they need us. Afterall what do we have? How many superstars can we produce from our local league? Which of our NPFL players right now can realistically walk into the Super Eagles starting 11 without a sweat?

On top of all this, the NFF doesn't accord them due respect. Of course, they'll keep playing matches like they don't give a damn.
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