By Olalekan Shoyinka
Football, they say, is a reflection of society. If that is true, then the current state of Nigerian football tells a deeper story about the challenges confronting our nation.
As the 2026 FIFA World Cup is about to kickoff in North America, the painful reality remains that Nigeria’s Super Eagles are not playing at the global football festival this year. Yet, even if Nigeria fails to qualify, Nigerians by blood will still be present at the World Cup, proudly representing other nations that recognized, nurtured and rewarded their talents.
This reality should provoke serious reflection among policymakers, football administrators and indeed every patriotic Nigerian.
The problem is not a shortage of talent. Nigeria remains one of the most naturally gifted football nations in the world. From the streets of Lagos to the fields of Abeokuta, Kano, Enugu, Ibadan, Benin, Jos and Port Harcourt, football talent abounds. The challenge lies within a system that has consistently failed to identify, develop and promote the very best among us.
Our system is unable to consistently produce the kind of national teams that make us proud. The problem is not with the players; it lies with a structure that continually prevents the best talents from flourishing. Whatever team is eventually assembled becomes the one Nigerians are expected to support, even when many know that it may not truly represent the finest legs available.
Unfortunately, this challenge is not limited to football alone. It reflects a broader national problem. Politics has infiltrated and weakened virtually every sector of our society. Merit is frequently sacrificed on the altar of connections, influence, favoritism and vested interests. Sports administration has not been spared from this unfortunate reality.
The consequences are evident.
Many young Nigerian footballers struggle endlessly for opportunities. Home-grown talents often find it difficult to break into the national setup, regardless of their abilities. For many of them, the dream is not just to play football but to be exceptionally lucky enough to be noticed.
Thousands leave the country annually in search of greener pastures, signing for obscure clubs in Europe, Asia, the Middle East and other parts of Africa. They work tirelessly, hoping that one day a national team scout or coach will discover them. Yet only a handful eventually receive recognition.
Players such as Victor Osimhen, Wilfred Ndidi, Akor Adams, Benjamin Frederick, and some of the latest emerging stars are among the fortunate few who successfully navigated a difficult and uncertain pathway. Behind every successful story are hundreds of equally talented footballers whose dreams faded due to lack of opportunity, poor scouting structures, inadequate youth development programmes and administrative inefficiencies.
This explains, in part, why Nigeria’s age-grade teams have struggled in recent years. The once-feared Golden Eaglets and Flying Eagles no longer dominate global youth football as they once did. While other nations continue to modernize their youth recruitment systems and invest heavily in grassroots development, Nigeria appears to be moving further away from the model that once made us successful.
The golden era of Nigerian football did not happen by accident.
The national teams many Nigerians still regard as the finest were products of a period when professionals were allowed to manage the sector with minimal interference. The legendary generations that produced continental champions and Olympic heroes emerged from robust school sports competitions, academies, youth tournaments, inter-house sports, community football structures and a deliberate commitment to talent discovery.
Scouts travelled across the country searching for the best players. Selection was largely based on ability, performance and potential. Young footballers earned their places through competition rather than connections.
Today, however, grassroots football receives far less attention than it deserves. Many schools lack functional sporting programmes. Community tournaments are poorly funded. Youth competitions are irregular. Consequently, many talented youngsters are never discovered at the critical stages of their development.
Nigeria must return to the fundamentals.
We must rebuild school sports. We must strengthen grassroots football. We must empower qualified coaches and talent scouts. We must establish transparent selection processes for age-grade teams. Above all, football administration must prioritize competence, professionalism and merit over politics and patronage.
Countries that consistently excel in football do not depend on luck. They invest in systems. They identify talent early, nurture it carefully and provide opportunities based on merit. Nigeria can do the same if we genuinely commit ourselves to reform.
The future of Nigerian football depends not merely on producing exceptional individuals but on creating an environment where exceptional talents can consistently emerge and thrive.
As Nigerians, we will continue to support our national teams regardless of the challenges. Our patriotism remains unwavering. Yet patriotism should not prevent us from demanding better structures, better leadership and better outcomes.
For now, the possibility remains that Nigeria may not be at the next World Cup. However, Nigerians by blood will undoubtedly be there, wearing the colours of different nations, showcasing the talent that originated from our soil.
The tragedy is not that these players succeeded elsewhere. The tragedy is that the system at home often failed to recognize their worth before others did.
Nigeria, we will continue to hail thee.
Chief Olalekan Shoyinka (Ayinla Egba), a sports enthusiast, writes from Abeokuta, Ogun State
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