Site icon Ghanaian Times

Nigeria stun Morocco to seal 10th WAFCON title

• Rasheedat Ajibade and Veronica Chinwendu joined by other teammates to lift the trophy

• Rasheedat Ajibade and Veronica Chinwendu joined by other teammates to lift the trophy

Nigeria produced a sensational second-half comeback to beat hosts Morocco 3-2 and seal a record-ex­tending 10th Women’s Africa Cup of Nations title.

The Atlas Lionesses led 2-0 at the break in Rabat through Ghi­zlane Chebbak’s fine curling effort and a scuffed shot from Sanaa Mssoudy.

But Esther Okoronkwo in­spired the West Africans after the break, pulling a goal back from the penalty spot in the 64th minute after Nouhaila Benzina handled Folamide Ijamilusi’s cross.

Okoronko burst into the Moroc­co box and squared for Ijamilusi to equalise in the 71st minute, then teed up substitute Jennifer Echegi­ni to score the winner with two minutes of the game remaining.

The 21,000-capacity Olympic Stadium was stunned into silence as the Super Falcons players col­lapsed to the turf in celebrations at the final whistle after producing a seemingly unlikely revival that will live long in the memory.

Nigeria billed their campaign as Mission X and have achieved their target, reclaiming the title they last won in 2018 and preserving their 100% record in Wafcon finals.

Morocco, meanwhile, had hired 2023 Women’s World Cup-winning coach Jorge Vilda after he parted company with Spain in a bid to land their first continental crown, but have now lost back-to-back Wafcon finals.

The Super Falcons pick up $1m in prize money which has been doubled since the last edition and become the first side to lift the new-look Wafcon trophy.

However, the stadium had large­ly emptied out by the time Fifa president Gianni Infantino and Confederation of African Football counterpart Patrice Motsepe took to the stage for the presentation.

The 2024 edition of the tourna­ment had been delayed because of scheduling issues last year, which included the participation of the West Africans and Zambia at the Paris 2024 Olympics. —BBC

Exit mobile version