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Thursday, January 15, 2026

Nigeria vs Morocco semi-final: A story of robbery, weakness, and self-sabotage

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Let us speak plainly and without sugar-coating: what happened in that Nigeria vs Morocco semi-final was a disgrace to African football.

It was a match that had all the ingredients of a classic—passion, talent, tension, and two heavyweight football nations—but it was destroyed by officiating so poor and biased that it left millions of fans across the continent in shock. The Ghanaian referee completely lost control of the game, making decisions that defied logic, fairness, and even the most basic understanding of football rules.

Worse still, the VAR system, supervised by South Africa’s Abongile Tom, was practically on holiday. Clear fouls were ignored, controversial moments were waved away, and one begins to wonder: was VAR there to assist the referee or to entertain itself with replays?

This was not a local friendly match. This was an AFCON semi-final watched by the whole world. CAF should be ashamed. If African football wants to be respected globally, those officials must face immediate sanctions. The Ghanaian referee in particular has no business near any serious competition again. His performance belonged to a school tournament, not the biggest stage in Africa.

Yet, painful as it is, Nigeria must also look inward.

Morocco played the political game before the match even kicked off. When CAF appointed an Egyptian referee for their quarter-final against Cameroon, the Moroccans protested loudly, wrote petitions, and demanded change. CAF listened and replaced the referee. That is football politics—dirty, but effective.

Nigeria? We kept quiet. We accepted whatever was thrown at us, as if fairness would fall from heaven. This passive attitude keeps costing us. Modern football is not won only on the pitch; it is fought in boardrooms, in petitions, and in strategic pressure. Until Nigeria learns this, we will continue to be victims.

And then there is our own self-inflicted wound: penalties.

Nigeria’s penalty problem has become a generational curse. From the heartbreak against DR Congo in the World Cup playoffs to this latest disaster, we never seem to learn. Coaches change, players change, but the fear remains.

Samuel Chukwueze was introduced in the 120th minute for one purpose—to help win the shootout. He had fresh legs, fresh mind, and one responsibility. And he missed. At this level, that is simply unacceptable. You cannot be brought on for a specific mission and fail so casually. The same lack of composure that has haunted us for years returned again on the biggest stage.

So here we are:

•Corrupt and incompetent officiating

•A useless VAR system

•Nigeria’s silence in football politics

•Our chronic penalty weakness

All combined to hand Morocco a victory they did not truly earn.

This defeat is more than just a football loss—it is a painful reflection of everything wrong with African football and with Nigeria’s approach to it. Matches should be decided by skill, tactics, and hard work, not by referees and hidden agendas. And Nigeria must stop behaving like victims in a game where others fight dirty and win.

If we do not learn to defend ourselves off the pitch and fix our mental weakness on it, this cycle will continue.

This was not just a loss.

It was a bitter,infuriating lesson.

● Sports Dominion  can be found on Facebook

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