Categories: News

Why 1996 remains the most important year in Nigeria national football team history

Fans of the Nigeria national football team thought it couldn’t get any better than the 1994 golden age. That year, the Super Eagles secured their second African Cup of Nations title and made their World Cup debut.

In the USA, they topped a group featuring Argentina and eventual semi-finalists Bulgaria. Then, in the knockout phase, they led finalists Italy for 74 minutes before losing in extra time.  Our friends at betPawa in Nigeria argue that while 1994 was great, 1996’s legacy will live longest:

What the Nigeria national football team achieved in 1996

1996 didn’t start so promisingly. The Nigeria national football team withdrew from their African Cup of Nations defence due to issues with hosts, South Africa. Thankfully, there were other major sports events taking place that year.

Despite their continental success, there wasn’t much expectation around Nigeria at the 1996 Olympics. Previous participations had proven forgettable: they’d won none and lost seven of their nine matches, finishing bottom of every group.

Then there was the competition. Brazil had Ronaldo, Rivaldo and Bebeto. Argentina boasted Hernan Crespo, Ariel Ortega and Diego Simeone.

The European sides were strong too: Spain sent Raul and Gaizka Mendieta, France selected Robert Pires, and Claude Makelele and Italy included Fabio Cannavaro and Alessandro Nesta.

There was just one thing those squads were lacking – the gold medals – and that’s because they came back to Nigeria.

Taribo West, Celestine Babayaro, Sunday Oliseh, Jay-Jay Okocha and Nwankwo Kanu formed a spectacular Nigeria national football team. The results they celebrated that July and August were even more spectacular.

Jo Bonfrere’s men kicked off with clean sheets and triumphs over Hungary and Japan before losing narrowly to Brazil. Their place in the quarter-finals was confirmed though, and that was where things got really magical.

The Olympic Eagles beat Mexico 2-0 to earn a chance to claim revenge over Brazil. Things started badly, with Flavio Conceicao scoring in the first minute, and they were 3-1 down at halftime.

Victor Ikpeba and Kanu struck in the last 13 minutes to take the tie to extra time. Kanu fired the golden goal that delivered a historic win.

That victory guaranteed Nigeria would become the second African nation to win an Olympic football medal, following Ghana’s 1992 bronze.

Again, the final against Argentina began terribly, with Claudio Lopez giving the favourites a third-minute lead. Babayaro equalised but Crespo put the South Americans back in front with a 50th-minute penalty.

Once more, Nigeria changed everything with a pair of late goals. Daniel Amokachi made it 2-2 in the 74th minute, and Emmanuel Amunike grabbed the gold-medal-winning goal in the 90th minute.

How 1996 continues to deliver for the Nigeria national football team

Golden Nigeria national football team moments haven’t been so frequent since. Despite reaching seven more African Cup of Nations semi-finals, they only lifted the trophy once.

Five further World Cup appearances ended in the round-of-16 or earlier. Three of the four this century didn’t last longer than the first round.

However, the current squad is the most talented in some time, and it carries a close connection to that glorious 1996. Several of the players likely to star in the next Super Eagles success were born 24 years ago.

Wilfred Ndidi, Alex Iwobi and Kelechi Iheanacho are children of that memorable year. So are Ola Aina and Joe Aribo.

Assuming sports events resume and qualifying goes well, all five should be in Cameroon next year and Qatar in 2022. Will 1996 give birth to further Nigerian heroics?

Enjoy betPawa online betting from ₦1

Even with limited sports events, betPawa in Nigeria offers over 4,000 daily chances to bet small and win
BIG. Bet from ₦1 and play for their 250% win bonus on pawaLeague virtuals. Sign up in seconds to
experience betPawa online betting at www.betpawa.ng/signup. Bet responsibly. 18+.

This post was last modified on April 16, 2020 11:37 am

Joba Ogunwale

Oluwajoba Ogunwale has many years of experience as a sports content writer. The most recent of these was at Opera News, after which he took up the role of Editor-in-Chief at Soccernet.

Share
Published by
Joba Ogunwale

Recent Posts

Footballer turned Golfer: Odemwingie hungry to raise Olympic-level competitors in Nigeria

Former Super Eagles and LOSC Lille striker, Peter Osaze Odemwingie, is putting in the underground… Read More

17 minutes ago

From John Finch to Éric Chelle: Who are the 37 coaches that have led the Super Eagles?

The appointment of Éric Sékou Chelle as the new head coach of the Super Eagles… Read More

1 hour ago

Trabzonspor make fresh transfer decision on Bruno Onyemaechi as Boavista insist on ₦4.7 billion deal

Trabzonspor's bid to secure Nigerian international Bruno Onyemaechi from Portuguese side Boavista has reportedly stalled… Read More

2 hours ago

Crystal Palace vs Stockport: Super Eagles’ Bright Osayi-Samuel reacts to Eze Eberechi’s standout performance

Super Eagles defender Bright Osayi-Samuel has praised the performance of Crystal Palace forward Eberechi Eze… Read More

2 hours ago

Nigeria-eligible Chelsea midfielder closes in on Borussia Dortmund move following Maresca’s statement

Nigeria-eligible Chelsea midfielder, Carney Chibueze Chukwuemeka, is nearing a move to Bundesliga giants, Borussia Dortmund,… Read More

2 hours ago

“We’re not taking any chances” – NFF President confident Super Falcons can win WAFCON 2024

President of the Nigerian Football Federation, Ibrahim Gusau, has backed the Super Falcons to take… Read More

3 hours ago