Nigeria’s Golden Eaglets closed their WAFU B U17 campaign with a professional 2-0 win over Burkina Faso in Friday’s third-place playoff in Yamoussoukro, but the victory was little more than consolation after another failed qualification bid for the Africa U17 Cup of Nations, Soccernet.ng reports.
Ahmed Yusuf, handed his first start of the tournament, seized the moment with a clinical opener five minutes into the second half.
The lively forward drove a low strike from long range past the Burkinabe goalkeeper to put Nigeria in front after the Eaglets had wasted several chances in the opening 45 minutes.

Substitute Famous Umole doubled the lead in the 77th minute, finishing off a precise through ball from Paul Ugwu to seal the result.
Nigeria played a meaningless U17 AFCON Qualifiers third place game today against Burkina Faso.
— GNB Official (@GHNaijaBallers) October 3, 2025
The Nigerian Eaglets won 2-0. pic.twitter.com/25Od15Qmsv
Yusuf, the standout performer, was deservedly named Player of the Match, giving Nigeria a glimpse of what might have been had he been trusted earlier in the campaign.
— ZONE OUEST B (@UfoawafuB) October 3, 2025
Félicitations au NIGERIA pour la ́ de cette édition du tournoi qualificatif U17 garçons – WAFU B QUALIFIERS.
Congratulations to NIGERIA for securing 3rd place in this edition of the U17 boys’… pic.twitter.com/WrDkY2Y2kc
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The result means Nigeria return home with bronze for the second consecutive year.
It also paints a painful reality for the record five-time world champions: despite their illustrious history at youth level, they will once again be absent when the continent gathers for next year’s U17 AFCON.

The tournament had started brightly for Manu Garba’s boys, who dismantled Benin 4-1 in their opening game before being held to a goalless draw by Burkina Faso in the group stage. With just three teams in Group B, that was enough to top the group, setting up a semi-final clash against rivals Ghana.
But the Ghanaians exposed Nigeria’s fragility, punishing defensive errors to claim a 2-0 victory and deny the Eaglets a ticket to the AFCON.

Burkina Faso also lost their semi-final to hosts Ivory Coast, leaving both sides to scrap for third place on Friday.
For Nigeria, the bronze is scant reward. A proud football nation, home to some of the world’s finest youth talents, now faces tough questions about development, preparation, and whether the conveyor belt of talent that once dominated this level is stalling.

Still, Yusuf’s emergence offers a silver lining. His fearless display against Burkina Faso showed the kind of quality the Eaglets can build on — if only the structures above him can get it right.