The hopes of the Nigeria Super Eagles participating in the 2026 FIFA World Cup appeared dead and extinguished following latest communication by the world’s soccer ruling body, FIFA, on this month’s Intercontinental Play-Off in Mexico.In a final accreditation notice for the upcoming inter-confederation play-off tournament, FIFA has yet again confirmed Democratic Republic of Congo as Africa’s sole representative and effectively dismissing Nigeria’s legal challenge.The controversy stems from the CAF play-off final in November 2025. After a gruelling match that ended 1–1, the Super Eagles lost to the Leopards of DR Congo in a penalty shootout. Following the defeat, the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) filed a formal protest with FIFA, seeking to overturn the result based on player eligibility.The NFF alleged that DR Congo fielded between six and nine players—including high-profile names like Aaron Wan-Bissaka and Axel Tuanzebe—who they claimed were ineligible.The core of the legal argument was that DR Congo’s domestic law does not recognize dual citizenship. The NFF argued that since these players held European passports , they were not legal Congolese citizens under local law, thus making their FIFA clearance “fraudulent.”NFF General Secretary Mohammed Sanusi stated that while FIFA cleared the players based on their Congolese passports, the federation believed FIFA was “deceived” because the players had not properly renounced their other citizenships as required by Congolese law.Read Also: NFF will decide my future as Super Eagles coach – ChelleBy including DR Congo in the official tournament line-up circulated to global media , FIFA has signaled that its disciplinary committee found no merit in Nigeria’s claims to disqualify the Congolese“The FIFA World Cup 2026™ Play-Off Tournament will see six teams fight it out for the final two places at the FIFA World Cup 2026™, to be staged in Canada, Mexico and the United States across 16 Host Cities,” the FIFA Official Statement stated. “All of the six teams have now been decided, with Bolivia, Congo DR, Iraq, Jamaica, New Caledonia and Suriname confirmed as qualifiers.”Incidentally, a FIFA insider recently told NationSport that “Nigerians’ wait for a verdict on the NFF’s protest against the DRC will go on for long.”The tournament is scheduled to take place in Mexico later this month. As one of the two highest-ranked teams in the play-offs, DR Congo receives a “seeded” path and will await the winner of the semi-final tie between New Caledonia and Jamaica for the March 31st finale.For Nigeria, this marks the second consecutive World Cup miss, following the Super Eagles’ absence from the 2022 edition in Qatar.
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