Nigeria may have lost AFCON game to Morocco, but it is Ghana they are fighting

CAF Africa Cup of Nations - Morocco 2025 - Semi Final - Nigeria v Morocco
Soccer Football - CAF Africa Cup of Nations - Morocco 2025 - Semi Final - Nigeria v Morocco - Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium, Rabat, Morocco - January 14, 2026 Morocco's Adam Masina in action with Nigeria's Victor Osimhen REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
Source: REUTERS

Nigeria crashed out of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) tournament to Morocco, but it has reignited their longstanding rivalry with Ghana.

After what looked like a promising turn up in the earlier stages of the competition, the Super Eagles, just like in the previous tournament, have been defeated by the host nation.

The Atlas Lions might have been the nation that defeated Victor Osimhen and his cohorts in a 4-2 win on penalties in the semis, but back home, Nigerians are having a go at the Ghanaian referee, Daniel Laryea, who officiated the game.

Many Nigerians have gone online to call out Laryea, whom they think favoured the Moroccans during the fixture, which led to their defeat. 

Some have questioned the competence of Laryea, saying he should never officiate a game again.

Others have publicised the Ghanaian referee's personal social media pages, calling for others to attack him.

Ghanaians have also come out to support their compatriot, congratulating him for his performance in such a high-stakes game.

Now, Ghana and Nigeria’s rivalry goes beyond football—the West African nations have always been at it. From Jollof Wars to music, and even having banter over which nation is more developed. 

But, when it comes to football, here’s the backstory;

Nigeria has won the AFCON three times: 1980, 1994, and 2013. Whereas Ghana has won it four times: in 1963, 1965, 1978, and 1982, bettered only by Cameroon (5) and Egypt (7).

Meaning if Nigeria had qualified for the final and gone on to win it, they would have equalled the Black Stars’ tally.

In the lead-up to the tournament in Morocco, Nigeria had just failed to qualify for the 2026 FIFA World Cup to be held in the USA, Canada and Mexico. Ghana, which failed to make it to the AFCON stage, qualified for football’s biggest competition—a feat they have not been so quiet about.

The pressure on the Nigerian team to win a fourth AFCON trophy was heightened throughout this tournament, considering how they were firm favourites in the finals last time but somehow lost to Côte d’Ivoire.

Now, many in Nigeria believed this year’s trophy to be theirs because they had cleared everyone before them. Defeating nations like Algeria and Tunisia along the way.

The Super Eagles now have to battle it out for the bronze medal on Saturday, January 17, with the most successful nation in the competition, Egypt, another nation that has been chasing the AFCON trophy since completing their three-peat in 2010.

The Pharaohs lost their semi-final fixture against Senegal. Surely, this means a nail in the coffin for the hopes of talismanic captain, Mohamed Salah, to win an AFCON.

Unless he decides to try again at age 35, when the 2027 tournament is jointly hosted by Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. 

The legendary Liverpool forward has not been in great form, and pundits suggest he might exit Anfield sooner, rather than later, after a very public falling out with Dutch manager Arne Slot.

For his former Liverpool teammate, Mane, it is a chance at immortality after winning Senegal their first trophy in 2021 against Egypt.

The West African nation faces the host, Morocco, another nation chasing its second trophy in the final on Sunday, January 18.

The last time the North Africans won the tournament was 50 years ago in 1976.

This story is written and edited by the Global South World team, you can contact us here.

You may be interested in

/
/
/
/
/
/
/