DR Congo upset Osimhen's Nigeria and keep 2026 World Cup dream alive
Nigeria's forward Victor Osimhen celebrates after the victory at the end of the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) 2024 round of 16 football match between Nigeria and Cameroon at the Felix Houphouet-Boigny Stadium in Abidjan on January 27, 2024. (Photo by Issouf SANOGO / AFP)
Audio By Vocalize
Democratic Republic of Congo ended Nigeria's hopes of qualifying for the 2026 World Cup with a penalty shootout victory in the African play-offs final on Sunday.
DR Congo and Nigeria drew
1-1 after extra time in the tie in Rabat and the central Africans won 4-3 on
penalties to book a place in inter-confederation play-offs in Mexico next
March.
In a nerve-riddled
shootout in which four spot-kicks were saved and another missed, DR Congo
captain Chancel Mbemba defied a bottle thrown toward him and torrential rain to
convert the winning penalty as his country seek a return to the global showpiece
after a lengthy absence.
Two of the saves were
made by substitute goalkeeper Timothy Fayulu, who replaced Lionel M'Pasi in the
final minute of extra time.
DR Congo was called Zaire
when the country qualified for the only time in 1974. It was not a happy debut
as they failed to score, and conceded 14 goals, including nine against
Yugoslavia.
Nigeria lie 19 places
above DR Congo in the world rankings and were pre-match favourites, but DR
Congo recovered from conceding early to look the likelier winners the longer
the match proceeded.
Nigeria, who needed 78
minutes to break the scoring deadlock in a 4-1 semi-finals victory over Gabon
three days ago, were ahead within three minutes against the Congolese.
A cross was only
partially cleared and a hard, low shot from outside the area by Brentford
midfielder Frank Onyeka was deflected by Burnley defender Axel Tuanzebe past
M'Pasi.
DR Congo slowly recovered
from the shock of falling behind so early against the Super Eagles and levelled
after 32 minutes.
Veteran forward Cedric
Bakambu crossed and when Nigeria captain Wilfred Ndidi failed to control the
ball in the six-yard box, Mechak Elia pounced to beat goalkeeper Stanley
Nwabali.
Osimhen injured
Star Nigeria striker
Victor Osimhen, scorer of five goals in his last two international appearances,
suffered an injury late in the opening half and was replaced by Akor Adams for
the second period.
As the second half of
regular time progressed the teams became increasingly cautious, especially
Nigeria, who almost gifted the lead to DR Congo on 83 minutes.
A defensive mix-up
involving Nwabali ended with DR Congo substitute Mahmoud Mayele just failing to
snatch the lead.
DR Congo thought they had
taken the lead 19 minutes into extra time, but the Moroccan referee disallowed
the goal, ruling scorer Noah Sadiki had committed a foul.
Victory qualifies the
Congolese for a six-nation inter-confederation mini-tournament in Guadalajara
and Monterrey from March 23.
The African
representatives are the third nation to secure a place after Bolivia and New
Caledonia, and the other three slots will be filled on Tuesday for a competition
that excludes Europe.
Iraq host the United Arab
Emirates in Basra after the first leg of the Asian decider finished 1-1 last
Thursday in Abu Dhabi.
Jamaica and Panama are
the frontrunners to be the two Central America/Caribbean flagbearers, but
Suriname, Curacao, Honduras, Haiti and Costa Rica are other possible qualifiers.
The two highest ranked
teams will receive byes into single-match finals while the other four meet in
single-match semi-finals. The winners of the two finals go to the World Cup.
Hosted by the United
States, Canada and Mexico, the global showpiece during June and July 2026 will
feature a record 48 nations, up from 32 at the last edition in Qatar three years
ago.
The nine automatic
African participants are Algeria, surprise packets Cape Verde, Egypt, Ghana,
Ivory Coast, 2022 World Cup semi-finalists Morocco, Senegal, South Africa and
Tunisia.


Leave a Comment