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Falconets Overcome Odds to Qualify for 2026 U-20 Women’s World Cup

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By Samuel Akpan

Nigeria’s Falconets have produced another masterclass in resilience, booking their place at the 2026 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup in Poland despite a 2-1 second-leg defeat to Malawi on Saturday.

The Young Scorchers of Malawi pushed the visitors hard at the Bingu National Stadium in Lilongwe, but Nigeria held firm to progress 3-2 on aggregate.

The Falconets’ 2-0 victory in the first leg at Ikenne on May 2 proved vital, providing the narrow cushion necessary to withstand a high-pressure return fixture.

However, the hosts struck early in the ninth minute as Faith Chimzimu fired home the opener, igniting a frenzy among the home supporters.

Nigeria almost hit back immediately as Kindness Ifeanyi whipped in a dangerous cross from the right and Favour Nkwocha met it with a thunderous header that crashed against the woodwork.

The second half brought fresh drama. Chimzimu struck again on 56 minutes to square the aggregate score and crank up the pressure.

Yet the Falconets responded with clinical composure: substitute Precious Oscar pounced in the 62nd minute to restore Nigeria’s aggregate lead and ultimately secure qualification.

The result caps a flawless qualifying campaign.

Before facing Malawi, the Falconets had dismantled Rwanda 5-0 on aggregate and Senegal 3-1 on aggregate to reach the final round.

Despite the narrow loss in Lilongwe, the team showed remarkable grit and tactical discipline in a hostile environment.

The qualification further cements Nigeria’s reputation as one of Africa’s most successful women’s youth sides on the global stage.

The 2026 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup will be hosted by Poland from September 5 to September 26.

See also  Former Falconets Coach, Dan Evumena, is dead

Persecondnews reports that Nigeria’s Falconets have established themselves as Africa’s most consistent performers at the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup, qualifying for every single edition since the tournament began in 2002 — an unmatched 11 appearances out of 11 possible.

Their greatest triumphs came in 2010 and 2014, when they reached the final both times, finishing as runners-up to Germany.

In 2010 (hosted by Germany), they lost 2-0 in the final. Four years later in Canada, they pushed Germany to extra time before falling 1-0, with teenage superstar Asisat Oshoala claiming both the Golden Ball (best player) and Golden Boot (top scorer) awards.

The Falconets also achieved a historic fourth-place finish in 2012 in Japan, becoming the first African team to reach the semi-finals of the competition

Beyond those podium moments, Nigeria have regularly advanced to the knockout stages:
Quarter-finals in 2004, 2006, 2008, 2018, and 2022.

Round of 16 in 2024 (where they beat South Korea and Venezuela in the group stage before exiting to Japan).

They suffered early group-stage exits only in 2002 and 2016.

Overall tournament record (11 appearances, 48 matches): 22 wins, 10 draws, 16 losses; 77 goals scored, 61 conceded.

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