Sat. Dec 21st, 2024

Nearly three decades on from their male counterparts winning Olympic gold, Nigeria’s women’s football team believe it is their time to stun the world at this year’s Games in Paris.

Despite their remarkable record of having appeared at every Women’s World Cup, the Super Falcons are returning to the Olympics for the first time in 16 years.

One of just two African representatives, alongside Zambia, Nigeria head to France with confidence high.

“We are not just going there to participate, we can even win it – nothing is impossible,” goalkeeper Chiamaka Nnadozie, who plays her club football in the French capital, told BBC Sport Africa.

“We have everything it takes to go to the Olympics and get a gold medal. We have a better team now and we can do great things.”

Unlike the men’s Olympic tournament, which Africa has won twice through Nigeria in 1996 and then Cameroon four years later, no women’s side from the continent has ever gone further than the quarter-finals.

This time it will be Zambia who meet the Germans, the 2016 Olympic gold medallists, as well as four-time champions the United States and Australia in Group B.

Nigeria have also been handed a daunting task, taking on reigning world champions Spain, Japan and Brazil, who have reached a total of three Olympic and World Cup finals, in a formidable Group C.

The Super Falcons reached the World Cup knockout stage for only the third time last year, suffering penalty shootout heartbreak against eventual runners-up England, but Nnadozie believes the nine-time African champions are greatly improved under American coach Randy Waldrum.

“With the kind of football we are playing now, we are going to conquer the world soon,” she added.

Saving grace

Nigeria's goalkeeper Chiamaka Nnadozie saves a penalty kick by Canada's Christine Sinclair at the 2023 Women's World Cup.
Image caption,Nnadozie’s penalty save to deny Canada forward Christine Sinclair proved key to Nigeria’s fortunes at last year’s Women’s World Cup

If Nigeria are to create history, then Nnadozie will need to continue her recent fine form.

Since joining Paris FC in 2020 from serial Nigerian champions Rivers Angels, the shot-stopper has consistently demonstrated her prowess, becoming a force for both club and country.

While she shone at last year’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand, the second she has contested despite being only 23, she was also exceptional in the Uefa Women’s Champions League in 2023-24, a competition in which she saved five penalties in eight games.

With her group-stage penalty save against Canada ultimately crucial in helping Nigeria progress at the World Cup, not to mention her three shootout saves in the victorious 2019 African Games final, Nnadozie clearly has a knack for stopping spot-kicks.

“There are a lot of secrets behind it,” she smiles, declining to give too much away.

“I use some techniques. You believe in yourself and it’s also about game reading.”

Former international team-mate Desire Oparanozie, who competed at three Women’s World Cups prior to retiring last year, believes the Olympics offer another chance for Nnadozie to show the world just how good African goalkeepers can be.

“If she continues to perform at the highest level, she will be among the best goalkeepers in the world – if not the best,” the 30-year-old told BBC Sport Africa.

“She’s a phenomenal player. Every game, she is consistent.”

The youngest goalkeeper to keep a clean sheet at the Women’s World Cup, which she achieved aged 18 in 2019, Nnadozie’s dependability saw her crowned the best goalkeeper in last season’s French top flight as Paris FC finished third.

“I feel very happy winning awards because I’ve been working hard. But the first goal is for my team to win, not an individual trophy.”

That was the Super Falcons themselves, who achieved the feat in Athens in 2004, losing to Germany in the last eight.

By Joy

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