Super Eagles’ pay dispute : Height of peculiar mess in NFF  

The Super Eagles’ recent training boycott in Rabat, just days before a crucial 2026 FIFA  World Cup Play-Off, was more than a protest — it was a mirror reflecting the deep administrative decay within Nigerian football system. Once again, the players’ call for justice over unpaid bonuses has ignited public outrage and exposed the Nigeria Football Federation’s (NFF) persistent failures in transparency and accountability, writes TUNDE LIADI .

In Rabat, Morocco, the green-white-green flew high again this week — but not for the right reasons. Instead of match-day excitement ahead of a crucial World Cup playoff tie against Gabon, Nigeria’s Super Eagles dominated global headlines for downing tools. Their training boycott over unpaid bonuses and allowances — some dating as far back as 2019 — once again exposed the deep rot within the Nigeria Football Federation

Although the strike was  called off following ‘intervention’  of the National Sports Commission (NSC), the damage — to morale, reputation  and trust — may take far longer to repair.

Drawing on the voices of ex-internationals, administrators and observers, the same argument  is  that Nigeria’s football problems are not born on the pitch but in the boardroom.

For many Nigerians, this latest embarrassment feels all too familiar. The names change, the players change, but the story remains the same: broken promises, delayed payments, and yet another national team’s  scandal on the eve of a crucial fixture.

The Super Eagles’ revolt began quietly. On Monday, whispers from their Rabat base hinted at rising tension. By Tuesday morning, it was official — the players had refused to train, citing years of unpaid entitlements. The situation triggered a flurry of emergency meetings and official statements.

Director-General of the NSC, Hon. Bukola Olapade, moved swiftly to absolve his commission of blame, insisting that every kobo meant for the Eagles had already been remitted to the NFF.

 “The NSC has remitted the funds to the NFF as at when due since I became DG,” Olapade said. “We don’t pay players directly. Everything goes through the NFF,” Olapade reportedly said.

But  Olapade’s statement raises deeper questions: where did the money go? How could the same players who brought Nigeria so much pride still be waiting for payments years later — despite several government bailouts, including President Tinubu’s ₦12 billion package in 2023 to clear “all outstanding allowances”?

Once again, the NFF finds itself in the dock of public opinion and many observers felt  the boycott was the culmination of accumulated frustration.

 Former international Sam Sodje called the players’ action “wrongly timed” but admitted he couldn’t blame them entirely.

 “I am very disappointed this is happening now because it was wrongly timed,” Sodje said. “But I cannot blame the players. Before it got to this level, promises must have been broken,” Sodje disclosed on Brila FM.

Former winger Oladimeji Lawal echoed that sentiment, labelling it “the right decision taken at the wrong time.”

 “If I were in that team, I’d say let’s qualify first, then make our demands public. But there’s no justification for them being owed this much money. It’s so sad,” Lawal lamented.

Another ex-international, Ifeanyi Udeze, struck a more sympathetic tone toward the players.

 “The timing may be wrong, yes, but I can’t blame them(the players). The NFF knows the players are being owed and can’t even pay part of the match bonuses. It’s shameful,” Udeze said.

But  Duke Udi, a former Super Eagles attacker, went further still, challenging those who criticized the team for requesting for what is theirs.

 “The players are fighting for their rights. They earned it. It’s not a gift — it’s what they worked for. They should be paid,” Udi insisted.

From these voices, a common thread emerges: even those who questioned the timing acknowledged that the NFF’s inefficiency and complexity were at the heart of the crisis.

For Nigerian football followers, this isn’t a new script — it’s a rerun.

According to renowned  sports journalist and Diarist, Kunle Solaja , acknowledged  that four decades of administrative blunders have created a depressing pattern: player strikes before crucial games followed by on-field collapse.

1981: A revolt over pay parity before a key match against Algeria ended with Nigeria missing the 1982 World Cup.

1989: Players refused to board a plane to Cameroon over unpaid bonuses. Nigeria lost and failed to qualify for Italia ’90.

1998: Another bonus row disrupted the squad before facing Denmark at France ’98. Result? A humiliating 4–1 exit.

2014: The team boycotted training before a Round of 16 clash with France in Brazil. The government flew cash to Brazil overnight — Nigeria still lost 2–0.

Now, 2025 threatens to be another chapter in that grim cycle.

Football historian Colin Udoh once described Nigeria’s recurring disputes as “a mirror reflecting the federation’s chronic dysfunction.”

The perennial money dispute in NFF

Despite numerous reforms and FIFA oversight, the NFF remains plagued by poor financial management and lack of transparency with allegations  that funds meant for the welfare of players  often vanishing  into a bureaucratic maze.

Earlier this year, the federation proudly announced that all debts had been cleared. Yet, in Morocco, players claim they haven’t been paid since 2019. So what happened between press statement and practice field?

The NSC insists the money was released. The NFF maintains partial payments were made. But as always, it’s the players who suffer the consequences.

This lack of accountability is not limited to bonuses. Reports of corruption surrounding FIFA Forward projects in Delta and Kebbi States have reignited public outrage. With these scandals still fresh, the Morocco debacle only cements the perception that the NFF is incapable of running football efficiently.

Overreaching  stance of the NSC

Yet  there are  further  claims  that  the NSC  cannot be totally  absolved  from this particular  mess in Rabat  as they  reportedly took over  the duties of the  NFF in putting together logistics  for the  Super Eagles towards  the  Play-Offs.

Having reportedly negotiated  the match- winning allowance  with the Super Eagles without  putting the NFF into the  picture, it can safely be said that  the leadership of the NSC  are going  beyond their oversight functions  or the “ big brother” roles as  claimed by Olopade .

While  the NSC seemed  desperate  in achieving results  on all fronts, their modus operandi  and overbearing posturing  on National Sports Federations is becoming a  major distraction even more so when there is no board  in place yet.

Incidentally, the NSC Chairman, Mallam Shehu Dikko , has long been part of the football establishment  before his new tour of duty  hence  cannot be totally exempted  from the malaise befuddling  the NFF.  

In fact, former  national team captain, John Obi Mikel, who experienced similar chaos in his playing days, minced no words  that  the current upheavals  was lack of responsible leadership.  

“The corruption has to be rooted out of the game if we want to go forward,” Mikel said on The Obi One Podcast. “Now is not the time for distractions. The NFF must do whatever it takes to make the players comfortable.”

Mikel’s remarks cut to the heart of the issue: leadership. The NFF’s leadership crises — frequent internal squabbles, allegations of financial impropriety and disconnect from players — have crippled the growth of Nigerian football.

Meanwhile, former Super Eagles skipper and coach, Austin Eguavoen, now NFF Technical Director, tried to strike a positive note.

 “We all know what it means to play at the World Cup. We missed the last one and we won’t miss this. God has given us another chance and we have the quality to take it,” he said.

How well  is such optimism would have partly been answered  following   the result of the decisive  game against Gabon  and irrespective  of the outcome of that match, it can never mask the  institutional failure of yesteryears.

Over the years, each crisis chips away at Nigeria’s football brand — one of Africa’s most recognizable.

 Beyond  the reputation, there are tangible costs including sponsorship risks as corporate backers lose confidence in an unstable system.

In a country of over 220 million people, football is more than sport — it’s a unifying force but when it becomes a stage for scandal, it corrodes national pride.

This latest episode in Rabat  is more than a protest by the Super Eagles  rather  — it’s a referendum on the NFF’s efficiency and credibility which beggar fundamental questions.

For instance , the NFF has reportedly  received   some N6.5 Billion  over the last one year to prosecute international matches  and other sundries  including N1Billion for the Play-Offs in Rabat  which is even far -fetched  from the reported  N15 Billion they had hitherto received in  eight years  before the Renew Hope Agenda  for Sports under President Bola Tinubu came to the  fore.

The NSC’s claim that its “books are spotless” only deepens the mystery of where accountability truly lies

How can a federation that receives consistent government funding still owe players for years? Why are basic administrative responsibilities so poorly managed? Who audits the federation’s finances and who holds it accountable when promises are broken?

Until these questions are answered, the NFF will remain under suspicion — and Nigerian football will continue to stumble from one avoidable crisis to another.

The immediate crisis may be over — the players went  back to training and the match against Gabon went on — but the underlying issues persist.

Analysts insist that Nigeria needs a structural reset even as some called for financial transparency through independent auditing of NFF accounts.

As  ace columnist   and  the  Editorial Board’s Chairman of ThisDay Newspapers, Mr. Segun Adeniyi once noted:  “The rot in Nigerian football is not in the dressing room; it’s in the boardroom.”

Until that boardroom is cleaned out — and accountability replaces excuses — the Super Eagles will continue to fly through storms of their own making.


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