In Rabat on a July evening in 2025, Jennifer Echegini's winning goal secured a 3β2 victory over hosts Morocco and gave Nigeria its tenth Women's Africa Cup of Nations title. Twelve months later, the Super Falcons are back in Morocco β same country, same ambition, higher stakes. The 2026 WAFCON, which kicks off on July 25, is not just a continental championship. For the top four teams, it is also Africa's direct route to the 2027 FIFA Women's World Cup in Brazil.
A tournament transformed
The 2026 edition marks the largest WAFCON in the tournament's history. For the first time, 16 teams compete β up from 12 in the last edition β a change that CAF announced in November 2025 to reflect the growing depth of women's football across the continent. To fill the expanded field, the four highest-ranked FIFA nations that had failed to qualify through the regional process were added directly: Cameroon, CΓ΄te d'Ivoire, Mali, and Egypt. The result is a group stage of genuine quality and an expanded knockout bracket that gives more nations a genuine shot at both the title and World Cup qualification. The four quarter-final winners earn automatic berths in Brazil; the four losing quarter-finalists still have a second chance through the FIFA play-off pathway.
Matches will be played across three Moroccan cities β Rabat, Casablanca, and FΓ¨s β with the 45,000-capacity FΓ¨s Stadium the largest venue. The opening fixture on July 26 sees hosts Morocco face Kenya at Rabat's Moulay El Hassan Stadium, setting the tone for what CAF has billed as the most competitive edition yet.
Nigeria's group and key players
The Super Falcons have been drawn into Group C alongside Malawi, Zambia, and Egypt β a group that demands respect without paralysing fear. Their opening match on July 28 is against Malawi at Al Madina Stadium in Rabat. Coach Justine Madugu's preparations have been thorough: Nigeria beat Senegal twice in warm-up fixtures, with Joy Omewa scoring a brace in the second game alongside a clinical finish from Asisat Oshoala, and swept past Cameroon in a February friendly series.
The squad selections tell the story of a generation in transition but far from finished. Captain Rasheedat Ajibade, playing her club football in Europe, remains the creative heartbeat. Goalkeeper Chiamaka Nnadozie β a Ballon d'Or nominee following last year's triumph β provides one of the most reliable last lines of defence on the continent. Asisat Oshoala, whose retirement has been predicted and dismissed repeatedly, has continued to silence doubters with her movement and finishing at 31. Defender Michelle Alozie, California-born and a key figure in the dual-national pipeline that has strengthened the squad considerably in recent years, anchors the back line alongside Ashleigh Plumptre. Midfielder Jennifer Echegini, the hero of the 2025 final, returns looking to build on what was the defining moment of her career.
The threats to the throne
Nigeria has won ten of the thirteen WAFCON tournaments held since the competition's modern format began β a dominance that has no parallel in African women's football. But the challengers have never been this organised. Hosts Morocco, humbled in last year's final on home soil, have invested significantly in their women's programme and will carry the weight and energy of a partisan home crowd through every round. South Africa, the 2022 champions who pushed Nigeria hard in recent editions, bring pace and tactical discipline. Cameroon and Ghana, seasoned competitors both, have the experience to hurt anyone on a given day. Zambia, who Nigeria face in the group stage, produced one of the tournaments of 2022 and have continued to develop rapidly.
The Super Falcons captain Rasheedat Ajibade has not hidden her frustration at the preparation challenges β in an environment where CAF postponed the original March dates after Morocco raised logistical concerns about calendar congestion, and then rescheduled to July, the disruption to club seasons and camp planning was significant. Nigeria were also the only top team that played no friendly matches during the November 2025 international window, a gap in preparation that Madugu worked to close in the months that followed.
More than a trophy
The stakes beyond the championship are significant. Women's football in Nigeria has historically struggled for funding, media coverage, and domestic infrastructure β a contrast with the Super Falcons' international record that has frustrated players and administrators alike. President Tinubu's 2026 sports funding reforms, which promised unified and timely budget releases under the National Sports Commission, have been welcomed but remain to be tested in practice. The Super Falcons' performances in Morocco will land in the middle of that debate. A successful title defence, combined with a Women's World Cup qualification, would be the strongest possible argument for sustained investment β and would give Nigerian women's football a platform it has rarely had before.
The Super Falcons have won this tournament more times than any nation in history. In Rabat this summer, they will be asked to do it again β in the country they beat to get here, before a crowd that remembers exactly how last year ended.