Sports
AFCON 2025: CAF Expand Teams List from 24 to 28 players
Morocco will host the competition from December 18, 2025 to January 18, 2026
The Confederation of African Football, CAF, has confirmed that each participating country will be allowed to register a final squad of 28 players for the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations.
In a statement CAF said that the expanded list is designed to help teams better manage player fitness, injuries, workload and potential health-related concerns during the month-long event.
CAF further stated that each national team can also include up to 17 members of technical staff for the competition.
The move is to ensure adequate support across coaching, medical, logistics, and performance analysis roles.
The 24 teams are expected to finalise their 28-man final squad on December 11.
Morocco will host the competition from December 18, 2025 to January 18, 2026.
Sports
Osimhen donates N5million to ailing online food vendor
The biggest support came on Wednesday when Osimhen transferred ₦5 million to the account. The gesture sparked an emotional response from the beneficiary, who publicly expressed her gratitude.
Super Eagles striker and Galatasaray forward Victor Osimhen has reportedly donated ₦5 million to assist with the medical treatment of popular online food vendor and Twitter personality, Aunty Esther, who is currently battling breast cancer.
Soccernet reported that Osimhen made the donation after he encountered a distressing video of the elderly woman, identified as Esther Omolola Mensah, crying in pain on a hospital bed while revealing the extent of the damage the illness had caused.
The footage, widely circulated on social media, stirred widespread sympathy and urgent calls for support.
Aunty Esther, known for sourcing and delivering market items for her followers, had grown a loyal community online because of her warm personality and trustworthiness.
However, her business ground to a halt in recent months as her health deteriorated.
When her condition worsened, concerned social media users rallied around her, mobilising funds and ensuring she received immediate medical attention.
Doctors later confirmed that she required extensive and costly treatment, prompting her supporters to create a verified fundraising account. Thousands of Nigerians have since contributed to the fund.
The biggest support came on Wednesday when Osimhen transferred ₦5 million to the account. The gesture sparked an emotional response from the beneficiary, who publicly expressed her gratitude.
Sports
Ugborodo’s abandoned FIFA project
Pinnick and Monimichelle accuse each other of being responsible for the project’s abandonment, while the public remains in the dark about what funds were released, how they were utilised, and why the project has been put on hold.
(Vanguard): When former FIFA President, Joseph S. Blatter, launched the FIFA Goal Project in 1999, the initiative was envisioned as a catalyst for global football development; one that would help countries build modern training grounds, nurture grassroots talents and strengthen the structures of football administration.
For many nations, the project has been nothing short of transformative.
In Nigeria, however, the story is painfully familiar.In 2020, FIFA approved the construction of two mini-stadiums: one in Birnin Kebbi, Kebbi State and another in Ugborodo, Delta State; each valued at $1.2 million.
While the Kebbi facility, built by Enron Construction, now stands completed, the Ugborodo project has become mired in controversy, delay and finger-pointing. And once again, Nigerians are left asking: How did we get here?
Launched with enthusiasm, the Ugborodo mini-stadium was celebrated as a project that would unite the Itsekiri, Ilaje, and Ijaw communities.
Delta State officials promised full support, applauding FIFA and the NFF for selecting the community.
Yet today, the site, awarded to Monimichelle Sports Construction Company under the leadership of then NFF President Amaju Pinnick, has become a symbol of yet another failed infrastructure dream.
While the Kebbi facility, built by Enron Construction, now stands completed, the Ugborodo project has become mired in controversy, delay and finger-pointing.
The stalled project is not just a physical eyesore, it is a metaphor for the deeper malaise afflicting Nigeria’s sports development ecosystem.
At a time when the nation continues to produce exceptional football talents against all odds, the very infrastructure meant to nurture these talents is either non-existent, ill-maintained or abandoned.
Worse still, the key actors are now trading blame instead of providing answers.
Pinnick and Monimichelle accuse each other of being responsible for the project’s abandonment, while the public remains in the dark about what funds were released, how they were utilised, and why the project has been put on hold.
Nigerians deserve better than recycled excuses. They deserve accountability.
The FIFA Goal Project operates with strict implementation and reporting standards.
If Nigeria cannot properly manage a $1.2 million mini-stadium, what message does that send about our seriousness in sports administration?
Why has no one been held accountable? How much was disbursed? What are the deliverables? Who failed to meet them?The Ugborodo embarrassment should be a turning point.
Every FIFA-funded or assisted project in Nigeria must henceforth undergo independent auditing, transparent, publicly accessible reporting and community-level monitoring to prevent abandonment and diversion.
Sports infrastructure is not a political souvenir to be handed out for patronage. It is a national asset with long-term developmental value.
Treating such projects casually undermines the opportunities for young athletes. It erodes public trust.
Ugborodo should therefore stand as a wake-up call, not another forgotten statistic in Nigeria’s long list of uncompleted projects.
And Nigeria must finally learn to move from fanfare to follow-through, from ceremonial ground-breaking to sustained institution-building.
Our young talents deserve better and more.
Sports
Nigeria petitions ITTF over Romania visa denial
Nigeria had qualified to represent Africa in the boys’ U-19 and U-15 team events after emerging as continental champions at the African Youth Championships in Lagos.
The Nigeria Table Tennis Federation (NTTF) has formally petitioned the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) after its players were denied entry visas to compete at the ongoing 2025 World Youth Championships in Romania.
In a letter signed by NTTF President Adesoji Tayo, the federation condemned the visa refusal, calling it a violation of the principles of international sportsmanship, inclusivity, and fair participation that the ITTF and its partners uphold.
“As an official representative of Nigeria and Africa in this prestigious global event, I firmly believe that the reasons provided for the visa refusal are unjust, discriminatory, and contrary to the spirit of unity which international sports is designed to foster,” Tayo stated.
Despite weeks of rigorous training by players and coaches, the visa denial has dampened the contingent’s morale and resulted in financial losses for the federation.
Nigeria had qualified to represent Africa in the boys’ U-19 and U-15 team events after emerging as continental champions at the African Youth Championships in Lagos.
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