Nigeria’s World Cup qualifying campaign has reached a knife-edge.
The Super Eagles welcome Rwanda to Uyo on Saturday in a match that already feels like make-or-break.
Eric Chelle’s men sit in fourth place in Group C with seven points, behind Rwanda and Benin (both on eight) and miles adrift of leaders South Africa, who look like they have packed their boarding passes for North America already.

For Nigeria, the assignment is clear: win the last four games or risk missing another World Cup. Rwanda are no pushovers, though, as the Wasps are stubborn, organised, and desperate to make a point.
Here are five quirky, surprising, and crucial things you probably didn’t know about this clash.
1. Five Super Eagles could make their competitive debut
Nigeria’s squad in Uyo is a cocktail of old heads and fresh blood, and Saturday could mark the competitive bow for five players.

Goalkeeper Amas Obasogie, defenders Felix Agu and Benjamin Fredrick, midfielder Christantus Uche, and forward Cyriel Dessers are all waiting in the wings.
Obasogie may need divine intervention to start ahead of first-choice Stanley Nwabali, but the others are very much in Chelle’s thoughts. Agu and Fredrick, who has been attracting praises, both impressed in the Unity Cup friendlies, while Uche’s energy in midfield is hard to ignore.
The most intriguing name is Dessers. With three goals in eight friendlies and a solid reputation as a poacher, the former Rangers striker looks ready to partner Victor Osimhen up front. If Chelle unleashes him, Nigeria could have a new-look strike force with serious bite.

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2. Osimhen is Nigeria’s goal machine of 2025
If Nigeria are to qualify, the responsibility will rest on Victor Osimhen’s shoulders. Fresh from his €75m blockbuster move to Galatasaray, the 26-year-old has been in the form of his life.
In 2025 alone, Osimhen has scored 30 goals in 31 appearances, numbers that would make even Erling Haaland glance twice.

Two of those came in March, when he single-handedly dismantled Rwanda in Kigali.
The primary task before Rwanda is as clear as daybreak. Stop Osimhen, stop Nigeria. But if he clicks, the Wasps could be in for another bruising.
3. Nigeria and Rwanda are familiar foes
This will be the ninth meeting between Nigeria and Rwanda.
The head-to-head reads in Nigeria’s favour: three wins, four draws, and just one defeat.
That lone loss still stings as it is a 2-1 shocker in Uyo last November during the Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers.

In World Cup qualifying history, the record tilts even more to the Super Eagles. The two nations have met three times in this competition: two wins and one draw for Nigeria.
Another win would restore order and keep the qualification dream alive. Anything less, and Nigeria could be staring at disaster.
4. South Africa could pile on the pressure early
By the time Nigeria step onto the pitch, they may already be nine points behind South Africa.
Bafana Bafana face Lesotho on Friday, and with Lesotho forced to play their ‘home’ matches in South Africa due to stadium issues, it’s essentially another free hit for Hugo Broos’s men.

It’s a quirk of the group that feels deeply unfair. South Africa have enjoyed multiple “away” fixtures on their own turf, including against Zimbabwe. It has given them an artificial cushion, while Nigeria, Rwanda, and Benin have been left scrapping for second place.
If South Africa beat Lesotho, Nigeria’s clash with Rwanda stops being just important and becomes absolutely critical.
5. A few strange but telling Super Eagles facts
The Super Eagles team in Uyo is a fascinating mix of youth and experience.
The baby of the camp is 20-year-old defender Benjamin Fredrick, while the elder statesman is captain William Troost-Ekong at 32. Only three players – Troost-Ekong, Moses Simon, and Dessers – are in their thirties. The rest are all 29 or under, making this one of Nigeria’s youngest squads in recent years.

In terms of market value, Osimhen is king at €70m, followed closely by Atalanta’s Ademola Lookman (€60m). Arsenal’s Alex Iwobi is the most valuable midfielder at €28m, while Fulham’s Calvin Bassey tops the defenders at €25m.
Nigeria’s current squad may lack the sheen of 1994 or 1998, but it is loaded with youthful talent and hungry for a breakthrough moment. Rwanda may just be the side that finds itself on the receiving end.