5 Biggest Winners After the Unity Cup.....
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5 Biggest Winners After the Unity Cup.....
Nigeria’s Top 5: The biggest winners at the 2025 Unity Cup
https://soccernet.ng/2025/06/nigerias-2 ... y-cup.html
by Imhonlamhen Eronmhonsele June 2, 2025 in News, NewsNow, Nigeria, This Week, Top 0
Thirteen long years. That’s how long Nigerian football had waited for any form of silverware — until now.
Eric Chelle’s bold, quietly brilliant Unity Cup campaign in London didn’t just end in Nigeria lifting a long-awaited trophy; it gave a nation’s football scene new oxygen.
With Victor Osimhen and Ademola Lookman absent, and a youthful, largely experimental squad assembled, not many backed Nigeria to do much. But Chelle's men beat Ghana and edged Jamaica on penalties to win the 2025 Unity Cup — a trophy as symbolic as it was celebratory.
Super Eagles head coach Eric Chelle
Super Eagles head coach Eric Chelle. Photo Credit X
Beyond the confetti and champagne, though, five standout winners emerged — each of them rewriting their personal narratives or, in the case of Nigerian football itself, restoring some long-lost pride.
1. The NPFL
Let’s not dress it up: the Nigeria Premier Football League (NPFL) has long craved relevance on the international stage. At the Unity Cup, it got it — in full technicolor.
Eight home-based players were called up, five played against Ghana, and three started that game. From Remo Stars' pair Sodiq Ismaila and Sikiru Alimi, to Niger Tornadoes midfielder Papa Daniel Mustapha, this wasn’t just token participation — it was representation with substance.
Ismaila, in particular, was immense. Starting both games and completing 90 minutes in each, the attacking full-back didn't just fill a gap — he owned his role. Add to that appearances from Enugu Rangers duo Collins Ugwueze and Emmanuel Onyebuchi, and it’s clear that Chelle has opened the door wide to NPFL talents.
As NPFL Chairman Hon. Gbenga Elegbeleye put it: “Their performance will inspire other players in the league to embrace hard work and discipline, knowing someone — like Coach Chelle — is watching.”
For a league often dismissed, this was a red-letter moment.
2. Cyriel Dessers – From fringe to frontline
Talk about rewriting the script. Before this tournament, Cyriel Dessers was barely in Nigeria’s striker conversation — a peripheral figure with just six appearances in five years and no competitive starts.
But in London, the Glasgow Rangers forward tore up the pecking order.
He scored the opener against Ghana with a striker’s instinct and assisted the crucial first goal in the final versus Jamaica. But more than his goal contributions, it was his all-round performance that dazzled: aggressive pressing, clever movement, strong hold-up play — Dessers looked every inch a modern No. 9.
In two games, he morphed from squad filler to a legitimate first-choice option. For Chelle, who needed a backup striker to Osimhen, Dessers might just be the man.
3. Samuel Chukwueze – Reborn under Chelle
If anyone needed a big performance, it was Samuel Chukwueze.
After a disappointing first season at AC Milan, eyebrows were raised when his name popped up in the starting XI against Ghana. But Chelle saw something others didn’t — and gave Chukwueze a free role in the heart of midfield.
The result? Magic.
Against Ghana, his floated free-kick led to Nigeria’s second goal. Against Jamaica, he scored with a sweetly struck left-footed effort. Beyond numbers, it was his movement, vision, and flair that lit up both games. Chelle has unlocked something different in Chukwueze — not a winger hugging the touchline, but a central creative force reminiscent of Jay-Jay Okocha in his pomp.
If these performances are anything to go by, Nigeria may have finally found the player to carry its creative torch — and it’s the same Chukwueze we once called inconsistent.
4. Benjamin Fredrick – From standby to showstopper
He wasn’t even in the initial squad. He wasn’t even supposed to play. But football writes its own stories, and 19-year-old Benjamin Fredrick is now the protagonist in one of the best.
Named Brentford’s Young Player of the Year just a week earlier, Fredrick was in town as an observer — until Semi Ajayi pulled up injured, and Eric Chelle rolled the dice.
The rookie started against Jamaica and delivered a performance well beyond his years. Calm, composed, and tactically aware, Fredrick didn’t just fit in — he stood out.
Chelle was so impressed he included him in the squad for Nigeria’s next clash against Russia. The Super Eagles may have just unearthed their next great centre-back.
5. Nigerian Football
Eric Chelle is only six months into the job, but already, the transformation is impossible to ignore.
He’s respected the local league, giving NPFL players legitimate chances. He’s given fringe players like Dessers and Fredrick platforms to shine. He’s reimagined roles, like turning Chukwueze into a midfield creator. And he’s built depth — real, positional depth — across a squad that had often looked thin beyond its big stars.
Felix Agu offers promise at left-back. Junior Nduka and Mustapha have bolstered the defensive midfield ranks. The attacking midfield problem? Chukwueze may have just solved it.
This isn’t merely tactical progress — it’s cultural. Nigeria’s football scene feels unified again, blending homegrown passion with foreign finesse.
The next test comes in the form of World Cup qualifiers against South Africa and Rwanda. But for now, Nigerian football is finally smiling — and it has Eric Chelle’s brave, belief-filled Unity Cup campaign to thank.
Trophies matter. But belief, structure, and opportunity matter more — and the Unity Cup delivered all three. For Chelle, for Dessers, for Chukwueze, for NPFL dreamers, and for the future of Nigerian football, this tournament wasn't just a win. It was a turning point.
Imhonlamhen Eronmhonsele
https://soccernet.ng/2025/06/nigerias-2 ... y-cup.html
by Imhonlamhen Eronmhonsele June 2, 2025 in News, NewsNow, Nigeria, This Week, Top 0
Thirteen long years. That’s how long Nigerian football had waited for any form of silverware — until now.
Eric Chelle’s bold, quietly brilliant Unity Cup campaign in London didn’t just end in Nigeria lifting a long-awaited trophy; it gave a nation’s football scene new oxygen.
With Victor Osimhen and Ademola Lookman absent, and a youthful, largely experimental squad assembled, not many backed Nigeria to do much. But Chelle's men beat Ghana and edged Jamaica on penalties to win the 2025 Unity Cup — a trophy as symbolic as it was celebratory.
Super Eagles head coach Eric Chelle
Super Eagles head coach Eric Chelle. Photo Credit X
Beyond the confetti and champagne, though, five standout winners emerged — each of them rewriting their personal narratives or, in the case of Nigerian football itself, restoring some long-lost pride.
1. The NPFL
Let’s not dress it up: the Nigeria Premier Football League (NPFL) has long craved relevance on the international stage. At the Unity Cup, it got it — in full technicolor.
Eight home-based players were called up, five played against Ghana, and three started that game. From Remo Stars' pair Sodiq Ismaila and Sikiru Alimi, to Niger Tornadoes midfielder Papa Daniel Mustapha, this wasn’t just token participation — it was representation with substance.
Ismaila, in particular, was immense. Starting both games and completing 90 minutes in each, the attacking full-back didn't just fill a gap — he owned his role. Add to that appearances from Enugu Rangers duo Collins Ugwueze and Emmanuel Onyebuchi, and it’s clear that Chelle has opened the door wide to NPFL talents.
As NPFL Chairman Hon. Gbenga Elegbeleye put it: “Their performance will inspire other players in the league to embrace hard work and discipline, knowing someone — like Coach Chelle — is watching.”
For a league often dismissed, this was a red-letter moment.
2. Cyriel Dessers – From fringe to frontline
Talk about rewriting the script. Before this tournament, Cyriel Dessers was barely in Nigeria’s striker conversation — a peripheral figure with just six appearances in five years and no competitive starts.
But in London, the Glasgow Rangers forward tore up the pecking order.
He scored the opener against Ghana with a striker’s instinct and assisted the crucial first goal in the final versus Jamaica. But more than his goal contributions, it was his all-round performance that dazzled: aggressive pressing, clever movement, strong hold-up play — Dessers looked every inch a modern No. 9.
In two games, he morphed from squad filler to a legitimate first-choice option. For Chelle, who needed a backup striker to Osimhen, Dessers might just be the man.
3. Samuel Chukwueze – Reborn under Chelle
If anyone needed a big performance, it was Samuel Chukwueze.
After a disappointing first season at AC Milan, eyebrows were raised when his name popped up in the starting XI against Ghana. But Chelle saw something others didn’t — and gave Chukwueze a free role in the heart of midfield.
The result? Magic.
Against Ghana, his floated free-kick led to Nigeria’s second goal. Against Jamaica, he scored with a sweetly struck left-footed effort. Beyond numbers, it was his movement, vision, and flair that lit up both games. Chelle has unlocked something different in Chukwueze — not a winger hugging the touchline, but a central creative force reminiscent of Jay-Jay Okocha in his pomp.
If these performances are anything to go by, Nigeria may have finally found the player to carry its creative torch — and it’s the same Chukwueze we once called inconsistent.
4. Benjamin Fredrick – From standby to showstopper
He wasn’t even in the initial squad. He wasn’t even supposed to play. But football writes its own stories, and 19-year-old Benjamin Fredrick is now the protagonist in one of the best.
Named Brentford’s Young Player of the Year just a week earlier, Fredrick was in town as an observer — until Semi Ajayi pulled up injured, and Eric Chelle rolled the dice.
The rookie started against Jamaica and delivered a performance well beyond his years. Calm, composed, and tactically aware, Fredrick didn’t just fit in — he stood out.
Chelle was so impressed he included him in the squad for Nigeria’s next clash against Russia. The Super Eagles may have just unearthed their next great centre-back.
5. Nigerian Football
Eric Chelle is only six months into the job, but already, the transformation is impossible to ignore.
He’s respected the local league, giving NPFL players legitimate chances. He’s given fringe players like Dessers and Fredrick platforms to shine. He’s reimagined roles, like turning Chukwueze into a midfield creator. And he’s built depth — real, positional depth — across a squad that had often looked thin beyond its big stars.
Felix Agu offers promise at left-back. Junior Nduka and Mustapha have bolstered the defensive midfield ranks. The attacking midfield problem? Chukwueze may have just solved it.
This isn’t merely tactical progress — it’s cultural. Nigeria’s football scene feels unified again, blending homegrown passion with foreign finesse.
The next test comes in the form of World Cup qualifiers against South Africa and Rwanda. But for now, Nigerian football is finally smiling — and it has Eric Chelle’s brave, belief-filled Unity Cup campaign to thank.
Trophies matter. But belief, structure, and opportunity matter more — and the Unity Cup delivered all three. For Chelle, for Dessers, for Chukwueze, for NPFL dreamers, and for the future of Nigerian football, this tournament wasn't just a win. It was a turning point.
Imhonlamhen Eronmhonsele
The difficulties of statistical thinking describes a puzzling limitation of our mind: our excessive confidence in what we believe we know, and our apparent inability to acknowledge the full extent of our ignorance and the uncertainty of the world we live in. We are prone to overestimate how much we understand about the world and to underestimate the role of chance in events -- Daniel Kahneman (2011), Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
Re: 5 Biggest Winners After the Unity Cup.....
We do not like to tell ourselves the truth in Nigeria! We see black and conveniently call it white!
My good friend and Chairman of the NPFL set the ball rolling by saying the NPFL representatives in the SE gave a good account of themselves and now journalists are following suit.
The evidence before my eyes suggest something very different and if the NPFL is to improve, the truth has to be told.
If they were so good, why didn’t any of them with the exception of Sodiq, the only RB in the squad and culpable for all the goals conceded, play in the next match against Jamaica?
With Osayi-Samuel returning to the squad, I bet none of them will play in Russia
My good friend and Chairman of the NPFL set the ball rolling by saying the NPFL representatives in the SE gave a good account of themselves and now journalists are following suit.
The evidence before my eyes suggest something very different and if the NPFL is to improve, the truth has to be told.
If they were so good, why didn’t any of them with the exception of Sodiq, the only RB in the squad and culpable for all the goals conceded, play in the next match against Jamaica?
With Osayi-Samuel returning to the squad, I bet none of them will play in Russia
I am happy
Re: 5 Biggest Winners After the Unity Cup.....
I do not expect any of them to start in Russia but I doubt that such is the measure. One thing we forget is that our SE often play against some teams that have players that are not better than these NPFL guys. Yet the SE regularly fails to overwhelm them. What does that tell us?Dammy wrote: ↑Wed Jun 04, 2025 8:50 am We do not like to tell ourselves the truth in Nigeria! We see black and conveniently call it white!
My good friend and Chairman of the NPFL set the ball rolling by saying the NPFL representatives in the SE gave a good account of themselves and now journalists are following suit.
The evidence before my eyes suggest something very different and if the NPFL is to improve, the truth has to be told.
If they were so good, why didn’t any of them with the exception of Sodiq, the only RB in the squad and culpable for all the goals conceded, play in the next match against Jamaica?
With Osayi-Samuel returning to the squad, I bet none of them will play in Russia
The difficulties of statistical thinking describes a puzzling limitation of our mind: our excessive confidence in what we believe we know, and our apparent inability to acknowledge the full extent of our ignorance and the uncertainty of the world we live in. We are prone to overestimate how much we understand about the world and to underestimate the role of chance in events -- Daniel Kahneman (2011), Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
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Re: 5 Biggest Winners After the Unity Cup.....
Our people know how to lie sha. Sodiq was terrible. I’m not saying to close the door on local players, but if the best midfielders and the highest goal scorer in the NPFL were not added to the Unity Cup team, then what’s the point.
"Yea right, we await the beatings the Aussie has for them. The Falcons are just another bad team at the women world cup".....fatpokey Tue Jul 25, 2023 4:34 .
Re: 5 Biggest Winners After the Unity Cup.....
This is the PR machine of the NPFL at work. Just read the following statements. Utter nonsense.Dammy wrote: ↑Wed Jun 04, 2025 8:50 am We do not like to tell ourselves the truth in Nigeria! We see black and conveniently call it white!
My good friend and Chairman of the NPFL set the ball rolling by saying the NPFL representatives in the SE gave a good account of themselves and now journalists are following suit.
The evidence before my eyes suggest something very different and if the NPFL is to improve, the truth has to be told.
If they were so good, why didn’t any of them with the exception of Sodiq, the only RB in the squad and culpable for all the goals conceded, play in the next match against Jamaica?
With Osayi-Samuel returning to the squad, I bet none of them will play in Russia
Where is the report on Alimi and Mustafa?
Ismaila, in particular, was immense. Starting both games and completing 90 minutes in each, the attacking full-back didn't just fill a gap — he owned his role. Add to that appearances from Enugu Rangers duo Collins Ugwueze and Emmanuel Onyebuchi, and it’s clear that Chelle has opened the door wide to NPFL talents.
Felix Agu offers promise at left-back. Junior Nduka and Mustapha have bolstered the defensive midfield ranks.
"For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life"
"If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land."
"If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land."
Re: 5 Biggest Winners After the Unity Cup.....
Enugu II wrote: ↑Wed Jun 04, 2025 5:24 am Nigeria’s Top 5: The biggest winners at the 2025 Unity Cup
https://soccernet.ng/2025/06/nigerias-2 ... y-cup.html
by Imhonlamhen Eronmhonsele June 2, 2025 in News, NewsNow, Nigeria, This Week, Top 0
Thirteen long years. That’s how long Nigerian football had waited for any form of silverware — until now.
Eric Chelle’s bold, quietly brilliant Unity Cup campaign in London didn’t just end in Nigeria lifting a long-awaited trophy; it gave a nation’s football scene new oxygen.
With Victor Osimhen and Ademola Lookman absent, and a youthful, largely experimental squad assembled, not many backed Nigeria to do much. But Chelle's men beat Ghana and edged Jamaica on penalties to win the 2025 Unity Cup — a trophy as symbolic as it was celebratory.
Super Eagles head coach Eric Chelle
Super Eagles head coach Eric Chelle. Photo Credit X
Beyond the confetti and champagne, though, five standout winners emerged — each of them rewriting their personal narratives or, in the case of Nigerian football itself, restoring some long-lost pride.
1. The NPFL
Let’s not dress it up: the Nigeria Premier Football League (NPFL) has long craved relevance on the international stage. At the Unity Cup, it got it — in full technicolor.
Eight home-based players were called up, five played against Ghana, and three started that game. From Remo Stars' pair Sodiq Ismaila and Sikiru Alimi, to Niger Tornadoes midfielder Papa Daniel Mustapha, this wasn’t just token participation — it was representation with substance.
Ismaila, in particular, was immense. Starting both games and completing 90 minutes in each, the attacking full-back didn't just fill a gap — he owned his role. Add to that appearances from Enugu Rangers duo Collins Ugwueze and Emmanuel Onyebuchi, and it’s clear that Chelle has opened the door wide to NPFL talents.
As NPFL Chairman Hon. Gbenga Elegbeleye put it: “Their performance will inspire other players in the league to embrace hard work and discipline, knowing someone — like Coach Chelle — is watching.”
For a league often dismissed, this was a red-letter moment.
2. Cyriel Dessers – From fringe to frontline
Talk about rewriting the script. Before this tournament, Cyriel Dessers was barely in Nigeria’s striker conversation — a peripheral figure with just six appearances in five years and no competitive starts.
But in London, the Glasgow Rangers forward tore up the pecking order.
He scored the opener against Ghana with a striker’s instinct and assisted the crucial first goal in the final versus Jamaica. But more than his goal contributions, it was his all-round performance that dazzled: aggressive pressing, clever movement, strong hold-up play — Dessers looked every inch a modern No. 9.
In two games, he morphed from squad filler to a legitimate first-choice option. For Chelle, who needed a backup striker to Osimhen, Dessers might just be the man.
3. Samuel Chukwueze – Reborn under Chelle
If anyone needed a big performance, it was Samuel Chukwueze.
After a disappointing first season at AC Milan, eyebrows were raised when his name popped up in the starting XI against Ghana. But Chelle saw something others didn’t — and gave Chukwueze a free role in the heart of midfield.
The result? Magic.
Against Ghana, his floated free-kick led to Nigeria’s second goal. Against Jamaica, he scored with a sweetly struck left-footed effort. Beyond numbers, it was his movement, vision, and flair that lit up both games. Chelle has unlocked something different in Chukwueze — not a winger hugging the touchline, but a central creative force reminiscent of Jay-Jay Okocha in his pomp.
If these performances are anything to go by, Nigeria may have finally found the player to carry its creative torch — and it’s the same Chukwueze we once called inconsistent.
4. Benjamin Fredrick – From standby to showstopper
He wasn’t even in the initial squad. He wasn’t even supposed to play. But football writes its own stories, and 19-year-old Benjamin Fredrick is now the protagonist in one of the best.
Named Brentford’s Young Player of the Year just a week earlier, Fredrick was in town as an observer — until Semi Ajayi pulled up injured, and Eric Chelle rolled the dice.
The rookie started against Jamaica and delivered a performance well beyond his years. Calm, composed, and tactically aware, Fredrick didn’t just fit in — he stood out.
Chelle was so impressed he included him in the squad for Nigeria’s next clash against Russia. The Super Eagles may have just unearthed their next great centre-back.
5. Nigerian Football
Eric Chelle is only six months into the job, but already, the transformation is impossible to ignore.
He’s respected the local league, giving NPFL players legitimate chances. He’s given fringe players like Dessers and Fredrick platforms to shine. He’s reimagined roles, like turning Chukwueze into a midfield creator. And he’s built depth — real, positional depth — across a squad that had often looked thin beyond its big stars.
Felix Agu offers promise at left-back. Junior Nduka and Mustapha have bolstered the defensive midfield ranks. The attacking midfield problem? Chukwueze may have just solved it.
This isn’t merely tactical progress — it’s cultural. Nigeria’s football scene feels unified again, blending homegrown passion with foreign finesse.
The next test comes in the form of World Cup qualifiers against South Africa and Rwanda. But for now, Nigerian football is finally smiling — and it has Eric Chelle’s brave, belief-filled Unity Cup campaign to thank.
Trophies matter. But belief, structure, and opportunity matter more — and the Unity Cup delivered all three. For Chelle, for Dessers, for Chukwueze, for NPFL dreamers, and for the future of Nigerian football, this tournament wasn't just a win. It was a turning point.
Imhonlamhen Eronmhonsele
What a hot load of donkey Sh!dt.
Sodiq was immense where?
All these Brown Envelope sports writers self.
Nigeria Must Be Great Again
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Re: 5 Biggest Winners After the Unity Cup.....










Especially the cvnt that wrote this article ---Imhonlamhen Eronmhonsele. The thief was the one who was campaigning for Musa last year. I guess we know how connected this thief is.
"it is better to be excited now and disappointed later, than it is to be disappointed now and later." - Marcus Aurelius, 178AD
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Re: 5 Biggest Winners After the Unity Cup.....
Chei
This is MAGA level propaganda.
Just tell the exact opposite of the truth and expect it to be accepted.
This is MAGA level propaganda.
Just tell the exact opposite of the truth and expect it to be accepted.
Re: 5 Biggest Winners After the Unity Cup.....
Get this junk out of here!
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Re: 5 Biggest Winners After the Unity Cup.....
OCCUPY NFF!!
Re: 5 Biggest Winners After the Unity Cup.....
That the coach is not doing his job right..Enugu II wrote: ↑Wed Jun 04, 2025 10:26 amI do not expect any of them to start in Russia but I doubt that such is the measure. One thing we forget is that our SE often play against some teams that have players that are not better than these NPFL guys. Yet the SE regularly fails to overwhelm them. What does that tell us?Dammy wrote: ↑Wed Jun 04, 2025 8:50 am We do not like to tell ourselves the truth in Nigeria! We see black and conveniently call it white!
My good friend and Chairman of the NPFL set the ball rolling by saying the NPFL representatives in the SE gave a good account of themselves and now journalists are following suit.
The evidence before my eyes suggest something very different and if the NPFL is to improve, the truth has to be told.
If they were so good, why didn’t any of them with the exception of Sodiq, the only RB in the squad and culpable for all the goals conceded, play in the next match against Jamaica?
With Osayi-Samuel returning to the squad, I bet none of them will play in Russia
When Saudi Arabia beat Argentina 2-1 in the 2022 World Cup, or when England lost 1-2 to Iceland in the 2016 Euros, it wasn’t the players that took the flack. It was the coaches.
Na we like to blame a bad job on the tools and not the workman when convenient.
"Ole kuku ni gbogbo wọn "