Nigeria has announced a 23-man squad for this month’s crucial 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifiers against Lesotho and Benin, with head coach Eric Chelle handing Sevilla striker Akor Adams his first call-up.
Captain William Troost-Ekong leads the team, while Semi Ajayi, Terem Moffi, Alhassan Yusuf, and Olakunle Olusegun make their return to the national side.
Goalkeeper Stanley Nwabali retains his place as first choice, supported by Amas Obasogie and Adebayo Adeleye. Defenders Felix Agu, Bruno Onyemaechi, Bright Osayi-Samuel, Benjamin Fredrick, and Calvin Bassey also feature.
The midfield includes Alex Iwobi, Wilfred Ndidi, Frank Onyeka, and Alhassan Yusuf, offering both experience and dynamism.
Up front, Nigeria’s attack is spearheaded by Victor Osimhen and strengthened by Ademola Lookman, Moses Simon, Samuel Chukwueze, Terem Moffi, Cyriel Dessers, Tolu Arokodare, the recalled Olakunle Olusegun, and debutant Adams.
The announcement comes at a decisive stage in Group C of the African qualifiers. Nigeria’s hopes of reaching the World Cup had been dented by five draws in eight matches, but a recent FIFA sanction against South Africa has reshaped the group standings.
The disciplinary ruling overturned South Africa’s 2–0 win over Lesotho in March, awarding a 3–0 victory to the Crocodiles and docking Bafana Bafana three crucial points.
As a result, Benin and South Africa now sit joint top with 14 points, Nigeria and Rwanda follow closely on 11, Lesotho has nine, while Zimbabwe is bottom with four and already eliminated.
For the Super Eagles, the ruling has revived their qualification chances. Victory over Lesotho in Polokwane on October 10 would draw them level with the leaders, ahead of their final group clash against Benin in Uyo four days later.
Two wins could put Nigeria on 17 points, potentially enough for automatic qualification depending on South Africa’s results. If not, Chelle’s men may still progress as one of Africa’s four best runners-up, though their current goal difference of plus two leaves them trailing rivals Benin and South Africa.
With everything at stake, emphatic victories will be crucial if the Super Eagles are to book their place at the 2026 World Cup in the United States, Canada, and Mexico.