The road to the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games has thrown up a fascinating second-round matchup for Nigeria’s senior women’s national team. The Super Falcons are now officially scheduled to face Comoros in the next phase of the continental qualification series following a truly historic, record-breaking performance from the island nation in the preliminary round.
The Comorian side, known affectionately as the Coelacanths, secured their progression after inflicting a massive thirty to zero aggregate defeat on Sudan over two completely one-sided legs. They opened their account with a staggering seventeen to zero victory in the first encounter before returning five days later to complete the blowout with an equally dominant thirteen to zero triumph. The relentless offensive display saw nine separate players get their names on the scoresheet during the opening fixture alone, highlighting a surprising depth of attacking options before they added ten second-half goals in the reverse match to seal the historic aggregate scoreline.
Despite their scoring exploits against Sudan, the East African side will confront a vastly superior tier of opposition when they line up against Nigeria. As the most successful women’s national team on the continent, the multi-time African champions received an automatic first-round bye alongside other regional heavyweights like South Africa and Ghana. They will enter the upcoming fixture as massive favorites to advance further into the tournament’s brackets.
The engineering of Nigeria’s tactical readiness is already well underway under the technical guidance of manager Justine Madugu. The team recently wrapped up a highly successful international window at the Remo Stars Stadium in Ikenne, securing a commanding three to zero victory over Senegal to complete a clean sweep of their double-header friendly series. That performance followed a hard-fought two to one win against the same opposition last week, showcasing the team’s sharp attacking organization and solid defensive shape.
The highly anticipated two-legged qualification tie between Nigeria and Comoros is officially scheduled to take place during the international window of October 5 to 13, 2026. The stakes remain incredibly high for every nation involved, as the extensive multi-round African qualifying series will ultimately produce just two representatives to fly the continental flag at the final Olympic football event in the United States.



























