NigeriaNickname(s) | Super Falcons |
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Association | Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) |
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Confederation | CAF (Africa) |
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Sub-confederation | WAFU (West Africa) |
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Head coach | Randy Waldrum[1][2] |
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Captain | Chiamaka Nnadozie |
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Most caps | Onome Ebi (109) |
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Top scorer | Perpetua Nkwocha (80)[3] |
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FIFA code | NGA |
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Current | 39 1 (7 December 2018)[4] |
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Highest | 23 (July – August 2003; August 2004; March 2005) |
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Lowest | 46 (August 2022) |
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Nigeria 5–1 Ghana (Nigeria; 16 February 1991) |
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Nigeria 15–0 Niger (Ivory Coast; 11 May 2019) |
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Norway 8–0 Nigeria (Karlstad, Sweden; 6 June 1995) Germany 8–0 Nigeria (Leverkusen, Germany; 25 November 2010) France 8–0 Nigeria (Le Mans, France; 6 April 2018) |
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Appearances | 9 (first in 1991) |
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Best result | Quarter-finals (1999) |
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Appearances | 3 (first in 2000) |
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Best result | Quarter-finals (2004) |
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Appearances | 14 (first in 1991) |
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Best result | Champions (1991, 1995, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2016, 2018) |
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Appearances | 2 (first in 2018) |
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Best result | Champions (2019) |
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The Nigeria women's national football team, known as the Super Falcons, plays for Nigeria in women's international football. It's managed by the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF). This team is the most successful women's football team in Africa. They have won the Women's Africa Cup of Nations eleven times. They won their latest title in 2018 by beating South Africa in the final match. This team is also unique because it's the only women's team from the Confederation of African Football that has made it to the quarterfinals in both the FIFA Women's World Cup and the Summer Olympics.
They're also one of the few teams worldwide and the only African team to qualify for every FIFA Women's World Cup. Their best performance was in the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup when they reached the quarterfinals.
References