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Osimhen, Lookman Do Not Allow Primate Ayodele’s Prophecy To Come To Past

Reporter by Reporter
January 6, 2026
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Osimhen, Lookman Do Not Allow Primate Ayodele’s Prophecy To Come To Past
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As Nigeria advances toward the quarterfinals, the conversation must shift from isolated moments to the bigger picture of maturity, cohesion, and collective responsibility. Tournament football is unforgiving. At this stage, talent alone is no longer enough. Success depends on emotional control, shared understanding, and the ability to operate consistently at a high tactical and psychological level. This is the phase where teams either evolve into true contenders or expose their internal weaknesses.

The criticism surrounding Victor Osimhen’s reaction during the match deserves a more informed and nuanced analysis. Elite football is not merely about visible effort or surface-level composure. It is deeply technical, instinctive, and psychological. Decisions are made in fractions of seconds, shaped by preplanned patterns, spatial awareness, and mutual trust among teammates.

Throughout the match, Osimhen repeatedly positioned himself in high-value scoring zones, with three or four clear situations where a timely pass could have produced a decisive chance. His off-the-ball movement was not random or self-serving. It was deliberate, intelligent, and consistent with the responsibilities of a world-class striker. These are the exact runs coaches drill into their forwards because they stretch defensive lines and create goals. Yet, in those moments, the final pass did not arrive. Lookman and Akor, caught between individual initiative and team execution, chose other options.

The situation was further compounded when Bruno surged forward from deep into the final third. Osimhen was well positioned and presented a clear passing lane, while Lookman was also available. Instead, Bruno chose to carry the ball into a congested area with little space to finish. The outcome was predictable: a lost opportunity at a critical moment.

It was after this sequence that Osimhen’s frustration became visible. Context matters here. This was not petulance, arrogance, or a lack of sportsmanship. It was the reaction of a player operating at the highest competitive level, one whose standards are shaped by elite European football and relentless personal accountability. Players of Osimhen’s caliber are wired differently. Their frustration is driven by a burning desire to maximize every advantage and punish every defensive lapse. That edge is not a flaw; it is a defining characteristic of champions.

It is also important to be fair to his teammates. There is no evidence that Lookman or Akor deliberately ignored Osimhen. In high-pressure tournament settings, players can become emotionally invested in finishing strong, sometimes allowing individual instinct to override collective logic. These moments are not unusual, especially in teams still growing into full tactical maturity.

Singling out Osimhen for his reaction, however, misses the point. This same intensity has made him one of Nigeria’s most dependable performers on the global stage. Time and again, he has delivered when it mattered most, carrying both expectation and responsibility with courage. His reputation as a world-class striker was not gifted; it was earned through discipline, sacrifice, and an uncompromising competitive mindset.

Even his decision to request a substitution can be interpreted through a mature lens. With the game effectively under control, stepping aside may have been his way of defusing tension, conserving energy, and allowing others to take responsibility. Leadership does not always come in the form of staying on the pitch. Sometimes, it is knowing when to step back for the greater good.

As Nigeria approaches the quarterfinals, the lesson is clear: the team must grow collectively. Players and coaching staff must align their vision, trust the system, and communicate better in decisive moments. The coach’s role is crucial in managing personalities, reinforcing tactical discipline, and ensuring that individual brilliance serves the team’s objectives rather than undermining them.

At this level, emotions will always run high. That is the nature of elite competition. What defines great teams is not the absence of emotion, but the ability to channel it constructively. These issues will be addressed internally, as professionals do. What matters most is that Nigeria harnesses this fire, sharpens its cohesion, and enters the quarterfinals not just as a talented side, but as a mature and unified force ready to compete with the very best.

A similar incident unfolded during Nigeria’s ill-fated World Cup qualifying match against DR Congo, where Osimhen chastised Lookman and Ndidi at halftime for missing a glorious chance to go two-nil up. The situation was poorly handled by the coach, leading to Osimhen not playing the second half. The team collapsed thereafter, and Congo dominated proceedings before eventually winning the match on penalties.

This is football at its peak. Players with the mentality of champions will always show that fire.

Dr. Bankole Dehinbo, Johannesburg, South Africa.

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