Super Eagles squad: Chelle names separate teams for Unity Cup and June friendlies
Nigeria head coach Éric Chelle has announced distinct Super Eagles squad lists for the 2026 Unity Cup in London and for June friendlies in Europe, handing opportunities to home-based players while protecting several established stars for matches against Poland and Portugal. The Unity Cup roster features a blend of domestic performers and fresh overseas call-ups, and the dual announcements have reignited debate over the long-term goalkeeping pecking order. (sportsvillagesquare.com)
Chelle names separate squads for Unity Cup and June friendlies
Éric Chelle opted to split his resources between a 27-man squad for the Unity Cup mini-tournament in London and a 24-man roster for the European friendlies, signalling a two-track preparation approach. This decision allows the Nigeria Football Federation to both reward domestic form and assemble a more experienced contingent for high-profile tests in Warsaw and Leiria.
The Unity Cup squad leans on a mixture of NPFL performers and emerging talents based abroad, while the Europe squad brings back many of the Super Eagles’ foreign-based starters who will be key to Chelle’s plans for 2027 qualification. The separation underlines Chelle’s directive to evaluate depth across tiers and to balance competitive exposure with squad continuity.
Blend of home-based talent and first-time call-ups
Chelle’s Unity Cup list includes seven players drawn from the Nigeria Premier Football League, with goalkeepers, defenders and midfielders from Ikorodu City, Enugu Rangers, Rivers United and Shooting Stars receiving invitations. The domestic contingent includes goalkeeper Michael Atata and midfielders Aderemi Adeoye and Tosin Oyedokun, reflecting the coach’s intent to reward strong NPFL form. (afrik-foot.com)
Alongside those home-based picks, the coach handed maiden senior call-ups to a handful of overseas players, most notably goalkeeper Arthur Okonkwo and forward Rafiu Durosinmi. These first-time inclusions provide Chelle with fresh options in goal and attack and offer the new internationals a chance to stake claims ahead of more significant assignments.
Goalkeeper controversy: Nwabali omitted again
A prominent talking point from the announcements is the continued omission of Stanley Nwabali, who has been absent despite his prior status as a first-choice goalkeeper for Nigeria at past major tournaments. Chelle selected Francis Uzoho, Maduka Okoye and Arthur Okonkwo as his three goalkeepers across the two rosters, a move that leaves Nwabali without a place while he remains unattached to a club. (leadership.ng)
The decision compounds a debate over whether current form, club situation and long-term planning should determine the national number one position. Sources close to the federation and multiple media outlets have noted that Chelle appears to be prioritising goalkeepers with regular club involvement and exposure to varied competitive environments.
Fixture details and tournament schedule
Nigeria will open its Unity Cup campaign with a semi-final against Zimbabwe at The Valley, Charlton Athletic’s stadium in London, on 26 May 2026, with the winners progressing to a final against either Jamaica or India. The Unity Cup runs from 26 to 30 May and provides a compact platform for international experimentation ahead of the summer. (en.wikipedia.org)
For the European programme, the Super Eagles are scheduled to meet Poland in Warsaw on 3 June 2026 before travelling to Leiria to face Portugal on 10 June 2026. Those fixtures are framed as high-quality tune-ups that will test Chelle’s tactical plans and allow the coaching staff to evaluate combinations against strong continental opposition. (en.wikipedia.org)
Senior stars recalled for Europe as Chelle guards core options
While the Unity Cup list emphasises evaluation and platforming, Chelle’s June selections include many of Nigeria’s established internationals, with Victor Osimhen, Ademola Lookman, Alex Iwobi and Calvin Bassey among players called into the Europe squad. The recall of those foreign-based stars aims to preserve continuity around the nucleus who will likely shoulder competitive responsibility during qualifiers and major tournaments. (thetrumpet.ng)
Chelle’s configuration means senior attackers and midfield operators will get minutes in Warsaw and Leiria against robust opposition, while fringe players and domestic improvers can impress on a different stage in London. That split approach is also meant to reduce travel strain and manage match minutes ahead of a busy international calendar that includes qualifying campaigns.
Tactical balance, youth integration and domestic reward
The squad construction combines experienced defenders and midfield enforcers with a deliberate injection of younger, versatile performers to increase competition for places. Wilfred Ndidi retains a leadership role in the Unity Cup squad, supported by a mixture of veterans and newly-capped midfielders intended to provide defensive stability and transition play.
Chelle’s selections indicate a preference for physical midfield structure anchored by established figures, while forwards in both squads offer contrasting profiles from direct power to technical mobility. The coach appears to be testing different forward partnerships and rotational models that could be adapted depending on opponent and match context.
What the selections mean for long-term planning
By handing NPFL players clear pathways into the senior set-up, Chelle is signalling that strong domestic performances will be rewarded and monitored closely as part of squad replenishment. The approach also widens the scouting net, giving young or overlooked professionals meaningful exposure to international standards without immediately displacing incumbent internationals.
The exclusion of a previously preferred goalkeeper and the invitation to new faces suggest Chelle is weighing both immediate competitive needs and a multi-year rebuild. The coach’s choices reflect an attempt to identify a core group while maintaining the flexibility to integrate fresh talent between now and qualification windows.
Chelle’s two-squad strategy will be judged on outcomes: immediate results at the Unity Cup and competitive displays in Poland and Portugal, and longer-term progress in assembling a resilient, deep Super Eagles squad capable of contending across African and global assignments. The forthcoming matches offer a clear measuring stick for individual players and the team’s tactical identity as Chelle continues to shape his plans for the next qualifying cycles.










