Home Eagles Coach Finds Consolation After CHAN Exit

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Home Eagles of Nigeria head coach, Eric Chelle.

Nigeria may have bowed out of the African Nations Championship, tagged CHAN 2024, but coach Eric Chelle insists their parting act against Congo was a reminder of the Home Eagles’ quality.

His side’s 2-0 win at the Benjamin Mkapa Stadium in Dar es Salaam not only denied Congo progression, but also offered Chelle a bittersweet sense of what might have been.

“We showed our technical ability in the last part of the match, but we lost several balls before that,” Chelle reflected. “In any case, we played well.”

“Our performance was great and we deserved to win the match. I really feel sorry because our last match was good, but the previous two matches had mistakes. We started at a high speed and had a lot of possession.”

Chelle’s regret was palpable, but so too was his admiration for a group of players he described as “young cubs” finding their way under heavy pressure. Playing for honour, not survival.

While Nigeria’s elimination was confirmed, the coach took pride in the manner his players approached their final outing. To him, the victory carried significance beyond the scoreboard.

“I don’t think my cubs let me down,” Chelle stressed. “The pressure was high on these young players and they sometimes played scared. But during the last match against Congo, they played for honour.”

“And that’s why they performed well. Letdown doesn’t come from winning this match. Our players responded to the previous results and said they didn’t want to go home with zero points.”

That resilience, he argued, will form the foundation for a stronger future, especially as the team recovers from their heaviest blow—the loss to Sudan.

“Our deep regret stems from our heavy defeat to Sudan, but that’s football. We will carefully analyze the Sudan match to make up for what happened in the future,” Chelle admitted.

Beyond tactics and desire, Chelle pointed to structural weaknesses that handicapped his team long before the tournament began. A lack of extended preparation and a hastily assembled squad left the Eagles at a disadvantage compared to rivals.

“The preparations for a CHAN tournament should start a year in advance,” Chelle explained. “For example, the player who won the Man of the Match award against Congo, Alex, I put him on our list for the tournament a week before we left.”

The Home Eagles of Nigeria.

“And everyone said, ‘Why did you call him up when he’s not known?’ We weren’t ready to participate in this tournament,” he added.

“Whoever attends our training sessions will notice that our players weren’t mentally prepared to participate in this version of the tournament.”

In the end, both Nigeria and Congo left the competition at the group stage, but their final clash was about more than elimination.

For Chelle, it was about proving pride and sending a message of growth; for Congo Coach Ngatsono, it was about gathering lessons and shaping the future.

The coaches’ reflections capture two sides of African football’s constant struggle: turning raw promise into lasting performance and ensuring preparation matches ambition.

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