GhanaWeb Feature by Frank-Kamal Acheampong
It was a weekend of redemption, but not the kind many expected. While the dust was still settling on the heartbreak left by the men, it was the women who stepped forward, bold, brilliant, and victorious, to restore pride to two football-obsessed nations.
In England and Nigeria, the wounds of recent men’s football failures still sting. England’s men had stumbled yet again in a major final, losing the UEFA Euro 2024 title to Spain after Gareth Southgate’s side faded on the big stage in Berlin.
Nigeria’s Super Eagles, for all their flair and promise, watched the 2023 AFCON title slip from their grasp in a bruising final defeat to Cote d’Ivoire in 2024.
Then, just months later, the women teams of these countries rewrote the scripts.
On Saturday, July 26, 2025, the Super Falcons of Nigeria staged a rousing second-half comeback in Rabat, stunning hosts Morocco 3-2 to reclaim their place atop African football.
It was their 10th WAFCON crown, a bold reminder that when African women’s football is written, the first and last pages almost always belong to Nigeria.
Barely 24 hours later in Basel, England’s Lionesses marched out under the weight of expectation and years of pressure. And they didn’t blink.
A tense, tactical final against world champions Spain ended with the Lionesses crowned champions of Europe once more, a second UEFA Women’s Euro title, but perhaps more importantly, a reaffirmation that the golden generation wasn’t just hype.
Two stories, two nations, one theme: where the men fell short, the women soared.
Different paths, same burden
For both countries, men’s football commands the spotlight. Stadiums sell out. Media cycles revolve around transfer sagas, managers’ press conferences, and missed penalties that become national talking points.
In contrast, the women have had to build their legacies in the shadows, fighting for airtime, investments, and respect. Yet in those struggles, they’ve forged something purer; something tougher.
The Super Falcons’ journey hasn’t been smooth. In recent years, they’ve battled not just opponents on the pitch, but the very system meant to support them.
Bonus rows. Pay disputes. A federation often slow to back them. Yet, they’ve endured and won; again.
In Switzerland, England’s women arrived with scars, emotional ones from their failed World Cup charge in 2023 and the growing murmurs that the post-2022 magic had faded.
But on Sunday, July 27, 2025, they quieted all of that with disciplined football, smart substitutions, and a steely belief forged in the crucible of pressure.
The role reversal
There’s a poetic irony here.
For decades, it was the men expected to deliver, to win tournaments, lift nations. The women were afterthoughts. Now, the women are becoming the standard bearers.
When England’s men walked off the pitch in Berlin, heads hung and dreams dashed, the conversation turned familiar: “We played well”.
But it was a tale of near-misses and what-ifs.
But when the Lionesses walked off the pitch in Basel, it was with medals, smiles, and history rewritten.
When Nigeria’s Super Eagles lost the AFCON final in Abidjan, it reopened old wounds, questions about mentality, finishing, and tactical nous.
But the Super Falcons’ triumph in Rabat brought healing, a reminder that Nigerian football still has world-class winners wearing the green and white.
Not just a win; a statement
These weren’t just tournament victories. They were national exclamations.
For young girls in Lagos and Leeds, Abuja and Birmingham, this weekend wasn’t just about football; it was about visibility, possibility, and validation.
That women’s sport matters. That women can carry the weight of expectations and deliver.
More than that, these victories offered a lesson to the men’s teams: talent alone is not enough. There must be resilience, unity, and a willingness to leave egos at the door and fight for the crest.
Where next?
As both nations bask in the glory of their women’s teams, the question must be asked: Will they be supported like the men?
Will the Super Falcons now be given the same logistical and financial backing the Eagles enjoy? Will England’s FA double down on grassroots development for girls, not just capitalise on a moment?
Because if this weekend has taught us anything, it’s that the women aren’t just filling in the gaps, they’re leading the charge.
FKA/AE
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