Johannesburg – Napoli forward Victor Osimhen scored four goals as Nigeria crushed Sao Tome e Principe 10-0 in Morocco on Monday to record the biggest victory in Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifying history.
Qualifying for the biennial competition has been staged since 1961 and Ghana, Kenya and Libya shared the record with eight-goal victories until Nigeria went on a rampage in the Atlantic resort of Agadir.
Nigeria led 3-0 at half-time in the Group A matchday two encounter and the other scorers were Terem Moffi (two), captain Moses Simon, Oghenekaro Etebo, Ademola Lookman, and Emmanuel Dennis.
With Nigeria 153 places higher in the world rankings than Sao Tome, a one-sided encounter was expected, but after a fairly competitive first half, the game turned into shooting practice for the Super Eagles.
ALSO READ | Hosts Ivory Coast can win 2023 AFCON, says former star Kalou
Nigeria eclipsed their previous highest score in a Cup of Nations qualifier of seven against Burkina Faso in 1991 when now deceased Rashidi Yekini notched four.
It was a home fixture for Sao Tome but had to be moved to southern Morocco because the tiny island nation does not have an international-standard stadium.
Goalkeeper Anastacio Braganca, one of several home-based Sao Tomeans in the line-up, has conceded 15 goals in two matches after Guinea-Bissau put five past him in matchday one last week.
MATCH HIGHLIGHTS: ?? 0-10 ??
The Super Eagles of Nigeria recorded the biggest victory of the AFCON 2023 qualifiers after smashing São Tomé by 10 goals ?#JoySports | @CAF_Online pic.twitter.com/Gk0OzZOF4n
— Joy Sports (@JoySportsGH) June 13, 2022
Osimhen reveled in the space offered by the minnows and is the leading scorer in 2023 AFCON qualifying with five goals, one more than reigning African Footballer of the Year Sadio Mane from Senegal.
Severely injured last year playing for Napoli, Osimhen wore a protective face mask during the first half but discarded it for the second 45 minutes.
The 23-year-old nodded the three-time African champions in front for nine minutes in the near-empty 45 000-seat Grand Stade d’Agadir.
Guinea-Bissau blow lead
He then created goals for Simon and Moffi before half-time as Nigeria dominated the fourth match under Portuguese coach Jose Peseiro after a win over Sierra Leone and friendly losses to Mexico and Ecuador.
Nigeria scored five more goals in 17 minutes soon after the restart to build an 8-0 advantage midway through the second half.
Osimhen notched the ninth goal six minutes from time and substitute Emmanuel Dennis completed the humiliation of the islanders by converting an added-time penalty.
ALSO READ | Senegal coach wants AFCON games delayed to boost World Cup build-up
Sao Tome qualified by edging Mauritius 4-3 on aggregate in a preliminary tie but was then disqualified by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) because one of the team broke the Covid-19 test rules.
The team, popularly known as The Falcons and True Parrots Team, appealed to a different CAF committee and were reinstated just nine days before their first group game.
Nigeria, title-holders Senegal, Algeria, Burkina Faso, Mali, and Morocco won both matches at the start of qualifying for the 2023 tournament in the Ivory Coast.
ALSO READ | Banned Kenya and Zimbabwe to be included in 2023 AFCON draw
Guinea-Bissau would have fancied their chances of winning twice as well after Jorginho netted twice within five minutes soon after half-time to build a two-goal lead over Sierra Leone in Conakry.
But the Wild Dogs were reduced to 10 men when Sana Gomes was sent off, Augustus Kargbo halved the deficit and Musa Kamara equalised on 87 minutes to snatch a 2-2 draw.
In Group K, lowly Liberia conceded home advantage to Morocco because they do not have a CAF-approved stadium and, unsurprisingly, fell 2-0 with Faycal Fajr and Youssef En-Nesyri scoring in Casablanca.
Matchdays three and four are scheduled for September 19-27, although Senegal wants them postponed so that they and fellow Qatar World Cup qualifiers Cameroon, Ghana, Morocco, and Tunisia can play friendlies.
Follow African Insider on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram
Picture: Twitter/@Makonco_M
Source: AFP
For more African news, visit Africaninsider.com