One fan, Alex Wenge, wrote on X, “Extremely disappointed in Nigeria’s back-to-back failure to qualify for the World Cup. I still cannot point to the exact issues, but our football will most likely decline further if care is not taken. Our football federation is extremely corrupt.”

Another supporter, Insonet Uche, warned that expansion of the tournament alone would not solve Nigeria’s problems writing, “I will not be surprised if the Super Eagles fail to qualify for the World Cup even if it expands to 64 teams until they start doing the right things.”

“The only people worried about increasing the number of participating nations are those who always qualify. The quality of football has improved globally, and teams once regarded as easy opponents are now causing major upsets.”

However, National Sports Commission Director-General, Bukola Olopade, insisted any change at the NFF must come through democratic means rather than public pressure, while also rejecting suggestions that the current leadership should be blamed for Nigeria’s back-to-back World Cup failures.

“I am not going to undemocratically push for a change. Any change must be done democratically,” Olopade said, adding that responsibility for the first missed qualification lay with the previous administration led by Amaju Pinnick.

“Apart from not qualifying for the World Cup, how did President Gusau and his board fail Nigeria? We need to be fair to one another. I know I will get a lot of backlash from this. People keep saying they failed to qualify for two World Cups. No, that was Amaju Pinnick, and that consumed him,” he said, while pointing to Nigeria’s performances at the Women’s World Cup and the Africa Cup of Nations under the current board as evidence of progress.