Super Eagles missed the 2026 World Cup. Here is what to do instead.
Nigeria lost the African playoff final to DR Congo on penalties in November 2025. For Naija bettors, the question is no longer 'how do we back Nigeria?' It is 'who gets the money when Nigeria is not in it?'
Nigeria did not qualify. This hub is built for the Naija bettor who is watching anyway.
The playoff that ended it
Nigeria finished second in their CAF qualification group behind South Africa, which sent them to the African playoff. A semi-final win over Gabon set up the final against DR Congo in Rabat, Morocco. The match ended 1-1 after 120 minutes. Nigeria lost on penalties. One miss, one save, and the Super Eagles were out of a World Cup for the second time in four editions.
There is no spin to put on it. It is the biggest gap in a Nigerian football calendar since 2006. But the tournament still happens, and for Naija bettors there is still a month of betting ahead.
The pivot: three ways to bet a Nigeria-less World Cup
1. Back the African sides that qualified
Nine African nations made it: Senegal, Morocco, Egypt, Ivory Coast, Ghana, South Africa, Algeria, Cape Verde, Tunisia. Morocco are the continent's best bet at 50.00 to win it after their 2022 semi-final run. Senegal have Mane and a tournament-tested core at around 70.00. Africa has never won a World Cup. This is the best-placed squad of African nations in the tournament's history.
2. Back the Naija-connection players
English-born Nigerians, Nigerian-descent French squad members, and players with family ties to Nigeria are scattered across this tournament. Bukayo Saka is the biggest single Naija-connection bet on the board. Anytime goalscorer on Saka against a mid-tier group opponent typically prices at 2.50 to 3.20, which is good value for a confirmed penalty taker and corner threat.
3. Back the markets that have nothing to do with Nigeria
Top goalscorer, outright winner, stage of exit, group winner, cards and corners totals. These markets exist regardless of who qualified. Without the emotional Nigeria bias that distorts every Super Eagles market on Naija books, these prices are as sharp as they get. This is the tournament to bet clinically.
Naija-Connection: Players to watch at WC 2026
| Player | Team | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Bukayo Saka | England | Born in London to Nigerian parents. Arsenal star. One of the most-backed Nigerian-connection anytime goalscorers on Naija books. |
| Ibrahim Osman | Ghana | Brighton winger. Ghana are in Group G with Spain, Serbia and Qatar. |
| Mohamed Kudus | Ghana | Tottenham attacker. One of the biggest West African stars at the tournament. |
| Sadio Mane | Senegal | Senegal captain. Al-Ittihad forward. The African superstar of Group E. |
| Achraf Hakimi | Morocco | PSG right-back. Captained Morocco to the 2022 semi-finals and now leading them again. |
| Hakim Ziyech | Morocco | Galatasaray attacker. Set-piece specialist and Morocco's creative hub. |
| Simon Ngapandouetnbu | Cape Verde | Marseille goalkeeper. Cape Verde's first ever WC appearance rides on him. |
| Mohamed Salah | Egypt | Liverpool star. Egypt qualified for the WC for the first time since 2018. |
| Simon Adingra | Ivory Coast | Brighton attacker. Part of the Ivory Coast squad that won AFCON 2023 by beating Nigeria. |
Where to place your Nigeria-less World Cup bets
Tested from Lagos on 4G, naira deposits where applicable, and cash out stress-checked. No paid rankings.
Stake
Tightest outrights in the market
Stake consistently prices 2026 World Cup outrights 2 to 4 percent tighter than the Nigerian-licensed average. Crypto deposits mean no naira card friction during the tournament rush. The welcome offer uses code NEWBONUS and applies to your first wager.
Claim offer at Stake Read our Stake review →1xBet
Widest World Cup market menu
1xBet carries the deepest World Cup market set of any Nigerian-facing operator: group qualification, top scorer by group, corners, cards, player minutes, half-time result by stage. If you want to bet the tournament creatively, this is the book.
Claim offer at 1xBet Read our 1xBet review →Bet9ja
The LSLB-licensed choice Nigerians trust
Bet9ja is the Lagos State-licensed book most Nigerians default to. Depth on outright markets is strong. Bet9ja will run tournament-long 'supercomputer' specials, boosted odds on the Final, and Naija-specific props around African players.
Claim offer at Bet9ja Read our Bet9ja review →