All eyes will be on Marrakech on Saturday as Nigeria’s Super Eagles and Algeria’s Fennecs renew one of African football’s fiercest rivalries in the quarter-finals of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco. The encounter will be the 23rd senior-level meeting between the two continental heavyweights, a rivalry that stretches back 55 years to their first clash at the 1970 All-Africa Games in Lagos.
Widely regarded as the standout fixture of the last-eight stage, the Nigeria vs Algeria showdown carries decades of history, pride, controversy, and unforgettable drama. From title-deciding battles to World Cup qualifiers that altered destinies, meetings between the Super Eagles and the Fennecs have rarely lacked intensity.
Saturday’s match will mark their 10th meeting at the Africa Cup of Nations. The head-to-head record at AFCON slightly favours Algeria, who have recorded four wins compared to Nigeria’s three, with two draws. One of those draws remains one of the most talked-about matches in AFCON history. The infamous 1984 Bouake encounter ended scoreless amid accusations of collusion, a result that sent both teams through to the semi-finals and knocked out defending champions Ghana.
Nigeria famously lifted their first AFCON title in 1980 after defeating Algeria at the National Stadium in Surulere, with goals from Olusegun Odegbami and Mudashiru Lawal in front of President Shehu Shagari. Ten years later, the script flipped as Algeria claimed their maiden continental crown on home soil, edging Nigeria 1-0 in the 1990 final through Cherif Oudjani’s long-range strike.
Beyond AFCON, Nigeria and Algeria have crossed paths repeatedly in crucial FIFA World Cup qualifiers. One of the most painful chapters for Nigerian fans came in October 1981 when Algeria stunned the reigning African champions 2-0 in Lagos, before completing the damage with a 2-1 win in Constantine weeks later. Internal disputes within the Nigerian camp at the time were ruthlessly exploited by the Fennecs.
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There have also been moments of Nigerian dominance. In July 1993, the Super Eagles produced a memorable 4-1 win after falling behind early, with Jay-Jay Okocha dazzling from midfield and Rashidi Yekini leading the charge. That same qualifying campaign ended in joy as Finidi George’s goal in Algiers sealed Nigeria’s place at the USA 1994 World Cup.
From Joseph Yobo’s towering header in Abuja in 2004, to Obafemi Martins’ brace in Oran in 2005, and Victor Moses’ masterclass in the 3-1 win in Uyo in 2016, the rivalry has continued to deliver defining moments. Algeria, too, have had their share of late heartbreak for Nigeria, most notably Riyad Mahrez’s stunning free-kick that knocked the Super Eagles out of the 2019 AFCON semi-finals in Cairo.
Marrakech, Morocco’s fourth-largest city, now provides the stage for the latest chapter in this storied rivalry. With both nations eyeing continental glory at AFCON 2025, Saturday’s quarter-final promises high stakes, raw emotion, and another night that could reshape the balance of power between two of Africa’s football giants.
As history has shown, when Nigeria and Algeria meet, form often counts for little. What is guaranteed is drama, passion, and a match that will echo far beyond the walls of the Marrakech stadium.



