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This is a list of women's football clubs in Nigeria. NWFL Premiership (formerly Nigeria Women Premier League) is the highest division for female football in Nigeria. [1] NWFL Championship (formerly Nigeria Women Pro-league) and NWFL Nationwide leagues are on the second and third tier on the pyramid respectively. [2]
The NWFL board documents that the club was the first female club in Nigeria to have her pre-season abroad in 2007. The club is also known as Restoration Girls , a name motivated by the government of the state.
The Nigeria women's national under-20 football team, nicknamed the Falconets, represents Nigeria in international youth women's football competitions. Its primary role is the development of players in preparation for the senior women's national team .
Multiple efforts were made in the 1960s to start women's football clubs in South Africa, but they proved fleeting. The 1970s saw some growth, with new women's leagues in Nigeria and an expansion of women's football into Western African countries, including Senegal. In 1978 Christopher Akintunde Abisuga created a club called the sugar babes.
Nigeria Women Premier League clubs (10 P) NWFL Premiership clubs (11 P) R. Rivers Angels F.C. (2 C, 2 P) Pages in category "Women's football clubs in Nigeria"
The Pepsi Football Academy was established in November 1992 by Kashimawo Laloko. [1] Originally based in Lagos, the initiative secured the total backing of Pepsi in 1994 and has been titled the Pepsi Football Academy since then. Over the years, it has developed and grown into one of the most prestigious football academies in Nigeria.
Name Caps Goals National team years Club(s) Perpetua Nkwocha [1] 99 [1] 80 [1]?–2012 Maureen Mmadu: 101 1993 - 2011 Klepp IL, Kolbotn and Avaldsnes IL: Stella Mbachu: 89 20 Nkiru Okosieme: 1991-2003 Rivers Angels, Charlotte Lady Eagles: Ann Chiejine [2] Ngozi Ezeocha: Adaku Okoroafor: Omo-Love Branch: Nkechi Mbilitam: Chioma Ajunwa: Rita ...
The Nigeria women's national football team, [a] nicknamed the Super Falcons, represents Nigeria in international women's football and is controlled by the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF). The team is Africa 's most successful international women's football team, having won a record eleven Women's Africa Cup of Nations titles; [ 3 ] their most ...