The Super Eagles have retained 26th place in the latest FIFA men’s world ranking. FIFA’s current ranking page lists Nigeria in 26th position, and current reporting says the team remains third in Africa after the March international window.
March brought both progress and drag
Nigeria’s March window produced two different ranking effects. Eric Chelle’s side beat Iran 2-1, which added 5.34 ranking points. But a 2-2 draw with Jordan cost Nigeria 1.81 points because Jordan were the lower-ranked side. That left the Super Eagles with a mixed return rather than a clear push upward.
Why the ranking did not move
Despite the win over Iran, Nigeria stayed on 1585.09 points and did not climb from 26th. The broader reason is simple. FIFA’s ranking model rewards results against stronger opponents more heavily and punishes dropped points against lower-ranked teams. So the gain from Iran was softened by the draw against Jordan.
Nigeria are still high by recent standards
There is still a positive side to the update. This remains Nigeria’s highest ranking position in 16 years. The last time the Super Eagles were placed higher was in May 2010, when they were 21st in the world. Current reporting also says the team’s rise earlier this year was driven by a third-place finish at the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations, which lifted them from 38th to 26th.
The African picture stayed stable
Nigeria remain third in Africa behind Morocco and Senegal. Morocco are eighth in the world on 1755.87 points, while Senegal are 14th globally on 1688.99. That means the Super Eagles kept their continental standing even without a global jump.
What changed at the top
The bigger movement came above Nigeria. France moved back to number one in the world rankings, ahead of Spain and Argentina. England, Portugal, Brazil, Netherlands, Morocco, Belgium, and Germany complete the top 10. So while Nigeria’s story is one of stability, the top end of the table shifted around them.
What this ranking really says
This is not a bad update for Nigeria, but it is not a breakthrough one either. The Super Eagles protected a strong position and stayed among Africa’s top three. But the March window also showed how hard it is to climb when one good result is balanced by a costly draw. The next revision is expected after the June international window, which gives Nigeria another chance to turn stability into movement.
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