Nigeria’s Super Falcons now know the first wall in front of their African crown.
The defending champions have been placed in Group C alongside Zambia, Egypt and Malawi for the TotalEnergies CAF Women’s Africa Cup of Nations Morocco 2026, with CAF’s final draw confirming a group that gives Nigeria no soft landing into their title defence.
CAF’s competition page also lists the WAFCON 2026 window as 25 July to 16 August 2026, after a rescheduling update on the tournament page.
For Nigeria, this is not just a group-stage assignment. It is the opening pressure board for a team that will arrive in Morocco carrying history, expectation and the weight of being the side everyone wants to measure themselves against.
Zambia bring danger, pace and a growing reputation in African women’s football. Egypt offer a North African test that can become uncomfortable if Nigeria allow the game to drift. Malawi, listed by CAF as debutantes in the group, arrive with the freedom of a side that can play without the same pressure sitting on Nigeria’s shoulders.
That is the real challenge for the Super Falcons. Group C is not only about quality. It is about control. Nigeria must manage the expectation of champions while avoiding the emotional traps that can come with facing teams chasing a statement result.
The Super Falcons’ advantage is clear: tournament pedigree, continental status and the psychological force of being defending champions. But title defences are never won by reputation. They are rebuilt match by match, starting with a group where every opponent has a different route to making Nigeria uncomfortable.
The Zambia fixture carries the strongest early danger. It has the feel of a match that can shape the group’s power structure and test Nigeria’s ability to handle a direct, ambitious opponent. Egypt may demand patience and discipline. Malawi’s debutant status makes them dangerous in a different way: less burden, more energy, and a chance to turn one match into national history.
For CranseSports, this is the Nigeria/Africa story that must stay on the board before the tournament begins. The Super Falcons are not entering Morocco as passengers. They are entering as the team with the target on their back.
The next stage is verification around Nigeria’s squad, camp schedule, warm-up fixtures and official NFF preparation updates. Until those details are confirmed, the safe story is the draw, the pressure, and the title-defence road now placed in front of the champions.
Nigeria know the group. The continent knows the champions. WAFCON 2026 now has its first Super Falcons pressure line.