In the stands at the Grand Stade de Marrakech, Zinedine Zidane sat motionless. His son Luca, Algeria's goalkeeper, had just picked the ball out of his net for the second time. Around him, Nigerian fans danced. The scoreboard read 2-0. And with it, perhaps, ended the flickering hope of an Algerian side that arrived in Morocco believing they could win their third continental crown.
This wasn't just a defeat. It was a statement.
The numbers don't lie
Zero shots on target. That's what Algeria managed across 90 minutes against a Nigerian defence that barely broke a sweat. For a team built around Riyad Mahrez, Mohamed Amoura, and the mercurial Ibrahim Maza, that statistic alone tells you everything about how comprehensively they were outplayed.
Nigeria's superiority was total: 57.5% possession, 13 shot attempts to Algeria's three, five corners to two. The Super Eagles dominated the physical battle, the tactical war, and crucially, the psychological duel. Vladimir Petkovic's pre-match confidence about having "the reliability and the quality" to stop Nigeria's attack now reads like hubris.
Osimhen silences the noise
The build-up had been dominated by everything except football. Bonus disputes. A public spat between Victor Osimhen and Ademola Lookman in the previous round. Reports of players threatening to boycott training. Nigeria looked like a team tearing itself apart.
Then the whistle blew.
Two minutes into the second half, Bruno Onyemaechi delivered an inch-perfect diagonal from the right. Osimhen, timing his run to perfection, rose above a flat-footed Algerian defence and powered his header past Luca Zidane. The Galatasaray striker—currently the top scorer in the Champions League with six goals—sprinted towards the corner flag, arms pumping, every ounce of frustration channelled into celebration.
"I'm very happy for the win, for the performance. Now we are in the semi-finals, we will go back and prepare and try to qualify for the final on Wednesday," Osimhen told reporters after the match. No drama. No mention of the chaos. Just business.
Adams completes the job
The second goal carried its own emotional weight. Akor Adams had left the Nigeria camp earlier in the week after his mother was hospitalised. The Sevilla forward was granted compassionate leave but returned in time for the biggest game of the tournament.
On 57 minutes, he repaid Eric Chelle's faith. With Algeria pushing forward in search of an equaliser, Ramy Bensebaini's loose touch was punished. Alex Iwobi pounced, slid the ball to Osimhen, and the striker unselfishly squared for Adams. The finish was ice cold: a deft touch around Zidane, a calm roll into an empty net.
It was a goal that spoke of assurance. This Nigerian side plays with the swagger of champions-in-waiting.
Petkovic's gamble fails
Trailing by two, the Bosnian-Swiss coach threw on Baghdad Bounedjah, Anis Hadj Moussa, and Adil Boulbina in a triple substitution. Bounedjah, the hero of the 2019 final, couldn't summon another defining moment. Boulbina, whose extra-time winner against DR Congo had sent Algeria through in the last round, found nothing but green shirts wherever he turned.
Algeria committed five bookings across the match. Ramiz Zerrouki went into the referee's book early for a reckless challenge on Lookman. Mohamed Amoura followed for a needless foul on Bright Osayi-Samuel. This was a team that had lost its composure long before the final whistle.
The stats paint a damning picture: this marks Algeria's fifth quarter-final exit in their last seven AFCON knockout appearances. A team that dominated African football in 2019 now looks stuck, unable to evolve past the ghosts of that Cairo triumph.
The Zidane sub-plot
There was something almost cinematic about watching Zinedine Zidane, arguably the greatest midfielder of his generation, powerless in the stands as his son struggled below. Luca Zidane, who switched his international allegiance from France to Algeria in September 2025 to honour his Kabyle heritage, had kept clean sheets in all three group games. But against Nigeria's relentless attack, he was exposed.
"When I think of Algeria, I remember my grandfather," Luca told beIN Sports France before the tournament. "Since childhood, we've had this Algerian culture in the family."
That sentiment remains beautiful. But football is brutal. And tonight, sentiment offered no protection against Osimhen's aerial power.
Chelle's quiet revolution
Less than 24 hours before kick-off, Nigeria's Federation confirmed that the bonus dispute had been resolved after government intervention. Eric Chelle, the Malian coach who spent three months at Algerian club MC Oran before taking the Super Eagles job in January 2025, refused to be drawn on the off-field turmoil.
"My job is to stay focused about only what happens on the pitch and not outside," he said at his pre-match press conference. "The group has to stay with big solidarity."
That solidarity was evident. Wilfred Ndidi and Iwobi controlled midfield. Calvin Bassey came agonisingly close to scoring when his goal-bound effort was cleared off the line by Bensebaini—VAR confirmed the ball hadn't fully crossed. And Lookman, playing as a number 10, threaded passes that consistently carved open the Algerian defence.
Nigeria will face Morocco in Tuesday's semi-final. For a team that missed out on the 2026 World Cup—their second consecutive absence—this tournament has become everything. The NFF set Chelle a target of reaching the final. He's one game away.
What now for Algeria?
The post-mortem will be painful. This was supposed to be the tournament where Algeria's 2019 generation got one last shot at glory. Mahrez is 34. Bensebaini and Bennacer are in their prime years but running out of AFCON opportunities. The blend of experience and emerging talent—Maza, Amoura, Chaïbi—was meant to be the perfect cocktail.
Instead, they leave Morocco having scored eight goals but failing to beat the one team that truly tested them. Nigeria had lost their previous three meetings with Algeria. Tonight, they didn't just win—they dominated.
As Nigerian supporters chanted into the Marrakech night, the image that lingered was of Osimhen and Adams embracing near the centre circle, the storm of the previous week already forgotten. Whatever divisions existed in that camp, they've been sealed by collective purpose.
Algeria will reflect. Nigeria will reload. And in the stands, a father watched his son walk off defeated, wondering what might have been.