Super Eagles head coach Eric Chelle has publicly defended his reported salary demands, insisting his requests reflect the scale and responsibility of managing Nigeria’s national team rather than personal ambition, Footynaija reports.
Contract negotiations between Chelle and the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) have intensified in recent weeks, even though his current agreement still has roughly a year left to run. Discussions over an extension gathered momentum after Nigeria finished third at the Africa Cup of Nations 2025, a campaign widely viewed as evidence of progress under the Franco-Malian coach.
One year of Monseuir Eric.
— 🇳🇬 Super Eagles (@NGSuperEagles) January 7, 2026
Eric Chelle’s role as #SuperEagles head coach officially began on this day last year 🦅 pic.twitter.com/0E5NqKa1eB
Attention around the talks increased sharply when details of a proposed contract document were leaked, revealing 19 requests reportedly submitted by Chelle. Central to the debate is a proposed salary adjustment from about $50,000 per month to $130,000; figures that have sparked strong reactions among supporters and observers.
Speaking on the Histoires de Foot Podcast, Chelle argued that comparisons with his previous managerial roles miss the point of his current position.
“First of all, I’m not a coach of Martigues, with no disrespect to my former club FC Martigues. I am the coach of the Nigerian national team,” Chelle said.
“So we’re not talking about just anyone. They’re a major footballing nation. So there are great players on this team, very great players.
“I’m the coach of the Nigerian national team. And when I say it, I think you can feel the pride in that. Today, this is the greatest thing that has happened to me.”
The record continues, Eric Chelle is yet to lose an official match since his appointment as the coach of the Super Eagles. pic.twitter.com/2Qk9V6kIRs
— Leagues Reporter (@LeaguesReporter) January 10, 2026
The 48-year-old also rejected suggestions that he forced negotiations, explaining that Nigerian officials themselves initiated discussions shortly after the AFCON tournament.
“What people forget or don’t know is that there is a contract that was written and agreed upon. I don’t think today is the day to say whether it was good or bad,” he said.
“It’s not something I asked for, it was the people from Nigeria who proposed it.
“And just as a side note: at the end of the match against Egypt, before an interview with Canal+ — or Bein, I don’t remember exactly; after the match I went for the interview, and the Nigerian Minister of Sports plus the customs director came to congratulate me.
“They told me, ‘Eric, after CAN (AFCON, but the french call it CAN), come to Nigeria, we need to discuss your contract.’
“I didn’t say that in the interview, but in the interview I mentioned that they told me to come back to Nigeria quickly. So I came back. I came back and there was a discussion.”
Despite the controversy surrounding the leaked proposal, Chelle insists his focus has not shifted away from football matters. Preparations are already underway for Nigeria’s upcoming international fixtures, including a March four-nation invitational tournament where the Super Eagles will face Jordan and Iran.
















