Nigeria’s relationship with its football stars has always been intense, but according to the Super Eagles’ team psychologist, that intensity has a darker side and it is costing the team, Footynaija.com reports.
Dr. Emmanuel Edem Ikpeme, who has managed the mental preparation of the Super Eagles since 2021, identifies what he calls the ‘Save the Nation’ trap as one of the most corrosive forces working against Nigeria’s continental ambitions.
The pattern is familiar: a star player arrives at a tournament and is immediately cast as the overnight saviour of 200 million people. The burden that follows, Ikpeme told The Nation, disrupts their club-level instinct to function within a collective. These are the very things that make those players dangerous.

“Players carry the heavy psychological burden of expecting success while fearing massive public backlash over potential disappointment,” he said.
The problem does not stop at expectation. Many Super Eagles players must also constantly reconcile the structured tactical demands of top European clubs with the instinctive, free-flowing style Nigerian football rewards.
At club level, a player has media handlers, welfare structures, and institutional buffers absorbing outside pressure. On international duty with Nigeria, those disappear, and the noise of a passionate, unforgiving public follow the player.

Ikpeme’s response has been to build a deliberate psychological counter-structure.
“Managing millions of passionate Nigerian fans and media demands during critical knockout stages requires a disciplined approach to filter out the noise,” he said.
That means redirecting players away from results and public perception toward process, effort, and execution game by game, phase by phase.
It is unglamorous work but across back-to-back AFCON medals in 2024 and 2026, it has proven necessary. Nigeria’s most gifted players do not need more pressure. They need someone helping them carry less of it.













