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Comoros women beat Sudan 30-0 to set up Super Falcons of Nigeria clash

Edem Kwame
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Comoros has announced itself on the African women's football stage in the most emphatic fashion imaginable — demolishing Sudan 30-0 on aggregate to book a second-round date with Nigeria's Super Falcons in the qualifiers for the 2028 Olympic Games.

It is the kind of scoreline that makes you do a double take. But it is very real — and it sets up one of the most fascinating mismatches of the entire qualifying campaign.

The Route to the Super Falcons

The Coelacanths — as the Comoros are nicknamed — got the job done across two dominant performances. They won the first leg 17-0 on June 3, with nine different players finding the net in a display of breathtaking attacking depth. Five days later, they returned to finish the tie with a 13-0 victory in the second leg, scoring three times before the break and adding ten more after it.

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Thirty goals. Zero conceded. Job done.

A Giant Awaits

The reward for that extraordinary run of form is a second-round tie against the Super Falcons of Nigeria – the most decorated women's national team in African football history and an eleven-time Africa Cup of Nations champion.

It is, to put it mildly, a significant step up in class.

Nigeria head into the fixture in strong form themselves. Justine Madugu's side defeated Senegal 3-0 in a friendly at the Remo Stars Stadium in Ikenne on Monday night, following a 2-1 win in the first meeting between the two sides last week. The Super Falcons are widely expected to enter the tie as heavy favourites.

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What Is at Stake

The second-round qualifiers are scheduled to take place between October 5 and 13, 2026. Two African nations will ultimately earn spots at the women's football event of the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles — making every tie from this point forward a high-stakes affair.

For Comoros, simply reaching this stage is a statement. Beating Sudan by 30 goals without reply suggests this is a team with genuine ambition — even if the Super Falcons represent a completely different kind of test.

Whether the Coelacanths can pull off one of African women's football's great upsets remains to be seen. But after what they did to Sudan, nobody will be taking them entirely for granted.

Edem Kwame

Edem Kwame is a journalist at GH News Media covering sports and national developments in Ghana.

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