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Super Falcons defender Ashleigh Plumptre says she will not compromise her values, adding her voice to a growing chorus of Nigeria internationals questioning how the team is being prepared for the 2026 Women’s Africa Cup of Nations. Her comments land as players push the Nigeria Football Federation to use every available international window.

The England-born centre-back, who switched allegiance to Nigeria and now plays her club football in Saudi Arabia, has become one of the most vocal members of the squad on issues of standards and respect for the women’s game. She insists that speaking up is not about ego but about protecting the dignity of the team.
What Ashleigh Plumptre said
In recent remarks reported by Nigerian outlets, Plumptre stressed that she would rather hold to her principles than stay silent when she feels the team is being short-changed. The defender has previously argued that scheduling decisions affecting women’s football would not be tolerated in the men’s game, and she has carried that same frustration into the build-up to this tournament.
Her stance reflects a wider mood inside the camp. Several Super Falcons stars have used interviews and social media to call out gaps in preparation, warning that the reigning continental champions cannot afford to drift into a major tournament without enough competitive matches behind them.
Why the timing matters
The 2026 WAFCON was pushed back earlier in the year and is now scheduled to run from late July to mid-August. That delayed window gave national teams extra time to arrange friendlies and fine-tune tactics. Players feel Nigeria has not made the most of that runway, and the criticism centres on a sense that valuable FIFA dates slipped by without enough high-quality opposition.
For a side carrying the weight of being Africa’s most successful women’s team, momentum and match sharpness are everything. The Falcons have built their reputation on tournament football, and the players want the federation to match their ambition with planning, logistics and friendlies against strong opponents.
The bigger picture for the Super Falcons
Plumptre’s intervention is part of a longer conversation about investment in Nigerian women’s football. From camp allowances to travel arrangements and competitive fixtures, players have repeatedly asked for the kind of structure they enjoy at their European and Gulf clubs. Their argument is simple: world-class results require world-class preparation.
The NFF has, in the past, pointed to budget pressures and a packed calendar while insisting it remains committed to the team. Officials have rolled out coaching and capacity programmes in recent months and say the Falcons remain a priority. How quickly the federation responds to the latest concerns could shape the mood inside the dressing room heading into the finals.
What happens next
With the tournament window now fixed, attention turns to the final friendlies, squad selection and the camp ahead of the competition. Plumptre and her teammates will hope their public stand pushes the federation to tighten its plans. For now, the message from the defender is clear: she intends to keep her standards high, on and off the pitch, as Nigeria chases another continental crown.
Fans will be watching to see whether the conversation translates into action before the Falcons begin their title defence.