Sports News of Thursday, 25 June 2026
Source: www.punchng.com
The 2026 FIFA World Cup has already produced a remarkable collection of goalkeeping performances, but as the spotlight falls on a new generation of shot-stoppers making their mark in North America, the legendary feats of former Super Eagles captain Vincent Enyeama remain unmatched among African goalkeepers at the tournament’s greatest stage.
Enyeama’s enduring place in World Cup history was brought back into sharp focus following Curaçao veteran Eloy Room’s record-breaking display against Ecuador.
The 37-year-old Miami FC goalkeeper made 15 saves in a goalless draw to secure his country’s first-ever World Cup point, surpassing the previous regulation-time single-match record of 13 saves set by Peru’s Ramón Quiroga against the Netherlands in 1978.
Room’s heroics, coming just days after Curaçao were thrashed 7-1 by Germany, placed him among an elite group of World Cup goalkeepers and rightly generated widespread admiration.
The overall African single-match record at a World Cup still belongs to Ghana’s Richard Kingson, who made nine saves against the Czech Republic in 2006 — a mark that remains unbeaten on the continent. And when it comes to sustained excellence across a tournament, Enyeama’s body of work stands apart.
The former Hapoel Tel Aviv and Lille goalkeeper produced what is widely regarded as one of the greatest individual goalkeeping performances in World Cup history during Nigeria’s opening Group B match against Argentina at the 2010 tournament in South Africa.
Despite the Super Eagles losing 1-0 to a Gabriel Heinze header, Enyeama made six saves — four of them against Lionel Messi, who arrived at that tournament as the reigning World Player of the Year. His stops included a fingertip save from a curling effort and a close-range block late in the game that denied the Argentine in full flight.
He was awarded the Man of the Match honour, becoming the first and only African goalkeeper to receive the accolade at a World Cup despite finishing on the losing side. Argentina coach Diego Maradona later admitted that Enyeama was the primary reason Messi failed to score.
Enyeama sustained that level four years later at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, registering 21 saves across four matches as Nigeria reached the round of 16.
He kept clean sheets against Iran and Bosnia-Herzegovina, playing a decisive role in the Super Eagles’ passage through the group stage. Only Kingson’s 22 saves at the 2010 tournament surpasses Enyeama’s total among African goalkeepers in a single World Cup.
Morocco’s Yassine Bounou, Cameroon legend Thomas N’Kono and Senegal’s Tony Sylva also rank among the continent’s finest tournament performers, but none have matched the consistency Enyeama demonstrated across two editions of the competition.
Back at the 2026 tournament, Room is not the only goalkeeper capturing the imagination. Cape Verde’s Josimar Dias — known by his nickname Vozinha, meaning “granny” in Portuguese — produced a stunning display in his country’s debut World Cup appearance, making seven saves in a 0-0 draw against Spain.
The 40-year-old, who became the oldest goalkeeper ever to play in a nation’s first World Cup match, recorded a team-high 68 touches and was named Man of the Match. His performance also made him an unexpected social media phenomenon, with his Instagram following surging from roughly 50,000 to nearly 14 million within 24 hours of the final whistle.
For the United States, Matt Freese has answered the questions that lingered over the host nation’s goalkeeping position ahead of the tournament. The 27-year-old New York City FC shot-stopper, a Harvard graduate and the first active MLS player to start a World Cup match in goal for the United States, has kept clean sheets in both of the Americans’ group stage matches, including the 2-0 victory over Australia that sealed their place in the round of 32.
In the race for the Golden Glove, Argentina’s Emiliano Martínez and Spain’s Unai Simón are currently joint favourites, with France’s Mike Maignan and Brazil’s Alisson Becker among the other contenders. Martínez, who won the award at the 2022 World Cup where he played every minute of Argentina’s title-winning campaign, has yet to be seriously tested, with Algeria failing to register a single shot on target in the sides’ group stage clash.
As the tournament progresses and more goalkeeping battles unfold, Room, Vozinha and Freese have already staked their claims for a place in the conversation. But for African football, the benchmark against which all others are measured remains the man from Kano — Vincent Enyeama, whose World Cup legacy, more than a decade on, continues to stand firm.