Sunday Mba grabbed the winner 12 minutes from time after Ivory Coast's Cheik Tiote had cancelled out Emmanuel Emenike's first-half opener.
Mba's strike brought the curtain down on Didier Drogba's Nations Cup
career, sending the African legend home without the title he and his teammates
craved.
"I want to thank God for this wonderful victory, and sincerely
thank my players for everything they did today. I hope we can keep going to the
final," said Nigeria coach Stephen Keshi.
"Ivory Coast are the top team on the continent with lots of
quality, so we tried to speed up and try to catch out players like Drogba and
Yaya Toure.
"I'm glad my team is progressing in every game -- there is great
discipline in the team and I just hope we keep going that way.
"The boys showed character. When I played for Nigeria I had to fight,
fight, fight and they did that today.
"When the Ivorians levelled we tried to defend and work out our
tactics, and we scored again. Sunday came up with a beautiful, beautiful
goal."
The 34-year-old Drogba, who was dropped to the bench in the Elephants'
second group game, led the Ivorians at the expense of Anzhi Makhachkala striker
Lacina Traore.
Goalkeeper Boubacar Barry, Manchester City midfielder Yaya Toure and
in-form Arsenal goal poacher Gervinho returned after being rested in the 'dead'
game against Algeria.
For Nigeria, midfielder Fedor Ogude was suspended, with goalkeeper
Vincent Enyeama wearing the captain's armband as its normal owner, veteran
defender Jospeh Yobo, struggling with an injury, was on the bench.
A lively start saw Victor Moses test Barry with a venomous shot on 10
minutes, the Ivorian keeper punching the danger away with the palms of his
hands.
Two-time former champions Nigeria were giving as good as they got against
the top-ranked team on the continent.
With a handful of English Premier League stars on show, the colourful
20,000 crowd could have been forgiven for thinking they were at the Emirates or
Stamford Bridge rather than the Royal Bafokeng Sports Palace.
Chelsea old boy Drogba had his first real chance after the half hour,
neatly controlling a high ball from the left only for his shot to take a
deflection.
Then, two minutes from the break, Nigeria took command, Emineke's
superbly struck right-foot 25-yard free-kick flying through the Ivorian wall
and past the head of the motionless Barry.
The Spartak Moscow attacker's third of the tournament, putting him joint
top of the 2013 scoring charts, was no more than the Super Eagles deserved.
With coach Sabri Lamouchi watching stony-faced from the dug out, Ivory
Coast levelled on 50 minutes when Drogba swung in a free-kick from the left for
Newcastle's Tiote to head in at the far post for his first goal for his
country.
It was game on again for the Elephants.
Moses then flashed in a corner but Barry kept out Brown Ideye's header,
the keeper cradling the ball as he would a baby.
Down at the other end, Enyeama produced a first-class save to deny
Toure.
An absorbing encounter between two titans of African football was living
up to its headline billing.
But with the clock ticking towards extra time, Mba, advertising the
intelligence his surname suggests, weaved his way through the Ivorian defence
to put Nigeria into the semi-finals, his 20-yard shot taking a deflection on
the way.
Nigeria's forward Sunday Mba (L) is congratulated by teammates after
scoring a goal during the African Cup of Nation 2013 quarter final football
match Ivory Coast vs Nigeria, on February 3, 2013 in Rustenburg. Nigeria downed
favourites Ivory Coast 2-1.
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