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Jesús Owono versus Victor Osimhen

Nigeria’s goals machine goes up against the Equatorial Guinean fortress on Sunday

 

 

What a tantalizing fixture on matchday one of the other  Group A qualifying plays on Sunday, which has Nzelang Nacional’s magnificent goalkeeping fortress, Jesus Owono, going up against Nigeria’s goalscoring machine Victor Osimhen.

 

At 22, Equatorial Guinean goalkeeper Owono holds the reins of the Nzalang Nacional defense.

 

“He’s a modern goalkeeper. On the pitch, his charisma speaks for itself. I admire his kicking game.” confides Juan Micha Obiang, the Equatoguinean coach.

 

With his athletic ability and 84-meter height, the Deportivo Alavés goalkeeper is one of Africa’s most highly-rated keepers, along with André Onana and Edouard Mendy.

 

Owono has all the qualities of a talented goalkeeper. He has excellent reflexes, is quick and capable of powerful and precise distribution (both with the foot and the hand), and is excellent at stopping penalties.

 

“I had never been classically trained and in a way that probably helped me. I had no time to think, so I acted on instinct.”

 

This is a natural gift for the shot-stopper. He defines himself as someone with an immense curiosity about everything”, who learns about things while having fun.

 

Choosing football as a profession is also a way for him to find an activity with well-defined rules that allows him to have fun while avoiding distractions. “Football imposed a disciplined environment on and off the field for me.”

 

Facing Nigeria, Jesús Owono will have to deploy all his qualities to repel the attacks of the Super Eagles.

 

Watch Live! AFCON2023 Opening Ceremony

Euphoria engulfs Abidjan as TotalEnergies CAF AFCON fever grips Cote d’Ivoire

 

 

The streets of Abidjan are buzzing with excitement as fans flock in from across Africa ahead of the continent’s biggest football party kicking off on Saturday night. 

 

Cote d’Ivoire’s capital has become a sea of color and noise as the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations hype shifts into overdrive.

 

Fans draped in their national colors have poured into the city, with streets and bars filled with jerseys, flags, and vuvuzelas.

 

Buses full of supporters have recently arrived from neighboring countries like Burkina Faso, Ghana, Mali, Senegal, Mauritania, and Nigeria.

 

Meanwhile, the airport has been abuzz as fans and media fly in from across Africa and the world before the tournament opener, with cities across the country witnessing a similar wave.

 

“The atmosphere here is amazing already,” said Morocco fan Hassan El Bakkali told CafOnline.com in Abidjan on Saturday morning.

 

An Ivorian fan, Yves Bedie, said: “Everyone is excited for the football to start. You can feel the AFCON fever building in the city.”

 

Vendors are capitalizing on the football frenzy by selling team jerseys, caps, scarves, and paraphernalia on street corners.

 

Roads are jammed with honking cars and motorbikes festooned with flags as national pride sweeps through Abidjan.

 

Cote d’Ivoire, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Morocco, and Mali colors are proving particularly popular given the heavy expectations on the hosts and reigning champions.

 

But shirts from Nigeria, Cameroon, and North African nations like Egypt also sell fast.

 

A carnival atmosphere will engulf the stadium when the Elephants take on Guinea-Bissau at the Stade Olympique d’Ebimpé on Saturday night.

 

Ivorians are confident their array of Europe-based stars like Sebastian Haller, Simon Adingra, and Franck Kessie can deliver glory on home soil.

 

An electric opening ceremony will further crank up the voltage inside the packed 60,000-seater arena in Abidjan.

 

But the AFCON passion is not confined to the Ivorian capital, with millions across Africa eagerly counting down to kick-off.

 

From fan parks in Senegal to crowded bars in Morocco, an entire continent is holding its breath in anticipation.

 

The following month will be an enthralling ride for Africans as 24 finalists battle for continental supremacy.

 

But this weekend, all eyes are on Abidjan as Cote d’Ivoire prepares to host the world’s most thrilling sporting spectacle.

 

‘National Thunder’ to strike Super Eagles

As Nzelang Nacional plots to clip Super Eagles’ wings

 

 

Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea officially kick off their TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023 campaign on Sunday afternoon in an exciting Group A encounter where the Nzelang Nacional (National Thunder) plots to clip the Super Eagles’ wings.

 

The meeting between the two sides promises to be an action-packed affair with relatively high stakes in a tough Group A consisting of hosts Cote d’Ivoire and Guinea-Bissau.

 

The Super Eagles were flawless in their group stages in the previous edition to be stunned by Tunisia in the knockout stages, who had qualified as the third-best team from the group stages.

 

Star-studded Nigeria has learned from their mistakes, and with the likes of CAF Player of the Year, Victor Osimhen, Samuel Chukueze, Ademola Lookman, and Kelechi Iheanacho on the side, Super Eagles will be looking at going all the way in their quest of winning a fourth African title.

 

Equatorial Guinea, which is also known by the moniker Los Elefantes (The Elephants), on the other hand, certainly are no pushovers.

 

They reached the quarter-finals during the last edition held in Cameroon, which included a shock 1-0 defeat over Algeria and Mali, who they knocked out in the round of 16 to advance to the quarter-finals.

 

The small Central African country that will be playing its fourth TotalEnergies CAF AFCON also made it to the quarter-finals in the 2012 edition.

 

Kick off at the Alassane Ouattara Olympic Stadium is at 14h00 GMT.

 

An Island’s hope rests on trio

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Paris triumphs could illuminate Grenada’s centenary

 

Anderson Peters celebrates his 2019 world javelin title win in Doha (© Getty Images

 

The Grenada Athletic Association celebrated its centenary earlier this week, with 11 January 1924 inscribed in the annals of World Athletics as the day the island’s federation was founded, Phil Minshull reports for World Athletics Heritage.

 

However, in the cricket-loving country of barely 124,000 people in which athletics always struggled for public attention until the ascent of global superstars and world champions like Alleyne Francique, Kirani James, and Anderson Peters, there was little fanfare and not a little déjà vu with the way the federation quietly came into being a century ago.

 

Alleyne Francique on the way to his world indoor 400m title in BudapestAlleyne Francique on the way to his world indoor 400m title in Budapest (© Getty Images)

The founding of the Grenadian federation took place against a backdrop of social and political change in what were then the British colonies in the Caribbean during the early 1920s; although this was mainly more representation for the local aristocracy in the colonial administrations and, as has been noted by various historians, unemployment and poverty were rampant.

 

However, as a corollary to these changes, many sports federations were also formed by the colonial leaders of the time, and it is no coincidence that the Grenada Football Association was also formed in 1924.

 

However, Grenada joining any major international federations was still decades away.

 

Athletics competitions allowing any talent to be identified were also severely limited for many years owing to poor facilities, including rudimentary grass tracks.

 

Gittens becomes Grenada’s first athletics hero

 

The first Grenadian athlete to make any impact internationally, albeit on a regional basis, was the multi-talented William ‘Pablo’ Gittens in the 1950s.

 

As noted by Renold O’Neal in his highly informative treatise on the history of athletics in the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States, which includes Grenada: “Gittens was an exceptional sportsman who also represented his county in cricket and football and in the latter sport just missed being chosen for the West Indies combined team that toured Great Britain in 1959.

 

“Gittens lived for a while in southern Trinidad and became a constant at the Texaco Southern Games, for many years the most important athletics competition for athletes from the British Caribbean.”

 

The versatile sportsman competed in these Games from 1953-58, and he twice won high jump and long jump doubles and, on another occasion, took the 400m hurdles crown.

 

At the British West Indies Championships – which existed from 1957-65 – Gittens also shone, and he won Grenada’s only medals: a 400m hurdles gold and high jump silver in 1958 and a 400m hurdles bronze in 1959.

 

Sadly, Grenada didn’t send a team to the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games – it would be another 12 years before they participated in this competition – but Gittens would have had good chances of making the finals in Cardiff in both the high jump and 400m hurdles.

 

In 1960, the British West Indies sent a combined team to the Olympic Games in Rome, but no Grenadian was included in any sport, and by now, Gittens was also more focused on cricket.

 

International arrival

 

The 1960s saw no one else of the stature of Gittens come to the fore. Still, the more significant opportunities for international experience started to be provided when Grenada finally sent a team to the Commonwealth Games in 1970 – joining what was then the IAAF the same year – and the following year made its debut at the Central American and Caribbean Championships.

 

At the latter championships, Dunstan Campbell became Grenada’s first medallist when he took a decathlon bronze, a precursor to the country’s recent prowess in producing multi-event exponents, including 2014 Commonwealth Games bronze medallist Kurt Felix and his younger brother, the 2023 World Athletics Championships bronze medallist Lindon Victor.

 

Lindon Victor at the 2023 World Athletics ChampionshipsLindon Victor at the 2023 World Athletics Championships (© Getty Images) 

In 1972, the first edition of the now-famed Carifta Games, the showcase for Caribbean teenage talent, took place in Barbados, and Eros Rapier – who would go on to greater recognition as a member of the Grenada football team – took the javelin gold as well as a silver in the shot put.

 

It would be another nine years until Grenada’s first Carifta Games gold medal on the track was won by Maurice Williams. Still, in 1981, he memorably became the first U20 runner from the region to go under 15 minutes for 5000m, and, amazingly, it is still a national record almost 43 years later.

 

The early 1980s saw a blossoming of Grenadian athletics talent, with long jumper Jacinta Bartholomew becoming her country’s first female Carifta Games gold medallist in 1983.

 

After also competing at the inaugural World Athletics Championships later that year, Bartholomew – who would go on to have an impressive US collegiate career as a sprinter – made Grenadian sporting history in 1984 as the first woman from her country to compete at the Olympics.

 

Olympic debut in Los Angeles

 

With the Grenada National Olympic Committee formed in 1982, the country sent a seven-strong team – two athletes and five boxers – to the Games for the first time.

 

Bartholomew, the only woman on the team, just missed out on the final and produced the best result from a Grenadian athlete until two-time world 400m indoor champion Alleyne Francique was to fall short of a medal with fourth place over one lap of the track in Athens 20 years later.

 

Grenada continued to have a production line of medallists at the Carifta Games and Central American Championships. Still, one needs to fast forward until the start of the new millennium before the feats of Francique rightly earned him the status of being the island’s first internationally recognized athletics star.

 

Francique’s potential was realized once he started studying at the famed athletics hothouse of Louisiana State University in 2001, running under 45 seconds for the first time that year.

 

At the 2004 World Athletics Indoor Championships, he took the lead in the 400m final just before the bell and was never headed, crossing the line in 45.88 to become Grenada’s first global athletics champion.

 

However, the Olympics later that year saw him come home behind a US medal sweep, a disappointment that lingers today. “[Having] the whole country cheering you was challenging. I wanted to win so badly that I put a lot of pressure on myself, and I ended up coming fourth,” he reflected recently.

 

Francique bounced back, though, and in 2006, he retained his world indoor title in Moscow two years later, retiring and subsequently becoming a renowned coach, including guiding USA’s Fred Kerley to the 2022 100m world title.

 

Not surprisingly, Francique was a role model for his successor as the island’s 400m record-holder, Kirani James.

 

James gets global acclaim

 

James first came to attention in 2007 when he broke the world age-14 400m best and won a silver medal at the World Athletics U18 Championships against athletes up to three years older.

 

After that, his rise was meteoric.

 

He won world U18 and U20 titles in 2009 and 2010 before triumphing on a senior stage at the 2011 World Athletics Championships – with compatriot Rondell Bartholomew also making the final and finishing sixth – to become one of just a handful of athletes to have won world titles in all three categories, amazingly in successive years.

 

Kirani James celebrates his 2011 world 400m title win in DaeguKirani James celebrates his 2011 world 400m title win in Daegu (© Getty Images)

The prodigious talent then flew to gold at the London 2012 Olympic Games, getting his country’s first Olympic medal of any color. He won in 43.94 to become the first non-US runner to go under the milestone of 44 seconds.

 

James described his win at the time as “A huge step for our country in terms of stepping up to the plate in track and field, just going out there and putting us on the map.”

 

Although London was to be his last global title, James has gone on to take two further medals at both the Olympic Games and World Athletics Championships and, showing that age has not dulled his talents, he was the 2022 and 2023 Wanda Diamond League winner.

 

James will only be 32 this year by the time of the Olympic Games and should still be in the battle for medals in the No.1 Olympic sport in Paris, as will the two-time javelin world champion Anderson Peters.

 

Peters showed he was ready to make an impact on the international scene when he won at the 2016 Carifta Games on home soil in the Grenadian capital St George’s – with the Games returning to Grenada for just the third time this year from 30 March-1 April at the Kirani James Stadium – with a championship and national record of 78.28m.

 

He improved later in 2016 to 79.65m when taking the bronze at the World Athletics U20 Championships in Poland.

 

Nevertheless, Peters was a slightly surprising winner of the 2019 world title but showed it was far from a fluke in the first year back to post-pandemic normality when he retained his crown in Oregon in 2022, part of a halcyon year in which he had four meetings over 90 meters topped by a vast 93.07m at an early season outing at the Doha Diamond League.

 

The year 2023 was a difficult one for Peters as he struggled to recover from injuries, but, like James and Victor, he will be expecting to be in contention to make the podium in Paris.

 

Nilsen and Morris take Reno

Start the season with solid pole vault wins at the National Pole Vault Summit

 

US pole vaulter Sandi Morris (© AFP / Getty Images)

As World Athletics reports, US pole vaulters Chris Nilsen and Sandi Morris started their year by securing victory at the National Pole Vault Summit in Reno, Nevada, on Friday (12).

 

Olympic and world medallist Nilsen cleared 5.90m to triumph ahead of his compatriot Zach Bradford and Thibaut Collet of France. In comparison, two-time world indoor champion Morris soared over 4.82m to prevail in a clash with her compatriot Katie Moon, the Olympic and two-time world champion.

 

Nilsen entered the competition at 5.45m and cleared that height plus 5.60m, 5.72m, and 5.82m on his first attempts. He needed all three tries to make it over his eventual winning height before passing at 5.96m and then attempting 6.01m.

 

Bradford and Collet managed a best of 5.82m to put them joint second ahead of Sam Kendricks, KC Lightfoot, Austin Miller, and Luke Winder, all with 5.72m.

 

In the women’s contest, at the start of a year that offers Morris the chance to defend her world indoor title in Glasgow in March and Moon the opportunity to defend her Olympic crown in Paris in August, both athletes entered at 4.43m. They cleared that height on the first try.

 

While Morris went on to clear 4.53m and 4.63m at the first time of asking, Moon needed two attempts to manage 4.53m and finished the competition joint second with Canada’s Anicka Newell when they both knocked the bar at 4.63m.

 

With the contest won, Morris then passed 4.73m and managed 4.75m on her second try before passing 4.80m and soaring clear at 4.82m on her third go.

 

Hana Moll, Katerina Stefanidi, Emily Grove, and Gabriela Leon finished joint fourth on 4.43m.

 

Results

 

Season openers in Baton Rouge and Fayetteville

 

North American 60m record-holder Aleia Hobbs opened her season by running 7.12 in the heats and 7.11 in the final at the LSU Purple Tiger meeting in Baton Rouge on Friday (12).

 

The Olympic 4x100m medallist set her area record of 6.94 when winning the US title last February.

 

World indoor silver medallist Mikiah Brisco was second behind Hobbs in Baton Rouge, clocking 7.24 after a 7.30 heat win.

 

Alia Armstrong won the women’s 60m hurdles in 8.05 after 8.10 in the heats, while Myles Thomas clocked 6.65 in the men’s 60m heats before running 6.61 to win the final.

 

Results

 

Also on Friday, USA’s 18-year-old Shawnti Jackson opened her season with a 400m win at the Arkansas Invitational in Fayetteville.

 

The world U20 100m bronze medallist claimed a clear victory in a PB of 52.10.

 

Shafiqua Maloney of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines won the women’s 800m and 1000m, running 2:02.70 to take the 800m ahead of Raevyn Rogers and 2:41.22 to improve her national record in the 1000m.

 

Britain’s Cindy Sember won the women’s 60m hurdles final in 8.06. In comparison, 2021 world U20 100m hurdles champion Ackera Nugent won the women’s 60m in 7.35, and Sanu Jallow dominated the women’s 600m to win in 1:26.52.

 

Over at the Rod McCravy Memorial in Louisville, world indoor silver medallist Devynne Charlton of The Bahamas dipped under eight seconds to win her 60m hurdles heat in 7.99.

 

Yusuf Bizimana set a US collegiate record to win the 1000m, clocking 2:18.10.

 

Eagles vow to overcome rumbling ‘Thunder’

In Nigeria’s Cup of Nations opener against Equatorial Guinea

 

 

By Rasheed Adewuyi

 

Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea are set to conclude the first matches of Group A of the 34th Africa Cup of Nations in Cote d’Ivoire when both nations clash at the brand-new Stade Alassane Ouattare in Ebimpe, outside Abidjan, on Sunday.

 

Matches between both nations have been few and far between, but Nigerians continue to relish a double over the neighbours to the south in qualification matches for the 2010 FIFA World Cup finals, when Joseph Yobo scored the only goal of the encounter in Malabo, and the Eagles then soared to a 4-0 win at the MKO Abiola National Stadium in Abuja.

 

On Saturday, Nigeria captain Ahmed Musa told thenff.com after the pre-match press conference that the Super Eagles have their eyes on the three points and have no apologies for their aspiration.

 

“It is always interesting to play in the Africa Cup of Nations. I was a champion in 2013, same as (defender Kenneth) Omeruo. However, the rest of the team want to have the feeling of what it means to win the Africa Cup of Nations. Everyone is geared towards making a statement.

 

“It will not be a picnic. All the teams in Group A are strong and ambitious as well. It is for us to go all out for the three points in each of our games, and then take it from there in the knock-out rounds. We will take it one match at a time.”

 

Nigeria’s campaign is woven around the aphoristic ‘Let’s Do It Again’ mantra, which was launched moments after their qualification for the finals, and is designed to galvanise and motivate the group to repeat the triumphs of 1980, 1994 and 2013, and also mobilise football-passionate Nigerians to support and encourage the group to action.

 

This year’s final tournament is Nigeria’s 20th appearance, having made her debut in 1963, and then appeared at the 1976, 1978, 1980, 1982, 1984, 1988, 1990, 1992, 1994, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2013, 2019 and 2021 finals.

 

The competition is also holding in the country where Nigeria reached the Final on away ground for the first time, losing to an experienced and battle-hardened Indomitable Lions of Cameroon at the Stade Felix Houphouet-Boigny in the Ivorian capital.

 

Nigeria remains the country with the most podium appearances at the Africa Cup of Nations, having in addition to wins in 1980, 1994 and 2013, finished as runners-up in 1984, 1988, 1990 and 2000, and picked up the bronze medals in 1976, 1978, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2010 and 2019, making for a total of 15 podium appearances in 20 finals.

 

Commentators continue to fret about a contention of lack of steel in midfield and perceived weakness in sectors of the defence, but Coach José Peseiro was bullish at the pre-match press conference on Saturday.

 

“I believe in my team. Every team has what you may call frail areas, but the important thing is for the players to play for one another. We are positive.”

 

Afterwards, he told thenff.com: “It is a 90-minute affair and it is always about who wants a win most. I have a group that has determination and discipline, flair and steel, and we believe we can go all the way in this tournament.”

 

Equatorial Guinea’s senior national team is known as the Nzelang Nacionl which means the ‘National Thunder’, but Musa said the Super Eagles will fly above any thunder strikes or claps the neighbours-to-the-East may be planning for Sunday.

 

“We are ready. This is a group of players love to compete, and we will give Sunday’s match, and the other games, our very best.”

 

Super Cup to end in another ‘El Clasico’

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Barcelona to face Real Madrid

 

Barcelona to face Real Madrid in Super Cup final

 

Robert Lewandowski and Lamine Yamal scored second-half goals to give Barcelona a 2-0 win over Osasuna in a dour Spanish Super Cup semifinal in Saudi Arabia on Thursday.

 

Barca set up a dream show­piece clash on Sunday with Real Madrid, who had beaten city rivals Atletico Madrid in a breathtaking 5-3 derby ear­lier in the week. It will be a rematch from last year’s final, which Barca won 3-1. Barce­lona dominated possession in a dismal first half but were be­reft of ideas and barely threat­ened their opponents.

 

Lewandowski could have done better in a few half-chances, which a confident Osasuna goalkeeper, Sergio Herrera, denied. Still, it was not until the 59th minute that Bar­ca came to life and managed to break the deadlock. Ilkay Gun­dogan picked out Lewandowski with a through-ball, and the striker scored from close range.

 

However, Osasuna players were fuming and complained to the referee that Barcelona defender Andreas Christensen had fouled Jose Arnaiz before starting the counter-attack. However, a VAR check confirmed the goal. “We felt we were wronged because the refer­eeing criteria were very different during the match. The foul was clear,” Osasuna manager Jag­oba Arrasate told Movistar Plus.

 

After Lewandowski’s goal, Xavi brought Joao Felix off the bench. The Portuguese forward added impetus Barca seemed to lack up-front, forcing goalkeeper Herrera to make a couple of fine saves to keep Osasuna alive. Joao Felix created a quick counter and assisted Yamal, who blasted low into the net to secure the win and set up an El Clasico in the final.

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Egyptian Arbiter to blastoff AFCON 2023

Amin Mohamed Omar to officiate opening match

 

 

Twenty-four hours before the kick-off of the 34th edition of the CAF Africa Cup of Nations.

 

TotalEnergies, Côte d’Ivoire 2023, Egypt’s Amin Mohamed Omar has been chosen to referee the match between the host country and Guinea-Bissau.

 

The 39-year-old is not at his first international experience; he officiated during the FIFA™ U-17 World Cup in Brazil in 2019.

 

His Compatriots, Mahmoud Ahmed Kamel and Ahmed Hossam Taha will support the Egyptians. Mahmoud Elbana was also appointed as the VAR referee of the match.

 

The match between Cote d’Ivoire and Guinea Bissau will kick off at 20:00 GMT at the Alassane Ouattara Olympic Stadium in Ebimpé.

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South Africa defender warns all contenders

Continental experience will be essential for us – Khuliso Mudau

 

 

South African national team defender Khuliso Mudau believes the experience of key players on the continent will be helpful when Bafana Bafana attempts to relive their 1996 success of the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations.

 

South Africa touched down in Korhogo on Thursday, 11 January, where they will be based for their Group E fixtures set to take place at the newly built Stade Amadou Gon Coulibaly – the same venue that Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies from South Africa recently lifted the CAF Women’s Champions League.

 

Speaking to CAFOnline from the team’s base on Friday, the Sundowns defender, who recently lifted the African Football League title with his club, says experience on the continent will be vital for the team to succeed at the continental showpiece.

 

“It won’t be an easy group to get out of, but I think we have quality in the squad with players who are young and hungry. We want to make sure that we write history together. It will greatly help us have players playing in the Champions League. You can’t compare it with the local league because the intensity is different. So I think it’s going to help us a lot. We have been playing together for quite a while now as a team, and I am just grateful to be here and want to showcase my talent”, said Mudau.

 

In addition to Mudau and his Sundowns teammates, Bafana Bafana has the in-form Percy Tau, who not only has continental experience but recently came back with a bronze medal from the FIFA Club World Cup with Egyptian giants Al Ahly.

 

The team is also led by former TotalEnergies CAF AFCON winner Hugo Broos, who guided Cameroon to the title in 2017.

 

“He is critical. He is an excellent coach. An experienced coach and I believe if we can apply exactly what he wants us to apply, we can make it,” concluded Mudau.

 

South Africa is drawn with North African giants Tunisia and neighbors Namibia and Mali, who are expected to enjoy the most support with their nation being on the border of Korhogo.

 

CAF unveils star-studded line-up of Legends

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For TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023

 

 

CAF has confirmed a star-studded lineup of African football legends for the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023 to promote the tournament and enhance the brand awareness of the flagship continental sporting event.

 

The CAF Legends, comprising iconic former players, were selected based on their popularity, participation in major competitions, and social influence.

 

Each Participating Member Association (PMA) is represented by one of their famous players who has a rich history in continental football, except hosts Cote d’Ivoire with two. They will be attached to their teams and involved in social activations around the tournament.

 

Flying high, the colors of ‘Les Elephants’ of Cote d’Ivoire are the former captain and two-time CAF Player of the Year, Didier Drogba, and former offensive midfielder Salomon Kalou. Kalou was part of the Cote d’Ivoire that won their last TotalEnergies  Africa Cup of Nations in 2015.

 

Holders Senegal will find comfort in former captain Mamadou Niang, who led the Teranga Lions at the 2012 TotalEnergies Africa Cup of Nations in Gabon & Equatorial Guinea. He was also present in 2004, 2006, and 2008.

 

Other eye-catching African legends set to join their teams include Egypt’s Ahmed Hassan, four-time winner of the TotalEnergies Africa Cup of Nations – 1998, 2006, 2008, and 2010.

 

Also on the list is Nigerian midfield generalissimo Augustine ‘Jay-Jay’ Okocha, who won the continental trophy in 1994, and former Zambia captain Christopher Katongo. The latter guided the Chipolopolo to continental glory in 2012.

 

Siphiwe Tshabalala, the first player to score in Africa’s first-ever FIFA World Cup in 2010, represents South Africa, just as former Black Stars captain Stephen Appiah, who represented Ghana at all age groups.

 

TotalEnergies CAF Legends

Karim Ziani (Algeria)

Fabrice Alcebiades Maieco “Akwa” (Angola)

Moumouni Dagano (Burkina Faso)

Heldon Ramos (Cape Verde)

Joel Epalle (Cameroon)

Didier Drogba (Cote d’Ivoire)

Salomon Kalou (Cote d’Ivoire)

Shabani Nonda (DR Congo)

Ahmed Hassan (Egypt)

Rodolfo Bodipo (Equatorial Guinea)

Pa Modou Jagne (Gambia)

Stephen Appiah (Ghana)

Pascal Feindouno (Guinea)

Bocundji Ca (Guinea-Bissau)

Adama Tamboura (Mali)

Souleimane Brahim (Mauritania)

Manuel Jose Luis Bucuane “Tico Tico” (Mozambique)

Nourredddine Naybet (Morocco)

Ronald Ketjijere (Namibia)

Augustine “Jay-Jay” Okocha (Nigeria)

Siphiwe Tshabalala (South Africa)

Mrisho Ngassa (Tanzania)

Karim Haggui (Tunisia)

Christopher Katongo (Zambia)