Sunday, February 19, 2012

SOCCER AFRICA : CURRENT AND PAST EVENTS

International matches return to Libya
19 Feb 2012:
© Reuters



International soccer will return to Libya on Monday when local clubs Al Nasr Benghazi and Al Ahli Tripoli meet CSKA Sofia in matches that will mark the first anniversary of the revolution, the Libyan embassy in Bulgaria said.

The 31-times Bulgarian champions, who will also face the two teams on Wednesday, will become the first foreign team to play in the African country after the uprising against Muammar Gaddafi's rule erupted on
Feb. 17 last year.

"We are very grateful to the Bulgarian team, who agreed to participate in this historic event for Libya," the embassy told Reuters by email on Sunday.


The Libyan league has been suspended since last February but clubs have continued to play in continental competitions, by forfeiting their right to play at home in knockout ties, which were reduced to a single match at their opponent's ground.


The national team used Mali and Egypt as their home grounds in the Nations Cup qualifiers but still managed to reach the finals, which were co-hosted by Equatorial Guinea and Gabon.


CSKA visit Libya for a first time since the 1960s when the team took part in an international tournament.


The matches will take place at the "The Heroes of February 17th" stadium in the eastern town of Benghazi, which is about 1,000 kms east of the capital Tripoli with capacity crowds expected for all games.


The host stadium has been renamed after previously being named after Hugo Chaves, Venezuela's President, who was one of Gadaffi's closest friends.

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Zambia hero Sunzu dreaming of Chelsea move  Previous  Next 
16 Feb 2012:
© Reuters


Stoppila Sunzu
Stoppila Sunzu has set his sights on a move to England after becoming a hero in Zambia for converting the winning penalty in Sunday's African Nations Cup final against Ivory Coast.

"I played for (French club) Chateauroux in the 2008-09 season and I would love to come back to Europe," said Sunzu who is now with the Democratic Republic of Congo team TP Mazembe.


"I have a dream to play in England as I prefer Chelsea and Bolton Wanderers," the defender told Romanian media on Thursday.


Zambia beat the Elephants 8-7 in a drama-filled penalty shootout in Libreville, following a 0-0 draw, to win the Nations Cup for the first time.


After the under-20 World Cup in Canada in 2007, Sunzu impressed in trials with English side Reading but he was denied a work permit.


The 22-year-old enhanced his growing reputation by keeping Ivory Coast and Chelsea striker Didier Drogba quiet for much of Sunday's final.


"Drogba was almost invisible, it was very easy for me," said Sunzu. "I have no secret, I'm not afraid of any player or team regardless of names.


"I was very confident throughout the match. I was focused and it helped me to convert the last penalty."


Frenchman Herve Renard coached Zambia at the Nations Cup but Sunzu also credited predecessor Dario Bonetti of Italy who was sacked in October, two days after the team had qualified for the finals.


"He (Bonetti) is a great coach, he did a very good job," said the defender. "He contributed greatly to winning the cup although he wasn't with us during the tournament."


Sunzu said the players were given a unique reception in Zambia after the final.


"It was unbelievable," he said. "Such a thing has never happened before in our country.


"People marched through the streets of Lusaka to celebrate with us and we were received like heroes." 

African champions Zambia shoot up rankings  Previous  Next 
15 Feb 2012:
© Reuters


Zambia have shot up 28 places in the FIFA rankings, breaking into the top 50 for the first time in eleven years after winning the African Nations Cup on Sunday.

The Chipolopolo (The Copper Bullets) moved into 43rd spot, their highest position since February 2001, after beating Ivory Coast on penalties following a goalless final in Libreville.


Despite losing the decider, Ivory Coast climbed three places to 15th and are the continent's highest-placed team. The Elephants did not concede a goal in the tournament.


Mali, who finished third, moved up 25 places to 44th, one ahead of co-hosts Gabon, who leapt 46 places after reaching the quarter-finals with wins over Niger and Morocco. 


Fellow co-hosts Equatorial Guinea, a team made up largely of Spanish lower league players, leapt from 151st to 110th after surpassing all expectations by reaching the quarter-finals.

Spain stayed top of the rankings while Germany moved up to second and Netherlands dropped to third even though neither side played a game in the last month.


FIFA said the change was "due to the devaluation of matches from previous years."


Similarly, Brazil dropped to seventh and Portugal moved up to sixth while Argentina dropped out of the top ten, losing their place to Denmark.


Rankings (last month's positions in brackets)


1. (1) Spain


2. (3) Germany


3. (2) Netherlands


4. (4) Uruguay


5. (5) England


6. (7) Portugal


7. (6) Brazil


8. (9) Italy


9. (8) Croatia


10.(11) Denmark

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Celebrations instead of snow for Zambia's Mayuka  Previous  Next 
14 Feb 2012:
© Reuters


Zambia's Emmanuel Mayuka runs with Zambia flag
Zambia strike Emmanuel Mayuka has been allowed to stay in Africa for another week by his Swiss club Young Boys Berne after helping his country to their stunning African Nations Cup win.

FIFA regulations say players should return to their clubs 48 hours after ending their participation with their national team, but Young Boys said they were happy to be flexible even though they face league leaders FC Basel
on Thursday.

The second-placed club said they were also worried about subjecting the 21-year-old to sub-zero temperatures days after he played in the heat and humidity of tropical Gabon.


"In view of the historic triumph, the club has decided to allow Mayuka to take part this week in the celebrations in his homeland," said Young Boys on their website (www.bscyb.ch). 


"The match against Basel will take place in completely different conditions to the ones in Africa," it added.

Mayuka scored three goals in the tournament and is the only player of the Zambian squad based with a first-division European club.


Unrated Zambia beat Ivory Coast on penalties after a 0-0 draw in Sunday's final in Libreville to win the cup for the first time, playing a few kilometres from the scene of an air crash which killed 18 of their national team players in 1993.


Unlike some European clubs, who complain at having to release players, Young Boys have backed Mayuka throughout, describing the player at one point last week as "the best advertisement for the club".


Young Boys signed Mayuka from Maccabi Tel Aviv 18 months ago, on the recommendation of club scout and former Swiss striker Stephane Chapusiat, for some 1.3 million Swiss francs ($1.41 million).


Swiss media have speculated that the player's current value is around 13 million francs although the club are not in a rush to sell.


"We need to take it step by step," said club president Ilja Kaenzig.

 
Nations Cup future brighter after Zambia's poignant win  Previous  Next 
13 Feb 2012:
© Reuters


Zambia's poignant and heart-warming triumph at the Nations Cup capped a tournament which was strong on emotion, easy on the ears and may be on the rise again after hitting a low point in Angola two years ago.

Lying 71st in the world rankings, with a squad based on little-known, African-based players and playing only a few kilometres from the scene of an air crash which wiped out their team in 1993, Zambian's win left even their own coach Herve Renard lost for words.


"They found the strength, I don't know where," he said after they beat the Ivory Coast's team of European-based players 8-7 on penalties on Sunday following a goalless draw.


"There is something written somewhere," added Renard, who himself abandoned a playing career after realising he was not
good enough and spent 10 years running a cleaning company.

"It just felt right but it was not because of me, I don't know where it came from."


After winning, the Zambian team held up banners remembering their side who died in an air crash following a stopover in Gabon on the way to a World Cup qualifier in Senegal in 1993.


It was the sort of fairytale which simply could not happen in the big-money world of European club football and may help the Nations Cup to gain new appeal.


The tournament was once regarded as an exotic sideshow associated with the old cliches about colourful fans, tactically naive teams and voodoo on the pitch.


Around 10 years ago, with the influx of African players to Europe, it suddenly found itself being taken seriously, so much so that European club coaches complained at having to release their players.


As European interest grew, a new reality struck. The football was often dull and defensive and, although the fans were colourful, there were not many of them with most games played in empty stadiums.


Chaotic organisation and controversial refereeing, particularly in Egypt in 2006, further lowered the outside world's perception.


It reached a possible low point two years ago in Angola when Togo pulled out of the tournament after two members of their delegation were killed in an ambush on the team bus in the province of Cabinda.


Although the tournament went on, the football was poor and attendances dismal while the outrageous prices, chaotic transport and visa restrictions which barred many would-be visitors all left a sour taste in the mouth.




SMOOTH TOURNAMENT


For 2012, oil-rich co-hosts Gabon and Equatorial Guinea produced impressive infrastructure, although nagging worries over visas and hotels persisted until the last minute for many visitors.


However, once the tournament started, things ran impressively smoothly with a notable absence of heavy-handed security.


Despite the absence of big guns Nigeria, Cameroon and Egypt, the competition threw up the drama which had been palpably missing from previous editions.


There was the astonishing progress of Equatorial Guinea, ranked 151st in the world, to the quarter-finals, thanks to a stunning injury-time win over Senegal with a goal from Spanish fourth-division amateur David Alvarez.


Gabon also surpassed expectations, reaching the last eight even more dramatically by beating Morocco 3-2 with a 95th-minute free kick.


They produced arguably the player of the tournament in striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, although the Mohican-haired player's tournament ended in tears when he missed the decisive penalty in the quarter-final shootout defeat against Mali.


That produced more moving scenes as the inconsolable, 23-year-old was comforted by his father, himself a former Gabon player.


Didier Drogba's two missed penalties for Ivory Coast, one in the final and one in the quarter-finals, and a first-round exit for a heavily-fancied Senegal team added to the overall drama.


The big disappointment was the failure to fill stadiums, with many games played in half-empty arenas.


Fortunately, the organised supporters groups who did turn up banged drums and played trumpets, rather than blowing vuvuzelas proving that the dreaded plastic horns, which provided the monotonous backdrop for South Africa in 2010, have failed to catch on elsewhere in the continent.

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Sunday, 19 February 2012
Saturday, 18 February 2012
Friday, 17 February 2012
Thursday, 16 February 2012
Wednesday, 15 February 2012
Tuesday, 14 February 2012
 
The World Cup stadium in Durban which may be used for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations
Organisers of the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations must choose which of the country's many sporting facilities will be used for the tournament.


Fixtures and results for this year's tournament.


Zambians lift the Africa Cup of Nations on Sunday Zambia shoot up Fifa rankings

African champions back in global top 50

Botswana coach Stanley Tshosane Hunting Zebras
Botswana have 'no national team', says coach Tshosane  


Zambia's players celebrate their first continental triumph, after being presented with the Africa Cup of Nations trophy The whole story
A pictorial journey through the 2012 Africa Cup of Nations 

Didier Drogba admits 'hardest season' for Chelsea

The Ivorian striker believes the current campaign has been his toughest during his time at Stamford Bridge and has defended boss Andre Villas-Boas

Didier Drogba - Chelsea (Getty Images)
Getty Images
Didier Drogba has labelled this campaign the ‘hardest’ of his Chelsea career to date.
The Blues sit 5th in the Premier League, 17 points from top spot, and have been largely disappointing under new boss Andre Villas-Boas, despite remaining in both the FA Cup and Champions League
"It is the hardest season I've known here," Drogba told reporters.
"The players and fans are used to being in the first two or three but this is different."
"You know how it is when you come with a lot of ambition and it doesn't go the way you want, it's difficult.”
The pressure has been mounting on the Chelsea boss, who arrived from Porto in the summer, but Drogba was quick to support his manager.
"It's not easy for him [Villas-Boas] but he's not the only one who is responsible, we all are."
Chelsea's 1-1 draw with Birmingham on Saturday means they face a replay at St Andrew's and their next fixture sees them up against Napoli in the Champions League.

 


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