2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP D - DAY 12 - Uganda vs Mali 1:1

Day 12 - 24th match - Mali and Uganda knocked out Africa Cup

25 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP C - DAY 11 - Morocco VS Ivory Coast 1:0

Day 11 - 21st match - Morocco reach quarter-finals

24 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP C - DAY 11 - Togo vs Congo DR 1:3

Day 11 - 22nd match - Congo DR reach quarter-finals

24 Jan 2017
National Team - Algeria - Coach - Leekens quits after exit

Coach Georges Leekens quits after Nations Cup elimination.

24 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP B - DAY 10 - Senegal VS Algeria 2:2

Day 10 - 19th match - Algeria exit without a win

23 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP B - DAY 10 - Zimbabwe VS Tunisia 2:4

Day 10 - 20th match - Tunisia reach quarter-finals

23 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP A - DAY 09 - Cameroon VS Gabon 0:0

Day 09 - 17th match - Gabon limp out as Cameroon progress

22 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP A - DAY 09 - Guinea-Bissau VS Burkina Faso 0:2

Day 09 - 18th match - Burkina Faso beat Guinea-Bissau to win group

22 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP D - DAY 08 - Ghana VS Mali 1:0

Day 08 - 15th match - Ghana beat Mali

21 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP D - DAY 08 - Egypt VS Uganda 1:0

Day 08 - 16th match - Egypt beat Uganda

21 Jan 2017

SAFA President predicts change to governance of African football

Now President of the South African FA (SAFA), former World Cup CEO Danny Jordaan also works as a special advisor to Issa Hayatou, the long-standing president of the Confederation of African Football (CAF). Jordaan was speaking after a Fifa seminar in Johannesburg, described by CAF Vice-President Suketu Patel as a 'watershed' for the continent's football future.

While a campaign to increase Africa's allocation of five places at the World Cup is underway, Jordaan said attendees were left in little doubt as to the importance of putting their financial accounts in order. "Very often, administrative and financial problems have created or stunted African football's growth and progress," he told BBC Sport. "Now that FIFA has established the independent Audit and Compliance unit, they will select - on a sample basis - national associations on the continent (whose accounts will then be audited).

"That will help us to really keep the focus on the essence of football associations' core business - and that is to provide a quality service and competitive teams." Jordaan added that FIFA's ability to spot-check any football association at short notice applies to all global nations, although it may make the most change in Africa - where, as the South African explained, football administration has often left a little to be desired. So it was significant that integrity matters, good governance and transparency were high on the agenda at the three-day conference.

"The seminar was all about establishing new benchmarks for the administration and organisation of football on the continent," he added after it closed on Friday. The 28 national associations that were in attendance also took the decision to ask FIFA to increase Africa's number of berths at the World Cup. The allocation is normally five, although this increased to six when South Africa hosted the continent's first finals four years ago. Nonetheless, no more than one African nation has ever reached the knock-out stage at any World Cup. "The allocation of Africa's World Cup slots is based on a decision taken in 1994 at the FIFA congress in Chicago, just ahead of the World Cup in the United States," he explained. "When that allocation was made 20 years ago, was African football still at the same place? And if not, what progress has been made - and is there a case for an argument of increasing the number of slots for the African continent?"

Jordaan is keen to bring these issues to the table at the FIFA Congress in Brazil, though he suggests it may be after the World Cup. Alongside African champions Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Algeria and Cameroon are set to compete in Brazil. No African side has ever reached the semi-finals, although Ghana were a penalty miss away in 2010, while Cameroon (1990) and Senegal (2002) make up the three sides to have reached the last eight. 2010 hosts South Africa are notably absent from June's finals but SAFA was decidedly grateful that football's world governing body had given the continental game such unwavering support. "It was an honour for SAFA to host such a seminar," Jordaan said.

6 Apr 2014
(BBC Sport by Piers Edwards)

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