TRANSFER - NIGERIA - West Brom break club record to sign Nigerian striker Brown Ideye

The Baggies announced the arrival of the 25-year-old Dynamo Kiev player on Friday, saying they had broken the club's record.

19 Jul 2014
2015 AFRICA CUP QUALIFIERS - 2ND ROUND- FIXTURES - PREVIEW

SATURDAY
•    Botswana vs Guinea-Bissau     
•    Uganda vs Mauritania 
•    Sierra Leone vs Seychelles 
SUNDAY
•    Lesotho vs Kenya 
•    Tanzania vs Mozambique 
•    Congo Brazzaville vs Rwanda 
•    Benin vs Malawi 

18 Jul 2014
TRANSFER - SENEGAL - DEMBA BA - Besiktas in talks with Chelsea to sign Senegal striker

Ba joined the Blues from Premier League rivals Newcastle in January 2013 on a three-and-a-half year deal for an undisclosed fee.

17 Jul 2014
Transfer - Senegal - Armand Traore - QPR defender signs new two-year deal

The Senegalese international defender has signed an extension which will tie him to the club until 2016.

16 Jul 2014
COACHES - ex Algeria Coach - Trabzonspor appoint coach Vahid Halilhodzic

Halilhodzic, who was born in what is now Bosnia-Hercegovina, has also coached club sides in Croatia, France, Ivory Coast, Morocco and Saudi Arabia.

15 Jul 2014
2014 WORLD CUP - DAY 25 - FINAL - GERMANY VS ARGENTINA 1:0

Germany is the new World Champion

13 Jul 2014
2014 WORLD CUP - DAY 24 - THIRD PLACE - BRAZIL VS NETHERLANDS 0:3

THIRD PLACE
12th July 2014

Brazil vs Netherlands 0:3

12 Jul 2014
transfer - Egypt - Ahmed Fathi set for trial at Arsenal

Fathi, who has 101 caps for Egypt, was also the subject of a bid by Nottingham Forest in January 2014.

11 Jul 2014
2014 WORLD CUP - DAY 23 - SEMI FINALS - NETHERLANDS VS ARGENTINA 2:4

SEMI-FINALS
9th July 2014

Netherlands vs Argentina 2:4 
 

Argentina reached the final - win on penalty shoot-out

9 Jul 2014
2014 WORLD CUP - DAY 22 - SEMI FINALS - BRAZIL VS GERMANY 1:7

SEMI-FINALS
8th July 2014

Brazil vs Germany 1:7

8 Jul 2014

NATIONAL TEAM - SIERRA LEONE - EBOLA AFFECTING OUR TEAM - MIDFIELDER MICHAEL LAHOUD

AFRICA CUP 2015 QUALIFIERS GROUP D SIERRA LEONE

Due to the Ebola outbreak, Sierra Leone have been playing home Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers in neutral venues.

"It is really causing a lot of tension and friction," Lahoud told BBC Sport.

"People refuse to allow you into places because the first thing they think is that you have Ebola." 

"It's pretty shocking discriminatory behaviour."

The 28-year-old added that some opponents have refused to shake hands with them and opposition fans have chanted "Ebola" at matches.

Sierra Leone Football Association vice president Brima Mazola Kamara explained to the BBC's Mohamed Fajah Barrie just how the outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus has affected the sport in the country.

The majority of the Sierra Leone squad play their club football in Europe, Asia or the United States and have not been back to their homeland since July.

"One pretty high-profile player on another team, I heard he refused to swap his jersey and instead gave his shorts and they didn't want any of our jerseys in return," continued Lahoud.

"I can understand the fear behind it because of the lack of education about the disease but it doesn't make it right.

"The fact that we were able to get a 0:0 draw against Cameroon on Saturday is truly testament to the fortitude of our team and the unity that we're having to show through this."

Philadelphia Union's Lahoud is a regular in the Sierra Leone squad but is not with the team at present because he is involved in the climax to the MLS season.

His last appearance for the national team came against Democratic Republic of Congo in September.

"The reaction from fans has been brutal at times. 

In DR Congo 20,000 people were chanting 'Ebola, Ebola' for 90 minutes," he said.

"It's really difficult, it hurts. 

Most of us are not living in Sierra Leone at the moment but we have family there so this outbreak is a very personal issue. 

It is probably one of the most painful experiences that I've gone through as a footballer.

"You feel humiliated. Being stranded in places like Zambia just trying to get home because they won't let you through because they automatically think you have Ebola."

"Walking through the streets in Congo and little kids that you try to give food to, running away in absolute terror of you. 

Mothers grabbing their kids and running away from you because they think just by you looking at them they're going to get Ebola. 

It is very humiliating."

 

15 Oct 2014
(BBC World Service Sport by John Bennett)

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