AFRICA CUP 2022 - Preview

 Top 10 African Footballing Nations

29 Dec 2021
#AFROFOOTBALL - November 2019 - AFRICAN FOOTBALL STORIES IN SHORT

The latest African football stories in short for November

30 Nov 2019
NATIONAL TEAMS - OCTOBER 2019 - AFRICAN FOOTBALL STORIES IN SHORT

African football stories in short for October

7 Oct 2019
FIFA RANKING - JULY 2019 FOR AFRICA

African champions Algeria are biggest climbers in latest Fifa rankings

27 Jul 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - Third Place - Day 20 - Tunisia VS Nigeria - 0:1

Nigeria beats Tunisia

15 Jul 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - SEMI-FINALS - DAY 19 - Senegal VS Tunisia - 1:0


Senegal beats Tunisia to reach Africa Cup Final

14 Jul 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - SEMI-FINALS - DAY 19 - Algeria VS Nigeria - 2:1


Algeria beats Nigeria to reach Africa Cup Final

14 Jul 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - Semi-Finals - preview

preview

12 Jul 2019

FIFA - candidate Prince Ali hopes for African support

Fifa presidential candidate Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein is hoping his trip to Zimbabwe will win him support from Africa for his election campaign.

The 39-year-old Prince Ali, a Fifa vice-president, is one of three challengers to incumbent Sepp Blatter for world football's top job.

Africa makes up 54 of the 209 Fifa member countries that will vote in the election in Zurich on 29 May.

"I hope I will get support from all of Africa," Prince Ali told BBC Sport.

"I also come from a country and a region developing at football so my project is to develop talent and take it to world class level and that is the reason I am in Africa, in particular, and why I am running to be Fifa president."

Jordan's Prince Ali has moved his campaign to Africa and arrived in Zimbabwe on Monday, where he is expected to meet vice-president Emmerson Mnangagwa, Zimbabwe Football Association president Cuthbert Dube and sports minister Andrew Langa.

Next week he will attend the Confederation of African Football's general assembly meeting in Cairo, alongside fellow presidential challengers Michael van Praag and Luis Figo, as well as Blatter.

The 79-year-old Swiss Blatter has a strong base of support in Africa, where he is still viewed as responsible for helping to deliver the first World Cup to Africa - the 2010 finals in South Africa.

He is seeking a fifth term in office to continue a reign that began in 1998.

Africa is a key battleground if any of the candidates are going to unseat Blatter, who is the clear favourite to win the election and retain his job.

 

2 Apr 2015
(BBC Sport UK)

Related articles