NIGERIA - COACH - AMODU AIMS TO TURN AROUND NIGERIA'S FORTUNE

Amodu replaced Stephen Keshi last week, after he paid the price for Nigeria's poor qualifying campaign so far.

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2015 AFRICA CUP - CAF - EBOLA AND NATIONS CUP - SOUTH AFRICA RULE OUT BEING 2015 HOSTS

South African sports minister Fikile Mbalula has stated the country will not step in as hosts for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations if Morocco withdraws.

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NIGERIA - COACH - ENYEAMA 'SHOCKED' BY TIMING OF KESHI'S REMOVAL

Goalkeeper Vincent Enyeama expressed his surprise that the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) decided to replace coach Stephen Keshi barely a month before the side's final two African Nations Cup qualifiers.

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2015 AFRICA CUP QUALIFIERS - GROUP STAGE - 4TH MATCHES - ALGERIA AND CAPE VERDE QUALIFY

Algeria and Cape Verde became the first teams to qualify for January's Africa Cup of Nations finals in Morocco.

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2015 AFRICA CUP - CAF - SOUNDS OUT ALTERNATIVE HOST OPTIONS

The Confederation of African Football has approached Ghana and South Africa about hosting the 2015 Nations Cup.

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2015 AFRICA CUP QUALIFIERS - GROUP STAGE - 4TH MATCHES - ALL RESULTS

Cameroon on verge of qualification - Cameroon took a huge step towards qualification with a 2:0 victory over Sierra Leone on Wednesday.

16 Oct 2014
2015 AFRICA CUP QUALIFIERS - GROUP STAGE - 4TH MATCHES - PREVIEW

Algeria will qualify, if they beat Malawi today, while wins for Cameroon and South Africa will put them within touching distance.

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The former BBC African Footballer of the Year was captain in 2012 when Zambia caused an upset to win the Nations Cup in Gabon and Equatorial Guinea.

14 Oct 2014

FIFA - Liberia's FA boss to stand for presidency

The waiting about who will be the first African to announce that they want to become the next president of football's world governing body Fifa is over.

Liberian Football Association President Musa Bility has thrown his hat into the ring, displaying his usual ease with standing up for what he believes in.

His reasons for running for the top job are largely driven by his desire that Africa should take its place in the global football conversation.

"If Africa does not put up a candidate, it says a lot about us," he told BBC Sport. "It shows a sense of mediocrity and that our only relevance is to vote and make leaders. 

I think that is not right."

Africa's 54 Fifa members makes it the world's largest voting bloc, but there are concerns that Europe is trying to change the way decisions are made, which could dilute Africa's power.

Earlier this month, Germany's FA president Wolfgang Niersbach, who took a seat on the Fifa executive committee last month, said he wants to see changes to the current one country, one vote system.

Africa has a lot of influence in Fifa because of its 54 members.

Mr Niersbach wants "a certain amount of weighted voting based on the size and relevance of the sporting associations", meaning that more powerful countries such as Germany would end up with more influence than smaller nations such as Lesotho, Swaziland or Guam.

This has caused consternation within African football.

The continent has long been aware of the pivotal role that it holds in the global game by virtue of its voting size, and it does not want to let it go.

 

FIFA MEMBERS PER REGION 

Africa - 54
Europe - 53
Asia/Australia - 46
North and Central America - 35
Oceania - 11
South America - 10


Mr Bility wants to smooth things over and says that with "antagonism very high" the world "needs a unifier".

He wants to listen to the "genuine concerns" of the European nations about things like corruption without ceding control to them.
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Mr Bility thinks that poorer nations should be getting more money to support football devlopment

On another issue, Mr Bility thinks the poorer nations are still not getting enough from the much-lauded Goal Project, which awards member associations $250,000 (£157,000) every year, and the Financial Assistance Programme (FAP) which gives out one-off payments of $400,000.

"I want to redefine our partnerships to see how those partnerships will directly benefit member associations.

Africa and Asia particularly have been left behind. 

The Goal Project and the FAP are not enough."

Such a stated aim may well attract interest from Asia and Africa but it is not clear if it will be enough to get him the Fifa presidency.

It is admittedly a long shot but in Mr Bility's mind it is an effort worth taking for the continent's reputation.

 

 

19 Jun 2015
(BBC Africa sport by Piers Edward)

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