2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP C - DAY 07 - Morocco VS Togo 3:1

Day 07 - 14th match - Morocco wins against Togo

20 Jan 2017
STARS IN ASIA - TRANSFERS - CLUBS - Africans will continue to move to China - Bertrand Traore

Chinese clubs have been investing heavily in foreign talent

20 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP B - DAY 06 - ALGERIA VS TUNISIA 1:2

Day 06 - 11th match - Tunisia boosted their chances

19 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP B - DAY 06 - SENEGAL VS ZIMBABWE 2:0

Day 06 - 12th match - Senegal beats Zimbabwe. 

19 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP A - DAY 05 - GABON VS BURKINA FASO 1:1

Day 05 - 9th match -  Aubameyang scored his second goal

18 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP A - DAY 05 - CAMEROON VS GUINEA-BISSAU 2:1

Day 05 - 10th match - Cameroon beats Guinea-Bissau

18 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP D - DAY 04 - GHANA VS UGANDA 1:0

Day 04 - 7th match - Ghana make winning start against Uganda.

17 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP D - DAY 04 - MALI VS EGYPT 0:0

Day 04 - 8th match - Egypt goalkeeper became the oldest player

17 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP C - DAY 03 - Ivory Coast vs Togo 0:0

Day 03 - 5th match - Ivory Coast and Togo drew 0:0 

16 Jan 2017
2017 AFRICA CUP - GROUP C - DAY 03 - DR Congo VS Morocco 1:0

Day 03 - 6th match - DR Congo hold on to beat Morocco

16 Jan 2017

National Leagues - Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa join World Association of Leagues

Tokyo Sexwale

 

Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa have joined a group of professional leagues to create a World Association of Leagues following a meeting in Paris on Tuesday.

The trio join 20 other leagues, including the English, French and Spanish top flights, with the intention of working alongside football's world governing body, Fifa.

Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) chairman Shehu Dikko believes there are exciting times ahead.

"There's a general consensus that the leagues are a fundamental part of football, obviously the clubs, players and referees are all from the leagues," Dikko told BBC Sport.

French Professional Football League (LFP) president Frederic Thiriez announced that the new association will come into effect in January.

It will only feature leagues who are independently run by bodies separate from their national football federations.
Dikko believes that the new body should have a hand in the ongoing reforms in Fifa.

"The leagues control 90% of football, therefore whatever decisions and reforms are going on in world football, the professional leagues want to participate in the rebuilding of Fifa and football institutions," he added.

"This gives us a chance to speak with a single voice on issues of common concern and from what we've seen here, it is clearly exciting times ahead for football going forward."

The second World Leagues Forum in Paris was attended by four of the five candidates in the running to take over the Fifa presidency from suspended incumbent Sepp Blatter.

The four Fifa candidates present in Paris:

• South African business tycoon Tokyo Sexwale
• Prince Ali bin Al Hussein of Jordan
• ex-French diplomat Jerome Champagne 
• Asia's football boss Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa 

Only Uefa's general secretary, Gianni Infantino, did not attend the forum.

"As Africans and being part of this powerful group, we would love to see a Fifa where the league forum is a key stakeholder and decision maker in what is happening there," Dikko added.

"The five Fifa presidential hopefuls now understand that there must be a good working relationship between the league forum and Fifa at world level, the league and confederations at continental level.

"We are hopefully going to see a new structure of world football that will give the game a beautiful face again."

Kenya Premier League chief executive officer, Jack Oguda, says that beyond building a working relationship between the leagues, African countries will benefit immensely from the strong steps taken in Paris.

Oguda told BBC Sport: "The opportunity [to have a united body] is great. 

Imagine the world leagues coming together to discuss a sole solution to synchronising our leagues for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

"The first forum in London gave us an insight into the challenges that other leagues face.

"What we have seen here in Paris is a great platform to make the game more beautiful than what it has been in the last few months.

"Africans cannot afford to simply sit back but play a significant role in world football. 

We are all happy with the steps taken and the doors this gathering will open for football on the continent."

 

Fifa presidential candidate Tokyo Sexwale on the forum in Paris:
The meeting was good for football and for all of us [Fifa presidential candidates] hoping to change the face of Fifa. Without the leagues there is no football and the people here are managing football daily in their countries, so they come with a wealth of experience.

2 Dec 2015
(BBC Sport, Paris by Oluwashina Okeleji)

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