2015 Africa Cup: dates & venues for Morocco 2015 announced

The final draw for Morocco 2015 will be held in Rabat on 26 November.

28 Apr 2014
2015 Africa Cup - draw is made

Three teams were drawn in each group at Sunday's ceremony. A fourth team will emerge from two more qualifying rounds. 

27 Apr 2014
NATIONAL TEAM - TANZANIA - COACH - Mart Nooij appointed as head coach

Martin Ignatius, popularly known as Mart Nooij, has been named as head coach of Tanzania's national team, the Taifa Stars.

27 Apr 2014
NATIONAL TEAM - RWANDA - COACH - Ratomir Dujkovic on shortlist for Rwanda coach position

Dujkovic, who also took Ghana to the 2006 World Cup, is believed to be in a strong position. 

27 Apr 2014
stars in Europe - Everton may seek to extend Lacina Traore's stay

Everton are open to extending Lacina Traore's loan spell despite the Ivorian's injury-ravaged time at the club since he joined from Monaco.

26 Apr 2014
NATIONAL TEAM - COACHES - Uganda coach Sredojevic targets 2015 Nations Cup finals

Sredojevic is scheduled to name his squad on 30 April and would not be drawn on who he may include. 

25 Apr 2014
NATIONAL TEAM - MOROCCO - COACH - Herve Renard plays down links to position

Sochaux coach Herve Renard has distanced himself from reports he could become the next coach of Morocco.

24 Apr 2014
stars in Europe - Nathan Sinkala keen to stay on at Sochaux

Zambia midfielder Nathan Sinkala hopes to stay at Sochaux beyond the end of his loan from TP Mazembe.

23 Apr 2014
stars in Europe - Ghana midfielder Jordan Ayew is focussed on Sochaux

Jordan Ayew is the son of Ghana great Abedi Pele and has so far won 11 caps and scored two goals for the Black Stars. Ayew has scored three goals for Sochaux since he joined from Marseille on loan in January and knows playing well for his club can only help his chances of getting into the Black Stars' squad for Brazil. 

22 Apr 2014
2015 Africa Cup qualifiers - Mauritania go through to next round

Mauritania coach Patrice Neveu said the tactics he put in place paid off. "We came to get the qualification and we knew we should not defend"

21 Apr 2014

Fifa - Sierra Leone FA executive to remain in power for now

Isha JohansenEmbed from Getty Images

 

The divisions in Sierra Leonean football deepened following Fifa's decision to continue to recognise the existing Sierra Leone Football Association (SLFA) administration, despite its mandate having ended on 3 August.

Fifa says the current SLFA executive committee - led by Isha Johansen - should remain in power until checks are carried out on current and potential SLFA members in order to allow elections for a new executive committee to be held.

"All current and potential SLFA executive committee members, including its President, must undergo integrity checks in line with the Fifa status and Fifa governance regulations," Fifa's director of member associations and development in Africa, Vèron Mosengo-Omba, stated in a letter to Johansen.

"Until these integrity checks are done, we have no alternative but to continue with the current leadership and management of the SLFA in preparation for the general assembly."

Fifa last month postponed the SLFA annual congress until a task force - comprising of representatives from Fifa, the Confederation of African Football (Caf), the SLFA and the Sierra Leone ministry - conducts the relevant checks.

"The first meeting of the Fifa task force will take place in mid-September in Freetown," Mosengo-Omba added.

The SLFA secretary general Christopher Kamara wrote to the SLFA membership a day before Johansen had received Fifa's letter, requesting that the executive committee should still be allowed to govern so as "not to create a power vacuum.

"We cannot disregard the directives of Fifa which will be tantamount to a breach of the status of Fifa, Caf and SLFA resulting to sanctions provided for in these statutes," Kamara wrote.

However, the chairman of aggrieved members of the SLFA, Idrissa Tarawalley refuses to accept the current executive.

"We totally reject Fifa's decision because five out of the nine executive members - including Johansen - have lost legitimacy because their mandate has expired," Tarawalley told BBC Sport.

"The mandates of the other four members remain valid because they were elected as chairmen by their regions in the country to represent them in the executive committee.

"Sierra Leone is a sovereign state and the SLFA is an autonomous body.

Our laws supersede that of Fifa."

"We hereby request the National Sports Council [NSC] and security forces to facilitate the smooth take-over of the official activities of the SLFA by the four regional chairmen and the Fifa appointed moral guarantor or his representatives," added Tarawally.

 

 

7 Aug 2017
(BBC Sport UK)

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