2015 AFRICA CUP QUALIFIERS - GROUP STAGE - GABON - 5TH MATCHES - PREVIEW

Gabon's Aubameyang to miss qualifier.

14 Nov 2014
2014 AFRICAN FOOTBALLER OF THE YEAR - SHORTLIST REVEALED

The five-man shortlist for the BBC African Footballer of the Year 2014 has been revealed.

13 Nov 2014
NATIONAL TEAM - GHANA - COACH - AVRAM GRANT IN NEGOTIATIONS

The Black Stars have been without a coach since Appiah left the job after the opening two 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers and was replaced by Maxwell Konadu on a temporary basis.

13 Nov 2014
2015 AFRICA CUP QUALIFIERS - GROUP STAGE - IVORY COAST - 5TH MATCHES - PREVIEW

Ivory Coast coach Herve Renard has recalled veterans Kolo Toure and Didier Zokora to his squad for the final 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers. Neither defender has featured for the Elephants in the 2015 qualifiers so far.

11 Nov 2014
2014 African Footballer of the Year - BBC list to be named

On the morning of 10 November, the BBC will unveil the five names in the running for the 2014 prize. The public will then be able to vote online via the BBC Sport pages and via text.

9 Nov 2014
AFRICAN FUTURE FOOTBALL STARS - RISING STARS

On monday the shortlist for the BBC African Footballer of the year 2014 will be revealed. While those five names will be established superstars from the continent, there are also a number of excellent young players coming through the ranks - emerging talent who themselves may soon compete for the title.

9 Nov 2014
2015 AFRICA CUP - MOROCCO FAILS TO MEET DEADLINE

Morocco have failed to meet the deadline to confirm it will host the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations in January.

8 Nov 2014
FRANCE - SAGNOL APOLOGISES FOR HIS COMMENTS ON AFRICAN PLAYERS

Bordeaux coach Willy Sagnol has apologised and explained his comments earlier this week about African players. Senegal's Lamine Sane has backed his coach at Bordeaux Willy Sagnol over the comments.

6 Nov 2014

2025 AFRICA CUP - Final - CAF - Morocco announced as AFCON winner 2025

 
 
Morocco is the winner of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations after the Confederation of African Football (CAF) overturned the result of the final following Senegal's controversial walk-off.
 
Senegal beat Morocco 1:0 in the final on 18 January in a match that was overshadowed when the Senegalese players refused to play after the hosts were awarded a stoppage-time penalty with the match goalless.
 
Following a delay of about 17 minutes, the players did eventually return, and Brahim Diaz's penalty was saved before Senegal's Pape Gueye scored an extra-time winner.
 
However, that result has now been overturned after a decision by an appeal board at African football's governing body.
 
A statement from CAF said Senegal had been "declared to have forfeited the final match" with the "result of the match being recorded as 3:0 in favour" of Morocco.
 
The Senegalese Football Federation said it would appeal against CAF's decision at the Court of Arbitration for Sport, calling it "an unfair, unprecedented and unacceptable decision which brings discredit to African football".
 
The decision follows an appeal by the Moroccan FA (FRMF), which CAF said was "declared admissible in form" and was upheld.
 
CAF added that "through the conduct of its team", Senegal infringed on Article 82 of the regulations of the Africa Cup of Nations and, as a result, Article 84 became applicable.
 
Article 82 states that if a team refuses to play or leaves the ground before the end of regulation time without the referee's authorisation, it will be considered the loser and eliminated from the competition.
 
Article 84 complements this provision, stating that any team that violates Article 82 will be permanently eliminated and will lose the match 3:0.
 
A statement from FRMF said its decision to appeal against the final result was "never intended to challenge the sporting performance of the teams" but was a request for the "application of the competition's regulations".
 
"The federation reaffirms its commitment to respecting the rules, ensuring clarity in the competitive framework, and maintaining stability within African competitions," the FRMF statement added.
 
"It also wishes to commend all the nations that took part in this edition of the AFCON, which has been a major moment for African football."
 
 
 
What happened in the AFCON final?
 
With the scoreline 0:0, referee Jean Jacques Ndala awarded Morocco a penalty in the eighth minute of added time.
 
Ndala was advised by the video assistant referee (VAR) to consult the pitchside monitor and review defender El Hadji Malick Diouf's challenge on Diaz.
 
Senegal head coach Pape Thiaw ushered his team off the field.
 
Former Liverpool striker Sadio Mane stayed on the pitch and tried to encourage his team-mates to finish the game.
 
After a 17-minute delay, Senegal's players did eventually return.
 
Real Madrid forward Diaz took the penalty, but his tame 'Panenka' effort was caught by Senegal keeper Edouard Mendy, who barely had to move, and Ndala immediately blew his whistle for full-time.
 
Villarreal midfielder Gueye then scored the winning goal in the fourth minute of extra time to seal a second triumph in five years for Senegal.
 
In his post-match news conference, Morocco coach Walid Regragui said Senegal's actions were "shameful" and did not "honour Africa". FIFA president Gianni Infantino strongly condemned the "ugly scenes" in a post on Instagram.
 
Thiaw, meanwhile, had his media briefing cancelled after a ruckus broke out in the press room. But in a later post-match interview, he accepted he should not have ordered his team off the field and had reacted "in the heat of the moment".
 
 
 
 
Timothy Abraham
BBC Sport Journalist
 
 
 
18 Mar 2026
afrofootball

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