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Home > Blogs > From Ghana: Africa Cup of Nations 2008

The next step for the eliminated quarter-finalists

Tuesday, 05 February 08, 11:20 AM

We look at how the four latest teams to depart the Africa Cup of Nations performed and their prospects of heading to Angola 2010 and the World Cup in South Africa around six months later.

Nigeria (lost 2-1 to Ghana)

Manager Berti Vogts has been the most under-fire boss of any at this Cup of Nations and is the key to Nigeria’s next step.

Sunday Oliseh is already putting pressure on for the job according to the BBC, while Nigeria’s ruthless press were highly critical of German Vogts both during and after the tournament.

So much so that his dark past as manager of Scotland rated a frequent mention as the Super Eagle scribes bemoaned his alleged destruction of a talented line-up.

Opening the tournament with two scoreless games meant Nigeria never really had the right combination up front.

After scraping past Benin they still lacked the cutting edge up forward after John Mensah was sent off for Ghana and Nigeria held the man advantage.

Whether a new manager decides to discard the veteran names in the team could shape Nigeria’s future.

World Cup qualification prospects:

Nigeria should stroll through to the second group stage of qualifying as it is paired with South Africa in group 4.

It means the Super Eagles only need to beat Equatorial Guinea and Sierra Leone to ensure progression to the next stage of qualifying.

However the group should not be taken lightly – the immediate step up in difficulty in the four-team, only-top qualifies second stage will pit Nigeria against the big guns.

With a team unity rebuilt, Nigeria easily has the talent to qualify for the World Cup, but leadership and a clear strategy is needed at the top.

Guinea (lost 5-0 to Ivory Coast)

Guinea’s embarrassing exit from the Cup of Nations will overshadow its fighting performance against Ghana and win over Morocco.

Pascal Feindouno is essential to any hope Guinea has of scoring goals and the rest of the team showed no indication that the skipper is anything other than a once-in-a-generation player.

While Ivory Coast was expected to win comfortably, the worst result for Guinea was arguably the draw with Namibia.

World Cup qualification prospects:

If anything because of the momentum it will give Namibia ahead of playing the Guineans again in World Cup and African Nations qualifying for 2010.

Guinea is pitted against Zimbabwe, Namibia and Kenya in a group looking destined for evenness.

As only eight of the 11 best second-placed teams go through, Guinea may well need to win the group to see the next group stage.

Guinea starts at home to Zimbabwe and is away to Kenya a week later.

Make it through this group and Guinea will do well to finish in the top three of the next stage of qualifying and go to Angola in 2010.

Don’t consider them any chance to make it to South Africa.

Angola (lost 2-1 to Egypt)

Angola was the statistical surprise packet of the tournament but will still feel unlucky to have gone home at the quarter-final stage.

The Palancas Negras had never won a game in Cup of Nations competition or made the knock-out stages, so in many ways this was a tournament of achievement.

But the team on the park has every right to leave disappointed and feeling it could have gone further.

Manucho was the stand-out for Angola, with him in this form at the 2006 World Cup Angola could well have made it out of their group.

Now his high-profile move to Manchester United (via Panathinaikos initially) could be the development he needs to become world class.

World Cup qualification prospects:

Angola is automatically qualified to host the 2010 Cup of Nations as host, but unlike Egypt in 2006 will want a World Cup to look forward too as well.

Getting there should not prove too difficult for Angola provided its organised defence sees off Uganda, Niger and Benin in the first group stage.

How close it goes to the elusive top spot (of four) at the next stage of qualifying to get a spot in South Africa depends largely on how much improvement is left in Manucho.

The better he gets, the more attention he will command to free up the likes of Flavio and Ze Kalanga – the players that along with Akwa got Angola to Germany 2006 – in order to provide multiple goal-scoring threats.

Tunisia (lost 3-2 to Cameroon)

The writing was on the wall for Tunisia after it scraped qualification for Ghana after losing to Sudan.

Improve the backline or face more embarrassment and frustration with the leaking of goals.

Sure enough, the Tunisians could not clamp down on Senegal, let in a soft consolation against South Africa and blew all the momentum it took into extra-time as Cameroon scored against the run of play.

Roger Lemerre has spent what is considered a lifetime at one African team (six years) with Tunisia, and the Frenchman may have reached the end of his tether.

But while speculation over his future remains dormant, how he rebuilds his backline with or without Radhi Jaidi will be the key to the Carthage Eagles’ future.

World Cup qualification prospects:

Tunisia’s fantastic record of qualifying for World Cups may at last be in jeopardy as the stakes are raised for South Africa 2010.

Burkina Faso, Burundi and Seychelles will not provide any stern opposition in the first group stage, but the second group stage will have the Tunisians scrambling.

Sort the groups geographically and the Tunisians will likely be facing familiar rivals Morocco and Algeria in order to qualify.

But if the groups are drawn randomly then a poor record away from home against the bigger nations of central Africa may prove Tunisia’s downfall.

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Ivorians in power performance

Sunday, 03 February 08, 04:32 PM

Ivory Coast blitzed Guinea late in the second half to win 5-0 and book an African Cup of Nations semi-final berth in Sekondi tonight.

Salomon Kalou struck a double for the Ivorians while Dider Drogba and Bakary Kone scored either side as four goals hit the net in 16 minutes.

Leading 1-0 at half time courtesy of a wonder-strike from Abdulkader Keita, the Elephants appeared to be cruising after the break as Guinea worked with a few half-chances.

With Pascal Feindouno in the stands suspended it was a lack of quality in the Guinea forward half that denied it a cutting edge.

And with Dianbobo Balde also out of the Guinea team, Ivory Coast met little resistance when it flicked the switch late in the second half.

The trigger point for the four-goal barrage was a glaring miss from Arouna Dindane in the 68th minute after a perfect through-ball from Yaya Toure allowed the winger to round Guinea goalkeeper Kemoko Camara.

Dindane shot into the side-netting, but it proved the last mistake of the match from a clinical Ivory Coast team.

Dider Drogba made it 2-0 on 70 minutes as he muscled around Kamil Zayatte and slotted past Camara.

Three minutes later Salomon Kalou's superior pace saw him dribble Camara and tap the ball easily into the empty net.

Yaya Toure then produced his own burst of speed down the left flank to tee up an unmarked Kalou in the six-yard box.

And the rout was complete when Kalou was given all the time in the world to tee up substitute Bakary Kone, who picked his spot and fired home a rocket from the edge of the area in the 86th minute.

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In the stadium - Night five in Accra

Thursday, 24 January 08, 03:46 PM

After a see-sawing game between Guinea and Morocco fed the appetite of the Accra crowd tonight one could only feel disappointed with the offering of the home team.

 

Instead of cheering in goals against Namibia, it was a subdued second half from the home fans – at least in context with the explosion of noise that was the second half of the Guinea game and the first half of the main event.

 

But that was not to take away from the electric atmosphere in which the game started as the crowd roared as one.

 

A lone hand in the crowd thrust a lighter to the sky and shot a flame into the Accra night, literally an ignition of the passion on show.

The stadium was set up with an interesting contrast as the organized fan groups sat at one end and the crazier and more individual fans – our man with the lighter included – sat at the other.

 But there was no division among the group in its willingness to cheer on the Black Stars.  

The Guinea-Morocco game whetted the appetite for the home team, with the building crowd willing to offer its support to Guinea.

 

But at 3-1 and the game looking reasonably safe a Mexican wave soon took over.

 

Ghana afforded Namibia space in its match but it was by no means an open game.

 

As the humidity descended on the pitch the game slowed considerably.

 

It was far cry from the firm ground and hectic opening half of Guinea and Morocco.

 

But by the end of the night victory is what mattered to the fans.

 

Sent home happy enough that its national heroes need just a draw against Morocco to guarantee progression to the knock-out stages of the competition.

  

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Guinea great but hero Feindouno sees red

Thursday, 24 January 08, 12:57 PM

Guinea is a win over whipping-boy Namibia away from qualifying for the knockout stages of the African Cup of Nations after a thrilling 3-2 victory over Morocco.

But inspirational captain and difference-maker in tonight's match Pascal Feindouno looks set to miss at least one match after being sent off for a behind the play clash with Elamin Erbate.

Feindouno opened the scoring from a free-kick that left the Morocco backline flat-footed in the 11th minute before assisting Ismail Bangoura for 2-0 early in the second half and scoring a penalty soon after.

But despite his brilliant work as Guinea's creative attacking force it was his landing on Erbate in the 67th minute as the two came down from an aerial clash that ended his match prematurely.

With a man advantage Morocco far from layed seige to the Guinea goal but did almost steal a draw to keep itself in the box seat to qualify.

From kick-off after going 2-0 down substitute Hicham Aboucherouane curled in a perfectly placed shot to keep Morocco in the game.

But just another minute later it was Soulemayne Youla deceiving Michael Basser on the edge of the Moroccan penalty area to win his side a spot kick. 

Feindouno duly converted, beating Naby Diarso mid-way up the right side of the goal after the Morocco keeper guessed the right way.

Abdeslam Ouaddou pulled back a late goal with an unmarked header on 90 minutes for Morocco but three minutes of stoppage time was not enough and a jubilant Guinea team flooded the field on the final whistle.

Stay turned to OleOle for pictures and video from the match.

Teo Pellizzeri, Accra Stadium 

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