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Two Equatorial Guinea players banned for insulting referee at Africa Cup of Nations

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Two Equatorial Guinea players have been banned for insulting a referee at the Africa Cup of Nations and Burkina Faso captain Bertrand Traore was fined for post-match remarks, the respective football federations said on Wednesday.

Equatorial Guinea captain Carlos Akakpo and midfielder Josete Miranda have each been banned for four games for swearing at referee Messie Nkounou of Congo after their 1-0 loss to Sudan in Casablanca on Sunday, which left them bottom of Group E. Two of the matches have been suspended for a period of one year, the federation said.

The suspensions begin on Wednesday when Equatorial Guinea face Algeria in their last group match in Rabat.

Traore, who plays for Sunderland, was fined $10,000 for “offensive remarks” he made in an interview after Algeria’s 1-0 win over Burkina Faso in Rabat on Sunday.

“It’s a shame, we lost 1-0 to a penalty. I think there was a penalty on me in the very first action of the match,” Traore said. “The referees are ruining the game. And then, at the end, the referee (swear word) me.”

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Traore expressed regret after being charged by the Confederation of African Football, the Burkinabe federation said.

-Reuters

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Kunle Solaja is the author of landmark books on sports and journalism as well as being a multiple award-winning journalist and editor of long standing. He is easily Nigeria’s foremost soccer diarist and Africa's most capped FIFA World Cup journalist, having attended all FIFA World Cup finals from Italia ’90 to Qatar 2022. He was honoured at the Qatar 2022 World Cup by FIFA and AIPS.

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AFCON

Bakambu blames Iberia Airlines for missing luggage

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DR Congo striker Cédric Bakambu has publicly called out Iberia Airlines over the loss of his luggage at the ongoing Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco.

 The Moroccan authorities bear no responsibility for his predicament.

Bakambu, on x (formerly Twitter) revealed that nearly two weeks after arriving in Morocco for the continental tournament, he is still without his personal belongings despite being fully involved in matches and team activities at the Africa Cup of Nations.

The Congolese forward said he had received three separate confirmations from Moroccan authorities that his luggage had been located, yet nothing has been delivered to him.

“I find myself having to compete in the AFCON deprived of all my personal belongings,” Bakambu lamented, describing the situation as frustrating and professionally disruptive at a time when players are expected to be fully focused on performance.

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The striker was emphatic in absolving the host nation of any blame, stating that the issue lies solely with Iberia Airlines, which handled his travel.

Morocco has earned widespread praise for its organisation, infrastructure and logistics at the tournament, with teams and officials commending the host country for smooth operations since the start of the competition.

Bakambu’s comments highlight the often unseen travel and logistical challenges faced by players at major international tournaments, even as the football action continues on the pitch.

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DR Congo fan holds ‘Lumumba pose’ for full AFCON match

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A DR Congo fan known as ‘Lumumba’ stood motionless in the stands for the entire match involving his country and Senegal at the on-going Africa Cup of Nations on Saturday mirroring a statue of the country’s independence leader, Patrice Lumumba.

Michel Kuka Mboladinga, dressed smartly in jacket and tie and looking very like his country’s first Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba, has stood still on top of a makeshift podium at every DR Congo group match in tribute to the politician who was assassinated in 1961.

Nicknamed “Lumumba” because of his tribute act, Kuka Mboladinga sets up his podium in the stands at the start of every game, and raises his arm to strike a pose similar to one held by Lumumba in a statue of him in his country’s capital Kinshasa.

His resolve was tested when DR Congo’s first group game against Benin on December 23 lasted almost 115 minutes due to time added on, but he held his position until the final whistle and will get at least one more chance to do it when his team play Algeria in the next round.

-Reuters

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A Goal with Weight: How Paul Onuachu Etched His Name into Nigeria’s AFCON History

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Paul Onuachu's goal is Nigeria's 150th in the Africa Cup of Nations history since Asuquo Ekpe's goal in 1963.

By Kunle Solaja.

Towering striker Paul Onuachu may not rank among Nigeria’s most prolific forwards by sheer numbers, but when he scores, history often follows.

In Nigeria’s Group C Africa Cup of Nations clash against Uganda national football team on Tuesday evening in Fes, Onuachu rose to meet the moment — and the ball.

His goal was more than just a contribution in a crucial group match. It was his first-ever Africa Cup of Nations goal, and more significantly, it became Nigeria’s 150th goal in the history of the competition.

For a player who has scored just four goals in 27 appearances for the Nigeria national footballteam, the strike carried a familiar Onuachu signature: timing, consequence, and quiet drama.

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Onuachu’s goals for Nigeria have developed a pattern — they arrive when they matter most.

Four years ago, his second international goal came deep into added time against Benin in an AFCON qualifier. That late header sealed a 1–0 victory that did far more than deliver three points. It ended Nigeria’s 497-day winless run, extended the Super Eagles’ unbeaten streak against Benin to 21 matches, and inflicted the Benin Republic’s first home defeat since June 2013.

The timing was ruthless. Scored just seconds before the end of three minutes of added time, it denied Benin a place in the AFCON group stage and stood as one of the latest goals Nigeria have scored in recent international history.

That sense of dramatic punctuality was present again in Fes. Uganda resisted for long spells, but when the opening came, Onuachu — built more like a basketball power forward than a classic striker — provided the decisive touch.

Speed, Shock and a Record in Asaba

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Ironically, the man known for aerial dominance also owns one of the fastest goals in Nigerian football history.

On 26 March 2019, in a friendly match in Asaba, Onuachu stunned Egypt just eight seconds after kick-off. Fans had barely settled into their seats when he unleashed a thunderous strike that decided the match.

The goal ended Nigeria’s 29-year wait for a victory over Egypt and placed Onuachu in the global record books. His strike was recognised as the second-fastest goal in international football, surpassed only by Lukas Podolski, who scored after six seconds for Germany against Ecuador in 2013.

More Than Numbers

Onuachu may never dominate Nigeria’s all-time scoring charts, but his goals continue to carry weight far beyond statistics. From record-breaking speed to last-gasp heartbreakers, and now a landmark AFCON strike against Uganda, each finish seems stitched into a larger story.

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In Fes, his name joined a significant chapter of Nigerian football history — not just as a scorer, but as the man whose boot delivered Nigeria’s 150th Africa Cup of Nations goal. For Paul Onuachu, that is becoming something of a trademark.

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