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AFCON

Super Eagles Renew Madagascar, Guinea-Bissau Rivalry in Tricky AFCON Draw

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By Kunle Solaja.

Nigeria will renew familiar rivalries with Madagascar and Guinea-Bissau, and also with Tanzania, after the Super Eagles were drawn in a potentially tricky Group L of the African qualifiers, while continental heavyweights across the continent face a mixture of political tension, regional derbies and dangerous underdogs on the road to the next major tournament.

The draw, which produced 12 groups spread across the continent, immediately highlighted several intriguing subplots beyond the traditional favourites expected to dominate qualification.

In Group L, three-time African champions Nigeria will confront Madagascar, Tanzania and Guinea-Bissau in what appears, on paper, a favourable section. Yet the Super Eagles have painful memories of Madagascar, who stunned Nigeria 2-0 at the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations in Egypt, while Guinea-Bissau have become increasingly competitive in recent years.

Both Nigeria and Guinea-Bissau were in the same qualifying group for the 2023 edition, with Guinea-Bissau stunning the Super Eagles with a 1-0 defeat in Abuja, and it took a penalty kick for Nigeria to avenge the defeat a week later in Bissau.

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When both met again in the final competition two years ago, Cote d’Ivoire and Nigeria only profited from an own goal to overcome the slippery Guinea-Bissau.

Tanzania, boosted by regular continental exposure, could also prove difficult opponents, especially at home. The last time both teams met at the 2017 qualifiers, they played goalless in Dar-es-Salaam while Nigeria scraped a 1-0 win in Uyo in what was Gernot Rohr’s first outing with Nigeria.

The group nevertheless offers Nigeria an opportunity to reassert continental authority after inconsistent qualification campaigns in recent years. Much may depend on whether the Super Eagles can avoid the away-day struggles that have often complicated seemingly straightforward African qualifying fixtures.

Defending African champions Morocco national football team headline Group A alongside Gabon, Niger and Lesotho. Morocco will be overwhelming favourites, particularly after their historic FIFA World Cup semi-final run elevated expectations around the Atlas Lions. However, Gabon’s experience and the physical difficulty of away matches in Central Africa could still provide occasional resistance.

Group C has emerged as one of the draw’s most explosive sections, pitting the continental giants Côte d’Ivoire national football team against the Ghana national football team. The rivalry between the West African neighbours has produced some of Africa’s fiercest modern contests, and with Gambia and Somalia also involved, every dropped point could become decisive.

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Another heavyweight confrontation lies in Group D where the South Africa national football team face Guinea, Kenya and Eritrea. South Africa’s growing confidence under recent rebuilding efforts will be tested by a Guinea side blessed with technical quality and physical strength.

Group G may prove one of the most unpredictable. The Cameroon national football team must navigate encounters with Comoros, Namibia and Congo. Cameroon’s pedigree makes them favourites, but Comoros are no longer continental newcomers after their impressive AFCON rise, while Namibia continue to show tactical discipline and organisation.

The North African powers also received challenging assignments. Tunisia national football team were paired with Uganda, Libya and Botswana in Group H, while Algeria national football team will battle Zambia, Togo and Burundi in Group I. Zambia’s resurgence could make that section one of the most competitive in the draw.

Perhaps the toughest-looking group overall is Group J, where African champions Senegal national football team meet Mozambique, Sudan and Ethiopia. Sudan’s recent rise on the continental stage and Ethiopia’s difficult home conditions mean Senegal cannot afford complacency.

Elsewhere, Egypt headlines Group B against Angola, Malawi and South Sudan, while Mali, Cape Verde, Rwanda and Liberia make up an evenly balanced Group K that could produce surprise outcomes.

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Beyond the football itself, the draw again underlines Africa’s growing competitive depth. Smaller nations that were once regarded as mere participants — including Comoros, Botswana, Namibia and Madagascar — now possess the structure and tactical organisation capable of disrupting established powers.

The qualification campaign is therefore unlikely to be a straightforward procession for Africa’s traditional giants. Instead, it promises another chapter in the continent’s increasingly unpredictable football evolution, where reputation alone no longer guarantees safe passage.

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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.

AFCON

No Room for Error as Nigeria Draw Tanzania in Tricky Qualification Race

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Guinea-Bissau have emerged as one of Nigeria’s most stubborn recent opponents, defeating the Super Eagles 1-0 in Abuja during the AFCON qualifiers;  Nigeria had to depend on the lottery of a penalty kick goal to win the return leg in Bissau, and later profited from an own goal at the 2023 AFCON in Abidjan.

By Kunle Solaja.

Nigeria’s path to qualification may look comfortable on paper after the Super Eagles were drawn alongside Madagascar, Tanzania and Guinea-Bissau in Group L, but the structure of the campaign means there will be little room for error, especially against Tanzania, the only direct rival likely to challenge for the group’s sole automatic ticket.

With qualification effectively rewarding only group winners, the Super Eagles cannot afford the kind of inconsistency that has complicated several recent African qualifying campaigns. Finishing second could prove fatal, particularly if another nation outside the East African zone tops the group ahead of Tanzania, shutting the door on any secondary qualification route.

That reality immediately places enormous importance on Nigeria’s two matches against Tanzania, widely seen as the Super Eagles’ principal challengers in the group.

While Madagascar and Guinea-Bissau are capable of causing occasional upsets, Tanzania arrive with growing continental credibility after regular appearances at major African tournaments and a rapidly improving domestic football structure. Their physical style, combined with the difficulty of playing in East Africa, could turn the group into a tense two-horse race.

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For Nigeria, the danger lies not necessarily in losing outright but in dropping avoidable points away from home, a recurring weakness that has hurt the Super Eagles in past qualification series. Draws against supposedly smaller teams have often transformed straightforward groups into nerve-racking campaigns.

The memory of Nigeria’s shock 2-0 defeat to Madagascar at the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations also serves as a warning against complacency. Guinea-Bissau, meanwhile, have evolved into a stubborn opponent capable of frustrating more fancied sides.

Yet the bigger concern for Nigerian football followers is the absence of a safety net.

Unlike previous qualification formats where strong runners-up still had a realistic pathway, this arrangement leaves little margin for recovery if Tanzania establish early momentum. A single defeat in Dar es Salaam or dropped home points in Uyo could suddenly place Nigeria in a difficult chasing position.

The draw, therefore, places immediate pressure on the Super Eagles to approach the campaign with urgency rather than reputation.

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Elsewhere across the continent, several heavyweight clashes emerged from the draw, including the blockbuster Group C showdown between the Côte d’Ivoire national football team and Ghana, while Cameroon face a potentially awkward Group G containing Comoros, Namibia and Congo.

African champions Senegal national football team also face a challenging route in Group J against Mozambique, Sudan and Ethiopia.

But from a Nigerian perspective, the mathematics are brutally simple: top the group or risk watching another major tournament from the sidelines.

And in a continent where away fixtures are increasingly unpredictable, even a seemingly manageable draw offers no guarantees.

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AFCON

AFCON 2027 Draw Throws Up Heavyweight Clashes and Regional Rivalries

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By Kunle Solaja.

African football heavyweights were handed a mixture of favourable draws and dangerous rivalries after the 2027 Africa Cup of Nations qualifying series was unveiled in Cairo on Tuesday ahead of next year’s historic finals in East Africa.

The qualification campaign, which will determine the 24 teams heading to Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda from June 19 to July 17 next year, produced several blockbuster groups, regional rivalries and tricky qualification scenarios involving the three co-host nations.

The standout clash emerged in Group C, where defending champions Côte d’Ivoire national football team were paired with arch-rivals Ghana national football team alongside Gambia and Somalia in what many observers immediately identified as the toughest section of the draw.

The rivalry between Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana has produced some of African football’s most memorable contests over the decades, and both countries are expected to engage in another fierce battle for supremacy.

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African champions Senegal national football team were drawn in Group J with Mozambique, Sudan and Ethiopia, while 2022 World Cup semi-finalists Morocco national football team headline Group A against Gabon, Niger and Lesotho.

Seven-time African champions Egypt will face Angola, Malawi and South Sudan in Group B, while the Cameroon national football team were handed a potentially awkward Group G containing Comoros, Namibia and Congo.

Comoros, once regarded as minnows, have developed into one of Africa’s fastest-rising football nations following their recent Africa Cup of Nations breakthroughs, making Cameroon’s route less straightforward than it appears on paper.

Group I could also produce intense competition as Algeria national football team takes on Zambia, Togo and Burundi, while Group K, involving Mali, Cape Verde, Rwanda and Liberia, appears one of the most evenly balanced sections in the qualifiers.

Nigeria were drawn in Group L with Madagascar, Tanzania and Guinea-Bissau, reviving memories of Madagascar’s shock victory over the Super Eagles at the 2019 AFCON finals in Egypt.

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However, the qualification format for Groups D, H and L introduces a special dimension because Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania are already guaranteed places at the finals as co-hosts.

In those three groups, only the highest-placed team, excluding the co-host nation, will qualify automatically for the tournament.

That arrangement affects Group D, involving Kenya, the South Africa national football team, Guinea and Eritrea; Group H containing Uganda, Tunisia national football team, Libya and Botswana; and Group L featuring Tanzania alongside Nigeria, Madagascar and Guinea-Bissau.

The qualification campaign will be played across three international windows, beginning from September 21 to October 6 this year. The second round of fixtures will take place from November 9 to 17 before the final series of matches between March 22 and 30 next year.

Each national team will play two matches during every qualifying window.

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At the end of the series, the top two teams from each group will normally advance to the finals, except in the three groups involving host nations, where the best-performing side apart from the automatic qualifiers will progress.

The 2027 tournament will mark a landmark moment for African football as Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda become the first East African nations to jointly host the continent’s biggest football championship.

The finals are expected to showcase the growing football infrastructure and commercial ambitions of the East African region while also expanding AFCON’s footprint across new territories on the continent.

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AFCON

Morocco Handed Comfortable AFCON 2027 Qualification Draw

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By Kunle Solaja.

Defending African champions Morocco national football team were handed a favourable route to the 2027 Africa Cup of Nations after Tuesday’s qualifying draw in Cairo placed the Atlas Lions in Group A alongside Gabon, Niger and Lesotho.

Morocco, still riding on the momentum of their historic FIFA World Cup semi-final achievement and recent continental resurgence, are expected to dominate the section as they begin preparations for another attempt to extend their growing influence in African football.

The North Africans will enter the qualifiers as one of the continent’s strongest sides, with coach Walid Regragui expected to use the campaign not only to secure qualification but also to further strengthen a squad many observers already regard as Africa’s benchmark.

Although Gabon possess enough experience to pose occasional resistance, particularly at home, Morocco are overwhelming favourites to top the group comfortably. Niger and Lesotho are widely viewed as outsiders in a section where the Atlas Lions’ superior depth, technical quality and international experience should prove decisive.

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The draw, conducted in Cairo on Tuesday, produced several heavyweight clashes elsewhere across the continent ahead of the finals scheduled to take place in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda from June 19 to July 17 next year.

The biggest headline matchup came in Group C, where defending AFCON champions Côte d’Ivoire national football team were paired with fierce rivals Ghana national football team alongside Gambia and Somalia in what is widely considered the toughest section of the qualifiers.

African champions Senegal national football team were drawn against Mozambique, Sudan and Ethiopia in Group J, while Cameroon national football team face Comoros, Namibia and Congo in a potentially tricky Group G.

Seven-time African champions Egypt will battle Angola, Malawi and South Sudan in Group B, while Algeria’s national football team must negotiate a difficult Group I featuring Zambia, Togo and Burundi.

Morocco’s relatively smooth draw immediately reinforced growing expectations that the Atlas Lions could arrive at the 2027 finals not only as qualifiers but as one of the tournament favourites.

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The qualification structure also creates unique scenarios in three groups involving co-host nations Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, who automatically qualify for the finals.

As a result, only the highest-placed team apart from the hosts will progress from Groups D, H and L. This affects Group D containing Kenya, South Africa, Guinea and Eritrea; Group H involving Uganda, Tunisia, Libya and Botswana; and Group L where Nigeria face Madagascar, Tanzania and Guinea-Bissau.

The qualification campaign will be played across three international windows, beginning from September 21 to October 6 this year, followed by matches from November 9 to 17 before concluding between March 22 and 30 next year.

Each country will play two qualifying matches during every international window.

For Morocco, however, the focus will be less about simply qualifying and more about maintaining the consistency and authority that have transformed the Atlas Lions into one of Africa’s most admired football projects ahead of another continental title challenge.

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