Connect with us

AFCON

Yobo teams with Hadji, Cisse and Aurier as Morocco 2025 Draw Assistants

blank

Published

on

blank

BY KUNLE SOLAJA.

One of Nigeria’s most influential players at the Africa Cup of Nations, Joseph Yobo, will be one of the quartet of former footballers who will act as assistants when the final draw for the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations is held this Monday in Rabat.

Yobo, was the first Nigerian to gross 100 international playing appearances.

He played every match and every minute of Nigeria’s successive 22 matches of the Africa Cup of Nations from 2002 to 2008.

No other Nigerian player ever achieved that feat. He was only substituted in the 23rd successive match when he got injured in Nigeria’s second group match against Benin Republic at Angola 2010.

Advertisement

He played his last match for Nigeria on the 20th anniversary of the last match played by Late Stephen Keshi. Both played their last matches on 30 June 2014 and 1994 respectively.

Yobo’s last match was his 10th World Cup match, the duel with France.

Thus, he became Nigeria’s most-capped World Cup player, surpassing the nine appearances by Austin Jay Jay Okocha in 1994,1998 and 2002.

Before then, only three other Nigerians had featured in three World Cup editions – Okocha, Nwankwo Kanu and Vincent Enyeama.

According to a media release by CAF, Yobo, Hadji, Cisse and Aurier will not only pull the balls from the pots but also be on hand to offer their insights into the groups for the tournament.

Advertisement
blank


They are some of the biggest names in the African game and all have a rich history with the AFCON themselves.

MUSTAPHA HADJI (MOROCCO)

Hadji is renowned as one of Morocco’s greatest ever players and was named African Footballer of the Year in 1998. He won 63 caps for his country and scored 12 goals, playing at two FIFA World Cup tournaments.  
He netted the winner for Morocco against Egypt at the 1998 TotalEnergies CAF AFCON, the only team to inflict a defeat on the eventual champions. He also played at the 2000 finals.

He had a successful club career in France, Portugal, Spain and England, and in 2011 received the CAF Legends award for his services to the game.

SERGE AURIER (COTE D’IVOIRE)
Aurier is a two-time winner of the AFCON having lifted the trophy in the 2015 and 2023 editions.

The right-back has been a stalwart of the national team since his debut in 2013 and has 93 caps, scoring four goals.

His club career has taken him to the likes of Paris Saint-Germain and Tottenham Hotspur, and he is a two-time winner of the French Ligue 1.
He had the honour of being named in the CAF Team of the Year on four occasions between 2015 and 2019, showing his incredible consistency for club and country in that period.   

ALIOU CISSE (SENEGAL)
Cisse was captain of Senegal when they excelled at the 2002 FIFA World Cup by reaching the quarter-finals against the odds, and while he failed to lift the AFCON as a player, he later did so as coach of the national team. 

Advertisement

He won 35 caps as an industrious midfielder during a period when he played for Paris Saint-Germain in France, leading Senegal to the 2002 AFCON final where they lost out to Cameroon.

He became head coach of the national team in 2015 and would lead them through a golden period that included lifting the AFCON in 2021, and FIFA World Cup qualifications in 2018 and 2022.  

He was named CAF Coach of the Year at the CAF Awards in 2022.

 Follow the Sports Village Square channel on WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

Advertisement

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.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

AFCON

Super Eagles’ Path to PAMOJA 2027 to Be Unveiled May 19

blank

Published

on

blank

By Kunle Solaja.

Nigeria’s senior national team, the Super Eagles, will discover their route to the 2027 Africa Cup of Nations when the Confederation of African Football (Confederation of African Football) conducts the qualifying draw on May 19, 2026.

This is an exercise that will define the country’s pathway to the historic PAMOJA 2027 tournament.

The draw, coming after the conclusion of the preliminary round, will feature 48 teams, including co-hosts Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. They will be pooled into 12 groups of four teams each. Only the top two teams from each group will progress to the final tournament, setting up what promises to be a fiercely competitive qualification series.

For Nigeria, a three-time African champion and podium finisher in three of the last four editions, the qualification format is familiar, but the stakes are evolving. They will need a good head start to avert the type of tragedy that defined their World Cup 2026 qualification campaign.

Advertisement

The Super Eagles have maintained a strong record in AFCON qualifying campaigns in recent years, yet inconsistency at the tournament proper has raised expectations for not just qualification, but a deeper continental impact.

The six-match qualification series will be spread across three FIFA international windows:

  • * September–October 2026 (Matchdays 1 & 2)
  • * November 2026 (Matchdays 3 & 4)
  • * March 2027 (Matchdays 5 & 6)

This staggered schedule will test squad depth, technical stability, and administrative efficiency, which are areas that have historically influenced Nigeria’s performance as much as on-field quality.

East Africa Return and Logistical Implications

The 2027 tournament will mark AFCON’s return to the East African region for the first time since the 1976 Africa Cup of Nations.

For Nigeria, this introduces a different competitive environment—altitude variations, travel logistics across three host nations, and potentially unfamiliar playing conditions.

Advertisement

The tri-nation hosting model also means that teams must prepare for a geographically dispersed tournament, requiring early planning in scouting, acclimatisation, and logistics—areas where Nigeria has previously faced challenges in major competitions.

CAF is banking on the momentum generated by recent tournaments such as the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations and 2025 Africa Cup of Nations, both of which recorded significant commercial growth, increased sponsorship value, and expanded global broadcast audiences.

For Nigeria, one of Africa’s most marketable football brands, this growth presents both opportunity and pressure. Strong performances by the Super Eagles not only boost national pride but also reinforce Nigeria’s commercial relevance in African football’s evolving ecosystem.

While the May 19 draw will simply allocate opponents on paper, its implications run deeper. A favourable group could ease Nigeria’s passage, but recent AFCON qualifiers have shown that traditional hierarchies are narrowing, with emerging teams increasingly competitive.

For the Super Eagles, the road to PAMOJA 2027 is not just about qualification—it is about reasserting continental dominance in an era where African football is becoming more competitive, more commercial, and more globally visible.

Advertisement

The journey begins with the draw, but for Nigeria, expectations will stretch far beyond simply making the trip to East Africa.

Join the Sports Village Square channel on WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

Continue Reading

AFCON

CAF Sets AFCON 2027 Dates, but FIFA Approval Raises Autonomy Questions

blank

Published

on

blank

By Kunle Solaja.

The Confederation of African Football (Confederation of African Football) has formally unveiled the competition window for the landmark Africa Cup of Nations, tagged PAMOJA 2027, setting the stage for what is shaping up to be one of the most politically and structurally significant tournaments in the competition’s history.

Scheduled to kick off on Saturday, 19 June 2027, with the final fixed for Saturday, 17 July 2027, the tournament marks only the second time the AFCON will be staged in the June–July window. The first was the expanded 24-team edition in the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations, a shift originally designed to align African football with the European off-season calendar and improve player availability.

A Return to June–July: Progress or Persistent Constraint?

While the timing suggests continuity with the 2019 precedent, it also underscores a deeper tension within African football governance. CAF’s confirmation that the dates required approval from the FIFA Council, following a meeting in Vancouver, raises renewed questions about the confederation’s operational autonomy.

Historically, AFCON scheduling has been vulnerable to external pressures, particularly from European clubs and leagues reluctant to release African players mid-season. The June–July calendar was initially seen as a strategic compromise. However, the necessity of FIFA ratification in 2027 signals that CAF’s flagship tournament still operates within a framework heavily influenced by global football politics.

Advertisement

This development may reignite debate about whether CAF is charting an independent course or increasingly aligning its decisions with FIFA’s broader international calendar priorities.

Beyond scheduling, AFCON 2027 represents a structural leap. For the first time, three nations—Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda—will jointly host the tournament.

This tri-nation model, branded “PAMOJA” (Swahili for togetherness), is more than symbolic. It reflects CAF’s attempt to decentralise hosting rights, reduce infrastructural pressure on single nations, and expand the tournament’s commercial and cultural footprint.

With a projected reach of over 400 million people across East Africa, the tournament offers significant opportunities:

  • Market expansion: Opening new commercial corridors in a region historically underrepresented in hosting major football events.
  • Infrastructure development: Accelerated investment in stadiums, transport, and tourism across three countries.
  • Regional integration: Football as a tool for political and economic cooperation within East Africa.

Yet, the model is not without risks. Multi-country hosting introduces logistical complexities—border coordination, security harmonisation, and infrastructure parity—that CAF has not previously managed at this scale.

Waiting for Key Decisions

CAF has deferred the announcement of which cities or countries will host the opening match and final, decisions that will carry both symbolic and economic weight. These choices could influence regional balance and perceptions of equity among the co-hosts.

Advertisement

AFCON 2027 sits at the intersection of ambition and dependency. On one hand, it embodies innovation—a new hosting model and a reaffirmed global calendar alignment. On the other, it highlights lingering structural challenges, particularly CAF’s reliance on FIFA’s approval mechanisms.

As preparations unfold, the success of PAMOJA 2027 will likely be judged not just by the quality of football on display, but by how effectively CAF navigates these competing forces—continental aspiration versus global integration.

In many ways, AFCON 2027 will be a test of whether African football can expand its horizons without compromising its independence.

Join the Sports Village Square channel on WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

Advertisement
Continue Reading

AFCON

Morocco Begin Title Defence as AFCON 2027 Draw Holds May 19

blank

Published

on

blank

By Kunle Solaja.

Defending champions Morocco will take the first formal step in their title defence when the Confederation of African Football (CAF) conducts the draw for the AFCON PAMOJA 2027 qualifiers on May 19, 2026, two days before the 122nd anniversary of the founding of FIFA.

Fresh from their triumph at the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations, the Atlas Lions now face the challenge of sustaining continental dominance as they begin the journey toward the historic East African finals, to be co-hosted by Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda.

As reigning champions, Morocco enter the qualifiers with a target on their back. Their recent rise, bolstered by strong World Cup performances and a deep pool of Europe-based talents, has elevated expectations both at home and across the continent.

But history suggests that defending an AFCON title is rarely straightforward. The qualifying format, which includes 48 teams drawn into 12 groups of four, leaves little margin for complacency. Only the top two teams in each group will progress, meaning even established powers must navigate a potentially tricky six-match campaign.

Advertisement

The qualifiers will unfold across three FIFA international windows:

  • * September–October 2026 (Matchdays 1 & 2)
  • * November 2026 (Matchdays 3 & 4)
  • * March 2027 (Matchdays 5 & 6)

For Morocco, maintaining squad cohesion across these windows will be crucial. With players spread across Europe’s top leagues, managing fatigue, travel, and club-country balance will test the technical crew’s planning and depth.

AFCON 2027 will mark the tournament’s return to East Africa for the first time since the 1976 Africa Cup of Nations. The unique three-country hosting model introduces new logistical variables—ranging from climate and altitude differences to travel across multiple venues.

For Morocco, whose recent success has been built on tactical discipline and structured preparation, early adaptation to these conditions could prove decisive in their title defence.

CAF’s recent tournaments—including the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations and Morocco 2025—have recorded unprecedented commercial success, expanding the global reach of African football.

As defending champions, Morocco stand at the centre of this growth. Their performances will not only shape the competitive narrative of AFCON 2027 but also influence the tournament’s commercial appeal and global visibility.

Advertisement

While the May 19 draw will determine Morocco’s immediate opponents, the broader mission is clear: retain continental supremacy in an increasingly competitive African football landscape.

For the Atlas Lions, the road to PAMOJA 2027 is not merely about securing qualification—it is about proving that their recent triumph was not a peak, but the beginning of sustained dominance.

Join the Sports Village Square channel on WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

Continue Reading

Most Viewed