2013 Africa Cup of Nations

Who will win the Cup?

  • Côte d'Ivoire

    Votes: 6 75.0%
  • Algeria

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Mali

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Ghana

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Zambia

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Nigeria

    Votes: 1 12.5%
  • Tunisia

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Cape Verde

    Votes: 1 12.5%
  • Morocco

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Togo, Angola, South Africa, Burkina Faso, Niger, Congo DR, Ethiopia

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    8
  • Poll closed .

nightwanker

Proud first owner of FreeOnes Playing Cards
Group A: South Africa, Angola, Morocco, Cape Verde

Group B: Ghana, Mali, Niger, Congo DR

Group C: Zambia, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia

Group D: Côte d'Ivoire, Tunisia, Algeria, Togo

Not qualified: Libya, Gabon, Egypt, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Senegal ...



http://www.cafonline.com/competition/african-cup-of-nations_2013
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_Africa_Cup_of_Nations
2012: http://board.freeones.com/showthread.php?578643-2012-Africa-Cup-of-Nations


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http://board.freeones.com/showthread.php?571555
 
Holders Zambia crash out after draw

A solid, defensive performance from Burkina Faso held at bay all that an increasingly desperate Zambia could throw at them and, combined with Nigeria's win over Ethiopia in Rustenburg, means Zambia will play no further part in the tournament.
They are the first holders to be eliminated at the first stage since Algeria in 1992.
Burkina Faso, outsiders coming into the tournament, now play either Togo or Tunisia in the quarter-finals on Sunday, ensuring at least one outsider in next week's semi-finals.
"We believed we could go further in this. It's a night of history for Burkina Faso," said coach Paul Putt. It is the first time since 1998, and only the second time ever, that they have reached the last eight.
"We had double motivation being close to qualification and playing against the champions. I told the players this chance might never come again," the Belgian-born coach added.
Zambia will rue missing their only real chance of the game in the 17th minute when Collins Mbesuma shot straight at the goalkeeper in a rare breach of the Burkinabe defence.
A cross from Chisamba Lungu set up Mbesuma right in front of goal but his shot went straight to Daouda Diakite.
They dominated most of the game and virtually camped in the Burkina Faso half in the second half, throwing their centre backs into centre forward positions for the final 10 minutes.
But the defence held firm and Burkina might have sneaked a goal in the last minute on the counter-attack when Jonathan Pitroipa just missed stretching home a cross from Charles Kabore.
Burkina Faso did suffer one setback with an early injury to Alain Traore, top scorer at the tournament, who went off with a knee injury in the 11th minute.
 
Referee shocker mars Togo progress as Tunisia exit

African Cup of Nations Group D, Mbombela Stadium – Togo 1 (Gakpe 13) Tunisia 1 (Mouelhi 31 pen).
Togo took the lead through a Serge Gakpe goal that looked suspiciously offside, with Tunisia equalising through a soft penalty conceded by Dare Nibombe.
Both sides had clear spot-kicks waved away in the second half, and Togo’s claim would have seen Tunisia goalkeeper Moez Ben Cherifia dismissed as he clobbered last man Emmanuel Adebayor.
Referee Daniel Bennett referee then controversially awarded Tunisia a penalty, also conceded by Nibombe - who had earlier been booked for someone else’s foul but not carded for either spot-kick- although Khaled Mouelhi missed that one.
Nibombe will miss the quarter-finals unless Togo appeal, which in turn would see Serge Akakpo suspended, but the West Africans did not care as they rode a frantic five minutes of injury time to hang on for the draw.
It was an extraordinary match by any standard, although played on a poor pitch.
Needing victory due to inferior goal difference, Tunisia defended with a high line, which caused problems throughout, as Togo sat deep and looked for the break.
Togo missed early chances when Floyd Ayite was denied by Khalil Chemmam, while Emmanuel Adebayor twice put wide.
They went ahead on 13 minutes as Tunisia failed to deal with a straight pass from Adebayor, Gakpe exploiting the high line to finish low past Ben Cherifia, although he looked offside.
Tunisia regained their composure midway through the first half, dominating passing and drawing level from the spot just after the half-hour mark.
The penalty was soft at best, Nibombe adjudged to have manhandled Walid Hichri at a corner. The finish was contentious too, Mouelhi stopping his run-up before rolling the ball home.
From that point Tunisia looked more dangerous, the lively Saber Khelifa denied a penalty when the turf prematurely ended his mazy run and the ball bounced up on to Akakpo’s arm. It would have been harsher than the previous spot-kick, and the referee turned away.
The second half continued with Tunisia in charge, and Bennett failed to award a clearer penalty when Oussama Darragi was chopped down by a wild hack from Vincent Bossou. He was well placed but the man in black waved play on.
Then Togo were denied a penalty of their own which, while not as clear as the one Tunisia had just seen rejected, was as awardable as the spot-kick that had been given. This time Adebayor got the better of Hichri, who did lay hands on the Spurs man, who in turn went down very easily.
As the half progressed, Tunisia’s line moved higher, mindful of the need to score. Togo were finding space again and should have gone ahead when Komlan Amewou kicked air after a brilliant run and pass from Adebayor.
Adebayor hit the angle of post and bar with a flying header, and two minutes later he was brought down by Ben Cherifia after racing one-on-one with the Esperance keeper.
Everyone thought it was a penalty as Tunisia surrounded Bennett but, inexplicably, he pointed for a corner, even though Ben Cherifia was nowhere near the ball when he flew straight into Adebayor.
Just to rub it in, five minutes later Tunisia were awarded a second penalty.
It was not even ironic that this one should have been the least awardable of the half-dozen claims – indeed, it appeared to be a dive by Khelifa – and there was little surprise that Nibombe, giving away his second penalty of the match, was not booked for the foul. Had he been carded, he would have been sent off, having been earlier shown a yellow for a foul committed by Akakpo.
In the confusion, keeper Kodji Agassa was booked, but he was delighted seconds later when Mouelhi put the spot-kick against the post.
Tunisia threw men forward, the introduction of young substitute Fakhreddine Ben Youssef causing problems. He was denied by a fantastic one-on-one save from the inspired Agassa, who flew out to block another finish from the youngster after a goalmouth scramble followed the corner.
Somehow Togo held on, to move into the last eight with delirious celebrations as Tunisia consoled the weeping Mouelhi.
Bennett, meanwhile, is likely to be culled for the remainder of the tournament, with Egyptian referee Ghaed Greisha having been sent home for lesser failures; fortunately this South African ref will have a shorter distance home.
 

nightwanker

Proud first owner of FreeOnes Playing Cards
Today wil bring the first two Quarter-finals.

South Africa v Mali
Ghana v Cape Verde

Tomorrow will follow

Côte d'Ivoire v Nigeria
Burkina Faso v Togo

I expect Côte d'Ivoire and Nigeria to be the match of the quarters, judging by renown and tradition.
Burkina Faso and Togo might be a game on eye level and therefore gripping!
South Africa, with support of the host, against a lately strong Mali, last years third! Also interesting.
Finally Ghana versus Cape Verde... The latter came out of nowhere for me. Will there be more surprise from that?
I can't help but root for Ghana, for knowing them from past tournaments.
 
Wakaso puts Ghana in semis as Cape Verde bow out

African Cup of Nations quarter-final, Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium – Ghana 2 (Wakaso 54 pen, 90+5) Cape Verde Islands 0.

A second-half brace from Mubarak Wakaso gave Ghana a 2-0 victory over minnows Cape Verde in the quarter-finals of the African Cup of Nations at Port Elizabeth.
After a terrible first half, tournament debutants Cape Verde dominated the second period but second-half substitute Wakaso converted a penalty and scored again in the dying seconds after the opposition goalkeeper went up front.
Cape Verde had spurned countless opportunities to equalise, a combination of poor luck, poor finishing and excellent keeping from the faultless Abdul Dauda keeping them at bay.
Indeed, seconds before Wakaso completed his double, Dauda had made a fantastic flying stop to deny dangerman Heldon a long-range screamer: it was from the corner that Ghana put the gloss on an unconvincing victory.
Four-times winners Ghana, favourites alongside Ivory Coast, march into the last four but will have to improve on this showing if they are to win a first title in three decades.
The first half was more notable for a series of feigned injuries than for any decent play from either side.
Cape Verde had set their stall to defend, which they did well enough, while Ghana were predictable going forward, looking too often for high balls to Asamoah Gyan that the likes of Nivaldo and Nando gobbled up.
The closest anyone came to a chance – let alone a goal – were a couple of long-range Heldon efforts that the Maritimo forward hit over the bar, while Ghana’s best efforts were crosses from Christian Atsu that just failed to find their targets.
It could only improve, and the second half saw Cape Verde start positively as Julio Tavares saw his towering header saved by Dauda.
They were threatening from set pieces but managed to concede immediately after one as Ghana exploited their big men’s attempts to get back in position after going up for that free-kick.
Gyan had found the space to run through on to a long ball, and he drew a clumsy foul from right-back Carlitos, the cousin of Manchester United star Nani conceding the penalty.
Wakaso, only just on, rolled the ball down the middle and Ghana had a barely deserved lead.
Cape Verde continued with their new attacking mindset and, having been unfortunate to go behind, were equally unlucky not to equalise as they rained balls into the Ghana box, with the at-times shambolic Black Stars defence struggling to cope with set pieces.
Babanco and Heldon were sending in superb free-kicks and corners which kept dropping agonisingly short of team-mates as Dauda and co flapped wildly under pressure from the likes of Tavares, Nivaldo and Neves.
There were chances from open play too, as Dauda kept out a Heldon effort, Toni Varela kicked air in the box and Dauda saved superbly from both Heldon and sub Djaniny.
Ghana were more concerned with defending their lead than feeding off the scraps Gyan and Wakaso were given, and it was desperate at times as they somehow escaped punishment for some slack marking and wild clearances.
The final minutes saw the Black Stars begin to exploit the spaces left by an over-committal Cape Verde attack, as Emmanuel Ageymang-Badu’s goal-bound finish was blocked by Nivaldo, with Nando doing likewise to keep out a Solomon Asante effort.
Cape Verde were agonisingly close to forcing extra time when, in the fourth minute of added time, a Heldon free-kick forced a world-class save from Dauda.
Keeper Vozinha – whose only real act all match had been to concede a penalty – came up for the corner, and with all his defence forward there was nothing to prevent Wakaso from running it in as Ghana cleared.
That provoked delirious celebrations from Ghana as they move into their fourth African semi-finals in a row; Cape Verde bow out in the knowledge that they have done themselves proud in their first Afcon appearance.
 
Mali beat South Africa on penalties as hosts' dream ends

African Cup of Nations quarter-final, Moses Mabhida Stadium – South Africa 1 (Rantie 31) Mali 1 (Keita 58): Mali win 3-1 on penalties.

Mali beat hosts South Africa on penalties to qualify for the African Cup of Nations semi-finals after a 1-1 draw at the Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban.
The hosts took a deserved lead through Tokelo Rantie, but he went off injured soon afterwards and Mali came back into it, levelling through talismanic captain Seydou Keita as the hour mark approached.
Neither side seemed concerned with finding a winner in the rest of normal and extra time, with penalties used to settle the contest.
The pressure seemed to get to the hosts, who missed four of five penalties, as Mali netting all of theirs.
A cagey opening quarter-hour saw South Africa control possession and Mali sit deep, with Mamadou Samassa their only forward outlet.
The match burst into life just before the quarter-hour when May Mahlangu headed wide from a good position, with the same player almost handing Rantie an opening goal but for fine goalkeeping by Soumbeila Diakite, preferred to the other Mamadou Samassa between the Mali posts.
Reneilwe Letsholonyane had been brought in by Bafana Bafana coach Gordon Igesund, and he was a lively presence in midfield, beating two men to set up Rantie, who was denied by a fine Adama Tamboura block.
Mali were sat deep but Tamboura did get forward from left-back, almost swinging a cross-shot in past Itumeleng Khune. But the home side had been by far the more positive and deserved their opener just after the half hour.
It had come from a Mali free-kick, with a rapid counter seeing Thuso Pala’s run wreak havoc in a backtracking defence: he found Rantie unmarked, the Malmo striker ramming home an easy finish.
Rantie’s match did not last much longer, a thigh injury it evening short as Mali improved going into half-time: there were chances for Samassa, Samba Sow and Sigamary Diarra, but some good blocks by Bongani Khumalo and Dean Furman kept South Africa in front.
Rantie’s injury had a game-changing impact, it seemed, as Mali retained the momentum into the second half, starting promisingly as they put the pressure on South Africa.
But the hosts should have doubled their lead when Rantie’s replacement Lehlohonolo Majoro beat the offside trap to race on goal: his touch was poor though, and Diakite claimed.
They paid for that seconds later when Keita exploited dreadful marking by Khumalo to ghost in unmarked and head home off Khune. The cross by Samassa was brilliant, but Khumalo had stopped running, perhaps deceived by the bend on the ball or unaware of Keita’s late run.
The pendulum had swung and, with South Africa looking a combination of fatigued and nervous, Mali were cutting them to shreds, Samassa guilty of a weak finish when a reckless pass from Tsepo Masilela played him in on goal.
South Africa regrouped and the improvement was marked, as Samassa once again started to look isolated up front, while there was more pressure from the home side.
They were cancelling each other out though, with chances rare, and most attempts on goal speculative.
The latter stages of normal time saw South Africa search for a winner, but some dangerous deliveries from wide failed to connect with targets and both sides took fewer risks with extra time beckoning.
As the match fizzled out, there were late attacking changes with the additional half-hour in mind, South Africa introducing Ajax playmaker Thulani Serero, Mali bringing Bordeaux target man Cheick Diabate into play.
Those changes had little impact, with the two risk-averse sides doing everything they could to avoid conceding, with attacking play an afterthought at best and mostly restricted to set-pieces.
As with the latter stages of normal time, this appeared to be a prelude to the inevitable shoot-out. Mali got to last year’s semis on penalties, and they repeated the trick thanks mostly to incompetence from the spot from their opponents.
Substitute Siphiwe Tshabalala started things well enough for Bafana Bafana, sending Diakite the wrong way, but that was as good as it got for the hosts as they wilted under pressure.
Diabite, Tamboura and Alain Traore netted all their efforts with ease, but Furman and Mahlangu’s finishes were weak and well-saved by Diabate.
The final spot-kick was Majoro’s, and his was the worst of all as he rifled it a few yards wide to send Mali’s players into delirium.
The stadium fell silent as South Africa went out unable to repeat their heroics of 1996, when they hosted and won the finals on their first appearance in the tournament.
 
Pitroipa puts Burkina Faso in semis, Togo out

African Cup of Nations quarter-final, Mbombela Stadium – Burkina Faso 1 (Pitroipa 105) Togo 0.

Jonathan Pitroipa’s extra-time header put Burkina Faso in the semi-finals of the African Cup of Nations at the expense of Togo.
Rennes winger Pitroipa, Burkina Faso’s most celebrated player, headed home a Charles Kabore corner on the stroke of half-time in extra-time after a goalless draw in the regulation 90 minutes.
The match was largely a dreary affair –Adebayor’s early second-half header cleared off the line was the only major chance until a frantic final 15 minutes that saw both sides threaten more than they had all game.
That spell saw lively Burkinabe substitute Prejuce Nakoulma denied a clear penalty, while Adebayor was denied by fine goalkeeping from Daouda Diakite.
With extra-time beckoning neither side took too many risks, but Burkina Faso were the more positive and just about deserved their victory.
It is the second time they have reached the last four, and the first time they have done so outside their homeland – and that was in 1998.
Played on the now infamously ragged pitch in Nelspruit, the first half was a cagey, messy affair punctuated by late challenges and unusual refereeing, which saw five players booked for minor infringements yet many get away with high and dangerous tackles.
Chances were rare for both sides. Floyd Ayite was denied an 18th-minute goal by a combination of poor composure and a terrible bobble off the surface.
Down the other end Pitroipa was similarly hampered by the pitch when – after starting the counter attack with a driving run – he arrived to meet Wilfried Sanou’s low cross-shot, which bounced backwards off his heels and away.
Otherwise it was all long-range shots and mis-hit crosses from both sides, although unusually for these finals both sides also defended capably.
The second half started promisingly, with Togo – who had been the more conservative in the first period – taking the game to Burkina Faso, Adebayor beating Diakite to a high ball but his header cleared off the line by Saidou Panandetiguiri.
But it soon degenerated into a scrap, with nothing of note occurring at either end until Togo defender Vincent Bossou headed over from a corner.
The lack of quality was not helped by the surface, but the decision making was at times dreadful – highlighted when Charles Kabore elected to shoot from 35 yards after a free-kick was played square to him. Clearly a ball into the box would have posed more danger with the ball bouncing as it was.
Togo sub Prince Segbefia was getting in good positions from the right wing, but his touch constantly let him down as a succession of wild crosses and shots failed to reach targets.
Indeed, Burkina Faso’s decision to throw on Prejuce Nakoulma was making a greater impact as he caused repeated problems on the left – one of his runs should have yielded a penalty, when the Senegalese referee somehow failed to spot Bossou’s clear foul on the Gornik Zabrze forward.
Suddenly the match had opened up, with Adebayor nearly getting a wonder goal as he shrugged off two challenges before being denied by a fine Diakite stop.
Nakoulma was the danger man though, another scintillating run from him ripping Togo apart, but his finish under pressure went wide.
That was the last chance of the 90 minutes, as extra-time was played for a second time at these finals, with hosts South Africa having gone out to Mali on penalties.
The Burkinabes had the better of the additional half-hour, with another sub – the returning Alain Traore – firing a low drive too that Kossi Agassa saved at his near post.
And they got the vital goal just as the first quarter-hour was up when Pitroipa cleverly escaped his marker with a reverse diagonal run, meeting Kabore’s near-post delivery with an arching header that flew in off the bar past a poorly-placed Agassa.
It was Agassa’s first real error of the finals, and it proved costly as – despite a late rally and the introductions of Dove Wome and Moustapha Salifou – Togo failed to find an equaliser.
 
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