Daily Archives: January 17, 2024

Why are Premier League forwards increasingly choosing one of football’s most difficult shots?


“… It’s a quirk we seem to be enjoying more regularly — the one where players shoot from a wide angle and, just when they look nailed on to whip an effort into the far corner, they swiftly reverse the shot to the near post — wrong-footing just about everyone in the stadium. … Let’s go straight into the tape. In this first instance, Liverpool’s Mohamed Salah comes inside against Arsenal’s Oleksandr Zinchenko, his body shape — and the large area of the goal uncovered — suggests he will shoot across David Raya (black arrow), but he swiftly pivots to close his body and strike through the ball towards the smaller area at Raya’s near post (white arrow). …”
The Athletic

The Gambia at AFCON: Several pay rows, one near disaster and a 3-0 defeat


“As a small Air Cote d’Ivoire propeller plane took off from the Gambian capital of Banjul last Wednesday, some of the passengers started to feel drowsy. From his seat, Tom Saintfiet thought it was unusual when a few minutes later, the aircraft, which was flying to Abidjan, fell quiet. He looked around and many of the travellers — including members of the Gambian national football team, bound for the Africa Cup of Nations — were already sleeping. …”
The Athletic

AFCON players on being pressured to miss tournament: ‘It shows disrespect for Africa’


“Sebastien Haller was furious. In December 2021, the forward — who was playing for Ajax at the time — was asked if he planned on playing at the Africa Cup of Nations the following month. … Ismaila Sarr was caught in the middle of a row between Watford and Senegal regarding his participation at the same tournament. Watford insisted Sarr was not fit enough to play due to a knee injury, but Senegal’s medical team wanted to make their assessment. …”
The Athletic

AFCON is a playlist

“Music and African football have always been inextricably linked. Think of some of Africa’s most iconic moments in football: Roger Milla and his dance at the corner flag, Siphiwe Tshabalala and Bafana Bafana on the half-turn in synchronized rhythm, and Robert Kidiaba bum-bouncing after a goal. It’s not just the players that punctuate the rhythm of play with dance, at times the terraces at Cup of Nations tournaments can turn into impromptu flash mobs. With just a few days to go before we kick off the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations, we’ve put together our official Africa Is A Country playlist, exploring some of the most iconic songs in African football and explaining why they mean so much to so many on the continent. …”
Africa Is A Country (Video)

Ivorian football heritage


“As a footballing country, Cote d’Ivoire only started having real success at the club and international level in the 1990s. The first African Cup of Nations title that the national team obtained was in 1992 in Senegal. That very same year, Africa Sports reached the summit of continental club competitions by winning the Cup Winners’ Cup in 1992 and then again in 1999. Its biggest rival, ASEC Mimosas won the Champions League in 1998. These glorious years, however, were dashed by political chaos and instability, which began at the start of the millennium. …”
Africa Is a Country

AFCON opening night: Colour, chaos and the mood is really cooking


“I mean, where do you start? Sometimes it is impossible to express the things you have witnessed and do it justice. You see travel shows, taking you to parts of the world you would never go to and they make you think you have felt the place. Yet no amount of film, no number of photographs and maybe no number of words can recreate energy, certainly not the energy on the road from Abidjan to Ebimpe, where informal settlements crash and blur and it is a challenge to know where you really are. …”
The Athletic

Ivory Coast, China and the murky truth behind AFCON’s most high-tech stadium


“Four men in uniform are studying the Stade Alassane Ouattara Ebimpe with their arms folded. They are locals and their uniform is a combination of floral-patterned shirt, jeans and flip-flops. Such is their fixation, it seems as though they are waiting for what has been called the most advanced football arena in Africa to express itself, maybe even take off and fly away. The stadium certainly looks like a spaceship, one that was landed incongruously on the red earth of semi-rural Abidjan, Ivory Coast’s de-facto capital. It is not a machine-beast, lumpen or identikit, but an architectural wonder with subtleties, such as a roof that curves and swoops around its giant bowl like an ocean wave or a skateboard rink. Below, enormous coliseum-style pillars support a fascia that includes latticing reflective of the Ivory Coast’s tricolour flag. …”
The Athletic