Sowetan

Afcon success a story

CAMEROON RETURN TO SUMMIT OF AFRICAN GAME

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LIBREVILLE – The Africa Cup of Nations in Gabon will be remembered for delivering an inspiring success story culminatin­g with Cameroon’s brilliant come-frombehind victory over Egypt to claim a fifth title in Libreville.

The dramatic return of the Indomitabl­e Lions to the summit of the African game came against expectatio­n, achieved with a squad of little experience after several key players put club above country in the preceding months.

Overcoming difficult odds to come through a taxing tournament – played in stifling humidity, on poor pitches and with complex travel arrangemen­ts – and claim the trophy gave the tournament a much-needed lease of new life.

Too many previous tournament­s have suffered from the burden of poor football, disappoint­ing crowds and a distinct lack of on-field drama.

Usually, it is controvers­y that marks the event. Cameroon’s exploits, however, ensured the 2017 edition concluded as one of the better recent Nations Cup.

Cameroon, last champions 15 years ago, were given little chance at the start, a side in transition after coach Hugo Broos made a comprehens­ive, almost cavalier, overhaul of the side in the preceding months.

Just a month before kick off, his plans looked in tatters as eight players declared their unavailabi­lity, rejecting call-ups to stay with their clubs.

It was the first significan­t show of dissent from African footballer­s, who are placed in an awkward position every two years by the tug of loyalty between club and country that the timing Nations Cup, in the middle of the European club season, forces on them.

It was an issue quickly forgotten as the tournament kicked off with some favourites quickly falling by the wayside. Algeria were in trouble from their first game, hosts Gabon and holders Ivory Coast went out in the first round and Cameroon’s post-match penalty shoot-out win over impressive Senegal in the last eight proved the biggest upset.

“Our ambition was to finish in the top two in our group, get to the knockout round and see what happened from there. Over the weeks we went from being a squad to becoming a family,” said Broos after Sunday’s 2-1 victory.

The progress to the semifinal of Burkina Faso, also little regarded at the start, added another exciting element in the same way the progress of unheralded nations spiced up the European Championsh­ip last year.

 ?? PHOTO: ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP ?? Cameroon players lift their coach Hugo Broos as they celebrate beating Egypt 2-1 in the Afcon final in Gabon on Sunday.
PHOTO: ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP Cameroon players lift their coach Hugo Broos as they celebrate beating Egypt 2-1 in the Afcon final in Gabon on Sunday.

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