The Herald (Zimbabwe)

A guide to 2020 CHAN tournament

- BBC Sport Africa

YAOUNDE. — The delayed 2020 African Nations Championsh­ip (CHAN), the tournament for homebased players, kicks off in Cameroon tomorrow.

The Local Organising Committee say it is ready to host the tournament and are putting the final touches in place ahead of tomorrow’s opener.

It will be the continent’s biggest football championsh­ips since the outbreak of Covid-19 and here is everything you need to know about the event.

What is CHAN?

The CHAN is a competitio­n that happens every two years, shining a light on local club players in Africa.

Only footballer­s playing in their own local leagues across Africa are eligible to play in the tournament, which was first held in 2009.

After the first edition, which was hosted in 2009 in Cote d’lvoire, the tournament expanded from eight to 16 teams.

Cameroon is hosting the sixth edition and the competitio­n, initially set to be held in April 2020, was shifted to 16 January-7 February by the Confederat­ion of African Football (Caf) as a result of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

CHAN during Covid-19

In order for the event to go ahead during the pandemic, the Cameroon government and Caf have put in place some strict regulation­s.

According to tournament manager Michael Disake, screening for Covid19 will start for players, delegates and officials as soon as they arrive at the airport.

Some of the new rules that Caf and FIFA have put in place include having one player per room in hotel accommodat­ions as opposed to two.

Meanwhile, teams — which will be tested 48 hours before every match

— are allowed to have 10 players on a waiting list to replace anyone in the 23-man squad who tests positive for coronaviru­s.

Another modificati­on means stadium grounds will be filled to just 25 per cent capacity for group stage matches, but this figure could double for the semi-finals and final if fans keep their masks on, maintain social distancing and follow Covid-19 guidelines.

Security

Separatist groups have issued threats and warnings to local authoritie­s about not wanting football in their territory and they claim to have notified teams of their intentions.

These threats were issued after three attacks happened in the north-west region and kidnapping­s in the southwest region.

Tournament coordinato­r Disake says he has read about the threats and it is something security officials will be handling.

In a meeting with the defence minister last week, officials have heightened security around hotels, transport and training grounds.

Past winners

The winner of the tournament will receives US$1.25 million, an increase from the US$700 000 handed out in 2018 by Caf. The runners-up now receive US$700 000, with the thirdplace and fourth-placed teams taking home US$400 000 and US$300 000 respective­ly.

Morocco are the current champions after lifting the title on home soil in 2018.

* Group A: Cameroon, Mali, Burkina Faso, Zimbabwe

* Group B: Libya, Niger, DR Congo, Congo

* Group C: Morocco, Rwanda, Togo, Uganda * Group D: Zambia, Guinea, Namibia, Tanzania

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe