Mail & Guardian

Sidelined Elephants dust themselves off

Out of the Cup of Nations, the young Ivorian team is now looking to Russia 2018

- Yassine Khiri

Ayoung Côte d’Ivoire side must pick themselves up quickly and look to the future after the bitter disappoint­ment of their early eliminatio­n from the Africa Cup of Nations.

The reigning champions suffered an ignominiou­s group-stage exit on Tuesday after a 1-0 defeat to a Morocco side coached by Hervé Renard, the man who led the Elephants to the 2015 title.

Now under Michel Dussuyer, the Ivorians failed to win a game in Gabon, their defeat on Tuesday following draws with Togo and DR Congo.

From the high of their 2015 title triumph, they have now failed to make it to the quarterfin­als of the Cup of Nations for the first time since 2004.

It is also the fourth consecutiv­e Cup of Nations in which the reigning champions have been absent from the last eight line-up, and the team’s poor showing was met with frustratio­n and anger at home.

Manchester United defender Eric Bailly, 22, who started all three games in Gabon, said: “Before being a footballer, I was a supporter. I know what they are going through.

“It is hard to take, all the more so being the reigning champions. It had been said that the last Cup was out of the way and it was time for new adventures. But we didn’t take that on board. The first two matches passed us by.”

Unsurprisi­ngly, Frenchman Dussuyer, who succeeded his compatriot Renard in 2015, is first in the line of fire. The 57-year-old, who took Guinea to the quarterfin­als in 2015, was appointed on a two-year deal with the option of two more years.

He made no immediate announceme­nt on his future when asked at the end of the game. Indeed, Renard, sitting next to his old friend as the winning coach, offered an impassione­d defence of Dussuyer after Tuesday’s match.

“I have known him for a very long time and he is a remarkable man. Of course, the Côte d’Ivoire’s objective cannot be an eliminatio­n in the first round. But please show a little decency.”

This was a new Côte d’Ivoire side, with more than half the squad having changed from 2015 and 10 of the players born in 1992 or later.

Leaders from the country’s socalled golden generation, notably the Toure brothers and goalkeeper Boubacar Barry, were no longer there and Gervinho was injured.

Immensely talented younger players such as Nicolas Pepe, Jean Seri, Wilfried Zaha and Franck Kessie were unable to seize their chance, but their presence suggests the future is still bright.

The Elephants have been at the last three World Cups and securing a place in Russia in 2018 is the next objective — they are top of a qualifying group with Gabon, Morocco and Mali and will resume their campaign with a return to Gabon in August.

Legendary former striker Didier Drogba refused to be downbeat.

“This team is young and talented. They need to be led, supported. They are the most disappoint­ed. They will come back strong,” tweeted the former Chelsea man, now 38. — AFP

 ?? Photo: Issouf Sanogo/AFP ?? Major win: Morocco celebrate after scoring against reigning champions Côte d’Ivoire, who lost the 2017 Afcon group C match 1-0.
Photo: Issouf Sanogo/AFP Major win: Morocco celebrate after scoring against reigning champions Côte d’Ivoire, who lost the 2017 Afcon group C match 1-0.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa