The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Afcon flops

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TODAY we look at the biggest flops of the Africa Cup of Nations so far after the conclusion of the group stage in Gabon. Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang It might seem harsh on a player who scored both of his country’s goals at the competitio­n. But Aubameyang did not live up to the sky-high expectatio­ns placed on him. The Borussia Dortmund striker, a former African Footballer of the Year, seemed distant for much of the time and was reluctant to talk to the media despite being the captain of the host nation.

He was also guilty of a glaring miss early on in the draw with Cameroon that eliminated the Panthers. After his penalty miss that precipitat­ed Gabon’s eliminatio­n in the quarterfin­als as co-hosts in 2012, this was another disappoint­ing tournament for the French-born star. Gabon Gabon bowed out without losing a game but did little to win over a population lacking enthusiasm in the Cup of Nations at a time when the country is battling with a social and political crisis. Their inability to win a game - they drew all three matches - meant the late decision to sack coach Jorge Costa and replace him with non-French speaker Jose Antonio Camacho backfired.

Aubameyang also blamed poor preparatio­n saying, “We were supposed to start on January 3, but we started a little bit late. We didn’t really have the time to prepare.” For only the fourth time, and the first since Tunisia in 1994, the hosts failed to make it past the first round. Pitches Togo coach Claude Le Roy spoke for all his counterpar­ts when he described the playing surface in Port-Gentil as “unworthy of hosting top-level foot- ball.” The shocking pitch in the port city was by far the worst of a bad bunch and was directly responsibl­e for several injuries, including the knee injury suffered by Ghana’s Abdul Rahman Baba that ended his tournament in the first game. “This is the Cup of Nations, we need to try to improve things” said Togo skipper Emmanuel Adebayor. Algeria Algeria were seen as one of the pre-tournament favourites. They had the newly-crowned African Footballer of the Year, Riyad Mahrez, in their ranks and a talented supporting cast around the Leicester City wizard.

But Georges Leekens’ side went home without winning a game.

A Mahrez brace only earned them a 2-2 draw with Zimbabwe in their opening match and a defeat to north African rivals Tunisia effectivel­y ended their hopes before a 2-2 draw with Senegal ended their campaign. Algeria’s wait for a first Cup of Nations crown since 1990 goes on, and coach Leekens quit after their exit. Ivory Coast The reigning champions were another big-name group-stage victim. The Elephants came looking to defend the title they won in 2015 but this was a muchchange­d side.

With a new coach in Michel Dussuyer and with a new generation of players replacing the likes of the Toure brothers and Gervinho, they could not win a game.

A young side could only draw with Togo and DR Congo before a 1-0 defeat to a Morocco coached by their old boss Herve Renard sent them packing. For the fourth successive Cup of Nations, the holders are out before the knockout phase. – AFP

 ??  ?? The on going Africa Cup of Nations is redefining how Zimbabwean­s go about their business. The collage shows pupils at Ashmil Nursery & Junior School in Harare drawing their favourite Warriors players amid contrastin­g emotions. — Pictures by Tariro Kamangira
The on going Africa Cup of Nations is redefining how Zimbabwean­s go about their business. The collage shows pupils at Ashmil Nursery & Junior School in Harare drawing their favourite Warriors players amid contrastin­g emotions. — Pictures by Tariro Kamangira
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