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Afcon 2015 -Through The Crystal Ball!

By Segun Odegbami
16 January 2015   |   4:28 pm
OF course, my first statement on Afcon 2015 must be that the defending champions will not be at the championship. How come?    It is hard for anyone to understand what happened and how it happened, but the reality is that the national team that won the 2013 African football championship without conceding any defeat,…

2015 Africa Cup of Nations logoOF course, my first statement on Afcon 2015 must be that the defending champions will not be at the championship. How come? 

  It is hard for anyone to understand what happened and how it happened, but the reality is that the national team that won the 2013 African football championship without conceding any defeat, that qualified for the 2014 World Cup as one of five African countries, and one that boasts one of the best records out of Africa in all global football competitions, will not be at the 2015 World Cup because it failed to qualify.  That’s how come!

  The last time Nigeria was not at the championship was three years ago when current hosts, Equatorial Guinea, co-hosted with Gabon. The other recent absence was by default and for political reasons. The military government of Nigeria deliberately chose not to send the Super Eagles to the championship. That was in 1996. 

  The most significant effect of Nigeria’s withdrawal that year was that the path to victory was paved for South Africa, a country fresh from the shadows of apartheid, to win their first and, to date, only African Cup of Nations championship.

  So, as Africa prepares for the football party, for many South Africans, the prospect of winning again, some 19 years after, particularly in the absence of their boogey team, Nigeria, becomes a realistic challenge! After all, Bafana Bafana have recently been playing football with uncommon determination and confidence, and have posted some very decent results, including their sterling performance against Nigeria in their last qualifying match for Afcon 2015. That surely ranks amongst one of their best performances that I have seen since 1996!

From January 17, 16 African countries will congregate in Equatorial Guinea and a lot of eyes will be trained on Bafana Bafana as they attempt to win their second Nations Cup. 

  A look at the road they have to travel indicates that it will be very rough and tough. They are nestled in the same group with two of the current best football countries in Africa – Ghana and Algeria. For South Africa, it may be easier to climb Mount Everest without a guide than to emerge unscathed from that group. 

 Back to Nigeria briefly! In two years, the Super Eagles have plummeted from the highest peak of African football, to the lower rungs! In the course of that tragedic situation, Stephen Keshi the most successful indigenous coach in the history of the Nigerian football, has fallen from grace to grass with scandalous defeats and performances that once looked remote but have become a reality for Nigeria. So dispirited have most followers of Nigerian football become that there is little interest in the championship.  

  Having said that, the 2015 championship will still commence this weekend and the Oracle will still peer into the crystal ball for what the immediate future holds for each of the countries. 

 Group A

Equatorial Guinea, Congo, Burkina Faso and Gabon.

This is a very unpredictable and a relatively cheap group in terms of the antecedents of the countries. 

The only reason Equatorial Guinea will emerge from this group is because, as hosts, they will ride on the back of home support to struggle and emerge. 

Congo will fight hard but will fade out in the second round.

 Burkina Faso, through hard work and endless running had their best chance of winning the championship two years ago when they went as far as the finals before being knocked out by the firepower of Nigeria. Since then, they seem to have lost some of the fire that made their performance very refreshing and exciting the last time. 

  Gabon have never been such a great football country in Africa as to give any one of the serious contenders any sweat. Their only hope rests with Pierre Aubameyang. From previous records, the striker in devastating form for Borussia Dortmund FC may not replicate that form in the championship. One man does not make a forest! 

 Group B

Zambia, DR Congo, Tunisia and Cape Verde.

Zambia in 2015 are not the same team that dazzled everyone only two championships ago. DR Congo have invested a lot in their domestic football, an investment that is yet to fully reflect in the national team. They remain dark horses! 

 Tunisia, as usual will play well, defeat the weak African teams, but falter against the West Africans. With none in this group they may succeed and emerge from the group.

Cape Verde. I do not really know what to make of this team. Two years ago we saw them display some of the most entertaining and brilliant individual football at Afcon 2013. In 2015, Africa should be ready to dance and celebrate some delightful football again. 

 Group C

Ghana, Senegal, Algeria, South Africa.

What a group! This, indeed, is the Dream Group, not the Group of Death. 

  The group includes Ghana and Algeria, two of Africa’s current strongest teams. Algeria put up Africa’s best showing at the 2014 World Cup. They appear to still be in great shape. On paper they may actually be favoured to win the championship, but against Ghana and South Africa they have equally formidable opposition. 

 Without question this is the group that will attract the greatest attention. I do not see Senegal emerging from this group.

Ghana have the experience and maturity. Algeria have a good young team in great form. South Africa are riding on fresh enthusiasm and adrenalin.  Separating them will be a huge challenge. 

 Group D

Cote D’Ivoire, Guinea, Mali and Cameroun.

Three West African teams come against the only team from Central Africa in the group.

In qualification, Cameroun looked very exciting with several new and younger players replacing Samuel Eto and some other aged players. They will emerge from here. The other three West African teams will slug it. I think Cote d’Ivoire will justify their placement as the highest ranked African team by stopping Mali and Guinea from joining Cameroun. 

 Finally, on to my crystal ball! 

It is misty and murky. 

 I am putting my money not on Algeria that looks to have the best team, or Cote d’Ivoire that appears to have the most mature team and superstar players, or even Ghana that may have the most complete team, but on Cameroun, new, immature, no Samuel Eto, and in a relatively difficult group. 

 In the absence of Nigeria at the championship that is where my money is! 

 Let Afcon 2015 begin!

 

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