Foriegn

CAF AFCON decision a blemish on African football-Weah

Former African and World Footballer of the Year George Weah condemned CAF’s decision to strip Senegal of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations title and award the trophy to Morocco, warning that the ruling has delivered a damaging blow to the continent’s reputation.

Weah, the 1995 Ballon d’Or winner, three-time African Footballer of the Year, and former president of Liberia, invoked FIFA’s Laws of the Game to argue that the decision has no sporting or legal foundation.

“This decision has further scarred and blemished African football, undermining confidence in the fairness, consistency, and integrity of football on the continent,” Weah said in a statement.

The AFCON final in Rabat on January 18 descended into controversy when Senegal’s players walked off the pitch in protest over back-to-back refereeing decisions — a disallowed goal for them and a penalty awarded to Morocco — before Sadio Mané personally led his teammates back onto the pitch.

Brahim Díaz missed the penalty for the Atlas Lions, and Senegal went on to win 1-0 in extra time. CAF’s appeal board subsequently nullified that result and awarded the trophy to Morocco, via a 3-0 result, citing Senegal’s conduct.

Weah argued that the Laws of the Game grants the referee full authority over decisions made during a match, authority that should not be retrospectively overridden in a board room.

He pointed out that the referee allowed play to continue after Senegal’s walkout, completed the game, and in his post-match report described a stoppage rather than a forfeit, recommending appropriate sanctions for the on-field infractions.

For Weah, that should have been the end of the matter: “Once play is allowed to continue and the match is completed, the result obtained on the field must stand.

“Football must be decided on the pitch, not re-decided after the final whistle. There is therefore no sporting justification to nullify a match that was completed in accordance with the referee’s authority and the Laws of the Game.”

Weah also moved to address disinformation about his position on the issue, stating he wanted “to clarify that social media posts widely circulating claiming that I support the decision by CAF Disciplinary Committee against Senegal is blatantly false.

“All those circulating my image and attaching same to such fallacious statements are advised to refrain.”

Senegal have already indicated their intention to appeal the decision at the Court of Arbitration for Sport and Weah is in full support.

“I call on the court of Arbitration for Sports (CAS) and other relevant authorities to move decisively so that this travesty does not stand,” he said.

CAF’s decision has also spawned some unintended consequences, with reports over the week claiming that Guinea were also demanding to be handed the trophy from the 1976 AFCON, when Morocco also staged a walk out, but returned to get the draw they needed to win the tournament, which was competed as a pool format at the time.

Guinea’s football federation were forced to issue a denial on Sunday: “The Guinean Football Federation (FGF) wishes to inform the national and international public that it has not initiated any proceedings with either the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) or the Confederation of African Football (CAF) regarding the 1976 Africa Cup of Nations,” they wrote in a statement.

“In recent days, information circulating on various media outlets, particularly social networks, has falsely suggested that Guinea has taken steps to contest the result of the match between the Syli National and Morocco during this tournament.

“The Guinean Football Federation wishes to clarify, in a spirit of responsibility and reconciliation, that this information is inaccurate and has no official basis.”-ESPN

Follow our WhatsApp Channel now! https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VbAjG7g3gvWajUAEX12Q

Follow our WhatsApp Channel now! https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VbAjG7g3gvWajUAEX12Q

Show More
Back to top button