Archive for African Football
3 Minutes Of Madness Gives Arsenal Options With Alex Song
Posted by: | CommentsI had only just popped out of the living room to get a second helping of the finger licking chicken my wife had made for dinner. As I lost myself in the thought of identifying the juicy piece I wanted, the screaming from my wife in the living room made me drop everything and bolt across to see what the fuss was all about.
I think she was pissed off at Cameroon’s Geremi for his suicidal back pass that gifted Egypt the first goal in extra time. Frankly speaking, such back passes get players lynched in some countries, and you couldn’t help but think what the hell the former Chelsea and Newcastle player was thinking trying to execute such a pass.
I shrugged my shoulders and headed back for the chicken pot that I was drooling over before that untimely interruption. I had only just placed my plate in the microwave to warm the food when another scream followed.
“Now what?”, was the first thought on my mind as I dashed to see the inevitable. As I watched the replay of the Egypt free kick, I couldn’t help but curse out Carlos Kameni the Espanol and Cameroonian goalie. What the hell was he trying to do with that ball. Punching such a ball instead of catching it outright was criminal in the first place, but it was like he was smiling and celebrating while punching it, and that’s what got my goat.
My wife though, was evidently pissed off about something else and it took me a while to realise that the ball never actually crossed the line. I didn’t know Stewart Atwell, the referee who gave the ghost goal at Watford was on duty at the ACN. What the hell had happened in the 3 minutes I’d decided to go for seconds.
And it was that 3 minutes of madness that consigned the Indomitable Lions to defeat. I think the 3rd Egyptian goal was criminal, and the referee should be taken out back, forced to kneel facing the wall and given a good hiding for allowing that goal to stand. At 2-1, Cameroon had a chance, but not at 3-1 with Egypt.
I know there’s a hell of a lot of Arsenal fans rejoicing today as Alex Song gets on a flight from Luanda to Heathrow some time tonight. Many are rejoicing about the fact that he could be reporting for duty at London Colney any time from Thursday.
I’m in two minds though about the Indomitable Lions going out at this stage. My rationale is that if Alex Song went all the way with Cameroon and won the ACN, it will actually be a great boost for his morale and subsequent performances for Arsenal.
The circumstances of yesterday’s exit were quite painful though. Moments of madness like that are known to knock the wind out of anyone’s sails.
Nevertheless, Arsene Wenger will not complain for having Alex Song as an option for the games against Man United and those that follow after this coming weekend.
Arsenal have had a squad of the walking wounded and the return of the Cameroonian ace will be a breath of fresh air at London Colney. I suspect the young man will have to be picked up at some point following last night’s disappointment, but Wenger has shown that he is a master at putting an arm around an excellent player and making them feel that it’s OK.
One other player that will provide much needed relief in the midfield is Emmanuel Eboue. Now how many times in the last couple of years would you have heard Arsenal fans saying they’re desperate to have Emmanuel Eboue back?
If Chelsea are getting Drogba and Kalou back, and Abu Dhabi City are getting Toure and Adebayor back, then it’s only fair that Arsenal get Emmanuel Eboue and Alex Song back.
The battle for the EPL title starts tomorrow. Despite the disappointments for Cote d’Ivoire and Cameroon, it’s great to have Eboue and Song back.
Perspective: Aftermath Of Attack On Togo National Team In Angola
Posted by: | CommentsNot for the first time, a sporting delegation to a major tournament has turned out to be the prime target for terrorists who are hell bent on making one point or another. Considering that Sport is a universal language that brings people around the world together, it’s not surprising at the least that in today’s age of conflict, an event like the Africa Cup of Nations is a terrorist target.
It happened in Munich in 1972 when Israeli athletes were gunned down at the Olympics, and it happened last spring in Pakistan when the Sri Lankan cricket team was ambushed on the way to a test match. In recent times, security has been a key issue for sports delegations and host countries and sports associations have invested considerable amounts of money to address security concerns. Despite the precautions, it is always a sad day when people lose their lives in this way.
Before Friday, not many people would have pointed to Cabinda on a map, and many questions are now being asked as to why the Togo national team was ambushed on their way to their camp in Cabinda where their group matches are being played. These questions have to be asked though, however difficult they are.
Firstly, the Togolese Football Federation have to explain what their national team was doing travelling by road through to Cabinda from their training camp in Congo Brazzaville. The organizing committee of the 2010 Africa Cup of Nations were crystal clear to all 16 national teams that no team was to travel by road to a host city.
Teams were expected to fly into the Angolan capital Luanda before being escorted with adequate security arrangements to the 4 host cities including Cabinda. Was it a case of naivety and sheer incompetence in risk management by the Togolese footballing administration, or was it a case of employing reckless short cuts to cut costs? Either way, there was enough military intelligence to suggest that travelling to Cabinda by road from Congo was insanity of the highest order and should have never been an option.
Suggesting that there were nominal security arrangements was naive at best and incompetent at worst. The truth is that the tragedy could have been avoided, and the minute the Togolese delegation decided to travel by road, they became a prime target of the highest order. By the time they left their training camp in Congo Brazzaville for the Angolan border, their convoy was the worst kept secret in the region.
I think it’s worth understanding a bit of the political context in the area at the moment.
Cabinda, where the Togo group matches are being played, is a resource rich province producing over half of Angola’s oil reserves, second only to Nigeria on the continent. China for example, is Angola’s biggest importer of oil on the African continent, and the country is also strategically important to developed countries in the west scavenging the world for energy resources. Since the 27 year civil war in the country ended 8 years ago, most of the reconstruction and rebuilding efforts have been funded and supported by Asian and western governments that have a strategic interest in Angola’s oil reserves.
Spend a week in and around the Angolan capital Luanda and you will quickly find out how much ass kissing foreign governments interested in Angola’s resources are indulging in. For a country that has been decimated by civil war, the strategic importance of such relationships and the ability to leverage its natural resources is paramount for the development of the country and the rebuilding of its infrastructure.
It’s for this reason that Cabinda was chosen as a host city. Many may question why this is so considering the volatility of the area and the specific activities of the Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda (FLEC), who have claimed responsibility for the attack.
The answer is simple. There was no way in the world the Africa Cup of Nations would be held in Angola without matches being played in Cabinda. The separate province is too strategic and too important for the Angolan government primarily because of its oil resources. ‘Gifting’ Cabinda host city status was a deliberate strategy to include the province as part of Angola and to show the world that Angola is in total control of the region.
It’s fair to say that the Angolan national forces have pretty much wiped out the core of the FLEC separatist rebels, but a few (said to be in the hundreds) still exist and are hell bent on making a point about their existence. Cabinda itself, as with the other host cities including the capital Luanda, are relatively safe havens and there’s no inherent risk of an attack like Friday’s being repeated. In fact, I’ll go as far as suggesting that most of the actual host cities are safer than South East London or North East Washington DC during any time of day or night. The same can’t be said about the areas in and around the border where FLEC rebels still hide out and where they’re are likely to have an influence. It’s for this reason why I say that the decision for Togo to travel in this area by road was insanity beyond belief, especially when the organizing committee specifically advised that delegations should fly into host cities and not travel by road. Furthermore, not being aware of Togo’s movements makes it that much more difficult to provide impromptu security arrangements that would have staved off such an attack. With the openly available information about the existence of the Togo National team convoy, I must say such an attack by the FLEC was inevitable.
I am supportive of the fact that the tournament is going ahead. It would be a travesty for the handful of separatist rebels to gain the initiative by derailing such an important and strategic sporting event for the continent. The government of Angola is obligated to step up security and use all means necessary to ensure the security for the rest of the tournament, and reports already indicate that Angola’s military forces are already playing a role in this.
While it’s easy to understand the motivation of the Angolan government to include Cabinda in the mix of the ACN, the attack on the Togo national team is an embarrassment to the political agenda of the tournament. However, it is totally understandable that the Togo national team has pulled out. Not only are the delegation traumatized by the attack, it is unfair to expect them to play competently considering the events 10 Km from the Angolan border. Going home is the right thing to do and the players and delegation need to be given time to grieve for their 3 colleagues who lost their lives, and for them to get some counselling. The remaining 15 teams should show solidarity and determination by seeing the tournament through and not letting rebels and terrorists get their own way.
The events in Angola though, have started murmurings and misguided comparisons with perceived and imaginary security threats being concocted with respect to the World Cup in South Africa.
Allow me to be blunt and say how much I detest this double standard bull shit of the highest order from mainly the western media who are hell bent on trying to create a crisis where one does not exist. Firstly, Cabinda is thousands of miles away from South Africa and there’s absolutely no parallel that can be drawn with South Africa politically, economically and socially, save for the fact that they’re both in the same continent. Secondly, to suggest that there’s now a real and present danger for the world cup in South Africa is irresponsibility of the highest order and is eternally patronizing.
When the railway network was blown up by terrorists in Spain, no one suggested that we shouldn’t go to Germany for the World Cup. When London was blown up in July of 2005, no one suggested that London was too dangerous to host the 2012 Olympics. I’ve had it to the neck with lazy and irresponsible journalism that is more interested in concocting sensationalism than being realistic and balanced. Some of the reporting of the link between what has happened in Angola and the imagined risk in South Africa is outright offensive.
They’ll state of course that South Africa has a high crime rate. Maybe they should try walking in South east London. Besides, I find it hard to believe that you’ll encounter a group of masked, machine gun wielding separatist rebels in South Africa hoping for a jackpot.
ACN Watch: Emmanuel Eboue and Cote d’Ivoire
Posted by: | CommentsIt seems just like yesterday when festivities in Ghana culminated in a final that pitted Cameroon, 4 time winners of the Africa Cup of Nations crown, against Egypt, the most successful African nation in the tournament. Egypt went on to win their 6th title since the inception of the biennial competition in 1957.
We’re at it again, this time in Angola. Arsenal has only 2 players representing their respective countries this time round, and whilst they’ll be thoroughly missed in the cold throws of the English Premier League – it’s always positive for our players to have good games in continental tournaments. The confidence and experience that they pick up in such tournaments bodes well for Arsenal and makes them better players all round.
In 2 instalments, I’ll briefly examine the prospects that Cote d’Ivoire and Cameroon have during this world cup year. Both of these countries have qualified for the World cup finals in South Africa, and the Arsenal stars – Emmanuel Eboue for Cote d’Ivoire and Alex Song for Cameroon – are pivotal players for their country.
Cote d’Ivoire
Ivory Coast are considered by many bookmakers as outright favourites to win the Africa cup of nations. The most logical reason given for this is their star studded squad of elite players and their free flowing football. I don’t think that it’ll be that straight forward for them and it’s somewhat simplistic to look at the team sheet and say that the Ivory Coast ’Elephants’ are strong on paper. Football is played on grass, and I believe the Cameroonian’s, Egyptians and the ’Black Stars’ of Ghana will have something to say about the final destination of the ACN title.

Emmanuel Eboue
Nevertheless, with Didier Drogba, Salamon Kalou, Kolo Toure, Emanuel Eboue, Yaya Toure, Didier Zokora and many other stars seen week in week out in European club football – the ’Elephants’ will pull in the crowds. From the point of view of a spectacle, Vahid Halilhodzic’s team does carry the sign ’Come see Hollywood here’ if you will.
Ivory Coast had a pretty straight forward 2nd round qualification root to the tournament collecting 12 points as group leaders in an undefeated campaign against Mozambique, Botswana and Madagascar. In the 3rd round qualification, which also saw them qualify for the World cup finals, they coasted past Guinea, Malawi and Burkina Faso.
In Angola, the ’Elephants’ face Togo in the opening game of the tournament. They will also face Burkina Faso and The ’Black Stars’ of Ghana.
Expectations are high, especially with the combination of the Yugoslav coach Halilhodzic, and a group of players perceived to be the most talented in Africa. Halilhodzic is renowned for running a tight ship and employing no nonsense boot camp tactics in training. With this being his first major tournament as manager of the ’Elephants’, much is expected from both team and manager. Although this is Ivory Coast’s 18th appearance in this tournament, they’ve only won the competition once in 1992. However, the expectation, especially after their humiliating exit last time round at the hands of Egypt is quite high – no pressure there for Emmanuel Eboue and his team-mates then.
Eboue will join former Arsenal star Kolo Toure in defence and the tournament is undoubtedly a stage for Eboue to express himself. Last season, no one would have blamed the young man if he wanted to throw in the towel and move away from Arsenal, especially after a nightmare of a game against Wigan Athletic, when Wenger substituted him for well, his own safety. He had a howler of a match and was booed off the pitch by the Emirates faithful.
Eboue though, has knuckled down and proven to himself, his team mates and Arsenal fans that he indeed has value to add to our Arsenal team. Not only is he very effective in covering for Bacary Sagna, his penetrative runs and power in midfield have proved a valuable tool for Arsenal’s style of play. Wenger once said that Eboue is in the squad because he adds balance. And without a doubt, it’s now clear to see what Wenger meant. Eboue is our most versatile utility player who can do a very competent job in at least 4 positions, and is the sort of player every top team needs in their squad.
It’ll be interesting to see how he influences play for Cote dIvoire as they try and fulfil the huge promise and expectation on their shoulders.
Also, if you don’t already know, I right a weekly column about Arsenal on A Cultured Left Foot. Make sure you check out my piece today outlining 8 reasons why Arsenal can win the title this season.

Sat 11th September 2010; 15:00, Emirates Stadium
