Tonight
is the final of the 2015 African Cup of Nations (AFCON). For people
outside of the continent, this means nothing. But for the 54 countries
inside, it's the biggest African sport event outside of the World Cup.
Ghana is playing neighbour Côte d'Ivoire for the final - a meeting of
giants. But this is not why African football is so interesting. Consider
how we got to this evening:
Case Study 1: Morocco
In
early 2014, the Ebola virus outbreak grew, from Guinea, to Sierra Leone
to Liberia. In the ensuing panic, AFCON 2015 host Morocco decided that
maybe they didn't want all of those other Africans coming and maybe
sneezing on them. So at the last minute, they not-so-helpfully declined.
The Confederation of African Football (CAF) then panicked to find a
replacement host. For their idiocy, CAF decided that Morocco will
forfeit their spot in this tournament and are banned from qualifying for 2017 and 2019 as well. Case Study 1: Morocco
Case Study #2: Equatorial Guinea
African
teams have a strange habit of not following the rules and fielding
ineligible players, which sunk a few teams in World Cup qualifying.
Equatorial Guinea followed this tradition (fielding a Cameroonian in a qualifier) and
were promptly disqualified.
However,
with AFCON looking for a home, the tiny oil-rich and massively corrupt nation benevolently offered to host (and take Morocco's spot), so all of
that disqualification business was quickly forgiven.
Case Study #3: The Mauritian Referee
In extra time of a deadlocked match between Tunisia and Equatorial Guinea, the Mauritius-born referee awarded a controversial last-minute free kick to the overmatched hosts, who scored.
In extra time of a deadlocked match between Tunisia and Equatorial Guinea, the Mauritius-born referee awarded a controversial last-minute free kick to the overmatched hosts, who scored.
This
put them ahead of Tunisia into the knockout round. Saving face, CAF suspended the ref for incompetence. When the Tunisian Football Association's president
accused CAF of cheating (football associations being notoriously corrupt), they banned him from all activities.