African
football powers Ghana and Ivory Coast are long overdue a Cup of Nations
title. It is 30 years since the Black Stars enjoyed the last of four
successes in the biennial championship and 20 years since the Elephants
lifted the Cup for the only time. They enter the January 21-February 12
continental showpiece in Equatorial Guinea and Gabon as co-favourites
with Senegal considered the best of the rest in a 16-team field.
Opinions
of coaches and footballers vary as to which other sides could go far in
a 23-day tournament notable for the absence of regular competitors like
title holders Egypt, Algeria, Cameroon, Nigeria and South Africa.
Ghana
coach Goran Stevanovic backs Mali and 2011 African Footballer of the
Year and Ivory Coast midfielder Yaya Toure believes Morocco and Burkina
Faso pose threats.
If
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger is to be believed, only the
star-saturated Ivorians need bother turning up as he rates them "an
incredible team and hot favourites". They have a midfield of English
Premier League stars Cheik Tiote, Yaya Toure and Gervinho and Cameroon
are not there, Egypt are not there and Nigeria are not there. Ivory
Coast were hot favourites in 2008 and cruised until Egypt hit them for
four in the semi-finals and were also the 2010 favourites only to
concede a late equaliser against Algeria in the quarter-finals and lose
after extra time. "We have got a big problem in Ivory Coast -- we do not
respect opponents," lamented coach Francois Zahoui. "We go to each Cup
of Nations as super favourites and come back disappointed."
Ghana
came third as hosts of a 2008 championship won by Egypt and held the
Pharaohs until the dying minutes of the 2010 final in Angola before
conceding the solitary goal. While star Ghana striker Asamoah Gyan
battles to recover from a hamstring injury, team-mate and 2011 African
Footballer of the Year bronze medalist Andre Ayew says the time has come
for the Black Stars to conquer Africa again. "I believe we have the
confidence to finally lift the trophy. It is not going to be easy,
though, because we are going into a tournament and anything can happen,"
said the Marseille-based son of Black Stars legend Abedi 'Pele'Ayew.
Senegal
(Group A), Ivory Coast (Group B) and Ghana (Group D) should top first
phase mini-leagues, but choosing between co-hosts Gabon and former
champions Morocco and Tunisia in Group C is difficult. Equatorial
Guinea, who put Brazilian coach Gilson Paulao in charge 18 days before
the tournament starts and told him to win it with a team ranked 42 in
Africa, Botswana and Niger are newcomers and seem destined for early
exits. Many neutral football supporters will cheer for Libya, whose team
risked their lives last year travelling to and from a country wracked
by civil war to fulfil qualifying fixtures.
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