Nigeria and Burkina Faso seek African Cup title
The final will be a rematch of the teams' opener in Group C, which ended in a 1-1 draw after Nigeria conceded an injury-time equalizer in Nelspruit. Nigeria is Africa's most populous nation with more than 160 million people, but many there may not be able to watch the final because local television channels were not able to secure broadcast rights to the tournament.
- Associated Press
- Updated: February 09, 2013 06:35 pm IST
Nigeria will be trying to lift the African Cup trophy again after nearly two decades when it faces a Burkina Faso team hoping for an upset and its first major title on Sunday.
Nigeria is back in the final after 13 years and has a chance to win the title for the first time since it dominated African football in the 1990s.
Burkina Faso is in its first final and enters the decisive match looking to shock African football just like Zambia did when it beat Ivory Coast last year.
Burkina Faso will have leading striker Jonathan Pitroipa available after his red card in the semifinals was rescinded, but it remained unclear if injured Nigerian attacking duo Victor Moses and Emmanuel Emenike will be fit for the match at Soccer City.
The final will be a rematch of the teams' opener in Group C, which ended in a 1-1 draw after Nigeria conceded an injury-time equalizer in Nelspruit.
Nigeria is seeking its first title since 1994 and third overall. The Super Eagles are touted as the favorite after rebounding from a sluggish start in the group stage. The team looked impressive when it beat Ivory Coast's star-filled squad 2-1 in the quarterfinals and trashed Seydou Keita's Mali 4-1 in the semis.
Nigeria was the team to beat in African football in the 1990s with a squad captained by current coach Stephen Keshi. It made the semifinals in five of the last seven tournaments but was never able to break through with the trophy.
"We have a lot of respect for the guys who won this competition in 1994, they are heroes back home," Nigeria captain Joseph Yobo said. "We cannot compare ourselves to them. We want to make our own history, we have our destiny in our own hands and I believe we can win this tournament on Sunday. We are capable, we have what it takes to win."
Burkina Faso, ranked only 23rd in Africa entering the tournament, reached the semifinals for only the second time - and first since it hosted the tournament in 1998. The Stallions initially just hoped to make it past the group stage, but the expectations were raised after they eliminated Emmanuel Adebayor's Togo 1-0 in the quarterfinals and favorite Ghana on penalties in the semis.
"We respect a lot the team of Nigeria. They have big players who play in the highest level in Europe, so we all know that," said Burkina Faso coach Paul Put, a Belgian who was banned for alleged connections with match fixing back home from 2008-11. "We also saw the progressing of the team first game (to) the last game. So we are facing a very, very good team."
Put is confident, though, that the African Cup may provide another surprising finish this year. In 2012, Didier Drogba's Ivory Coast arrived at the final strongly favored to win its first title but was stunned by Zambia 8-7 in a penalty shootout.
"I think in football you never know," he said. "You have to play the game and at the end when the referee is blowing you will know the result."
It will help that Put will be able to count on Pitroipa on Sunday after the Confederation of African Football rescinded the yellow card that led to his sending off in the semifinals.
The ruling body on Friday overturned the decision by now-suspended referee Slim Jdidi to book the striker for diving in the final minutes of extra time. The confederation said the Tunisian referee conceded he had made a mistake.
Pitroipa would have been heavily missed as Burkina Faso is already without injured Alain Traore, who scored three goals early in the tournament.
Keshi, meanwhile, still doesn't know whether he will be able to count on his top forwards because of injuries. Spartak Moscow's Emenike, one of the tournament's leading scorers with four goals, is nursing a muscle injury, while Chelsea's Moses is treating a twisted left ankle.
Moses converted two late penalty kicks in the team's final group match against Ethiopia, saving it from early elimination.
Keshi is trying to become the first African coach to win the cup since Ivory Coast's Yeo Martial in 1992.
The Nigerian coach said he still didn't know whether he would put captain Yobo back in the starting lineup after benching him in the previous match.
Nigeria is Africa's most populous nation with more than 160 million people, but many there may not be able to watch the final because local television channels were not able to secure broadcast rights to the tournament.
Although the Confederation of African Football said they reached a last-minute deal for the game to be shown, a top official in Nigeria's broadcasting industry said there had been no agreement made by late Friday.