Tag: AFCON 2023

  • AFCON 2023: Super Eagles to set new record in Bouake today

    AFCON 2023: Super Eagles to set new record in Bouake today

    Irrespective of the result of Wednesday’s 34th Africa Cup of Nations semi-final clash with the Bafana Bafana of South Africa, Nigeria will extend her record of being the country with the most last-four appearances at the continental fiesta.

     

    Since making her debut at the 1963 finals held in Ghana, where she was ejected in the group phase after 3-6 and 0-4 losses to United Arab Republic (Egypt) and Sudan respectively, Nigeria has been at the last-four of the tournament 15 times, and has never failed to win a medal each time.

     

    The Eagles have gone ahead to win the trophy and gold on three occasions, won silver on four occasions and won the bronze medals eight times. They have never lost a third-place match.

     

    On Wednesday, the three-time champions will make a 16th appearance in the semi-finals, in what is their 20th appearance at the competition. The only times Nigeria failed to make the semi-finals were in 1963, 1982, 2008 and 2021.

     

    1982: As Cup holders, the Eagles led by Felix Owolabi started brightly by beating Ethiopia 3-0 in Benghazi, and led Algeria 1-0 in their second match before capitulating 2-1 to the Fennecs. They were manhandled 3-0 by Zambia in their third match and crashed out.

     

    2008: The squad led by Joseph Yobo lost 0-1 to Cote d’Ivoire in their first match in Sekondi, but drew 0-0 with Mali and then defeated Benin Republic 2-0 to reach the quarter-finals. They led Ghana 1-0 before goals by Michael Essien and Junior Agogo toppled the advantage and sent the Eagles back home.

     

    2021: Named the best team of the group phase, the Eagles led by Ahmed Musa defeated Egypt, Sudan and Guinea Bissau in the group phase in Garoua to earn maximum points, only to lose 0-1 to Tunisia in the Round of 16.

     

    Below is a cursory look at all the 15 previous AFCON semi-final matches that Nigeria have been involved in:

     

    11 March 1976: The 1976 finals in Ethiopia were played on league basis – the only tournament in the competition’s history conducted in that format. There was a final round of the competition involving Nigeria, Guinea, Morocco and Egypt. After a 1-1 draw with Guinea, what could be considered as Nigeria’s own semi-final match was against eventual champions Morocco on 11th March 1976. The ever-prolific Baba Otu Mohammed scored for Nigeria in the 57th minute, but the Green Eagles allowed two late goals by Ahmad Faras (elected Africa Player of the Year that year) and Redouane Guezzar. After beating Egypt 3-2 three days later, with goals from Haruna Ilerika (a brace) and Mudashiru Lawal, Nigeria (3 points) finished third in the final classification behind Morocco (5 points) and Guinea (4 points) and were awarded the bronze medals.

     

    14 March 1978: Ahmed Abdulla Nasur put Uganda ahead at the Kumasi Sports Stadium, and Martins Eyo equalized for Nigeria in the 12 minutes into the second half. But Philip Omondi scored for Uganda late on and Nigeria were condemned to the third-place match, where they were awarded a 2-0 win after Tunisia abandoned the game in the 42nd minute in protest at Nigeria’s equalizer by Baba Otu Mohammed.

     

    19 March 1980: Felix Owolabi scored the only goal against Morocco after only nine minutes at the National Stadium, Lagos. Christian Chukwu, Segun Odegbami, Adokiye Amiesimaka and Ifeanyi Onyedika all tried to add to the tally to no avail. The hosts went ahead to win the trophy after beating Algeria 3-0 in the final three days later at the same venue.

     

    14 March 1984: In what was easily the match of the tournament, Egypt Pharaohs, beaten 1-0 by Nigeria four years earlier in a group phase match in Ibadan, raced to a two-goal lead within the half-hour. The Eagles had experienced something similar in their group phase match against Malawi, before Clement Temile restored parity. In Bouake, Stephen Keshi reduced the tally from the penalty spot, following up after the ball crashed against the bar. The captain’s inch-perfect cross in the second half was converted by Bala Ali, whose headed effort saw the ball roll past Thabet El-Batal. Nigeria won 8-7 after a penalty shootout.

     

    23 March 1988: Nigeria went into a first-half lead in Rabat when Sam Okwaraji’s miss-cued shot was diverted into the net by Abderrazak Belgherbi. Algeria equalized with only four minutes left when Rachid Maatar headed home from a corner kick. The two teams went into a marathon penalty shootout after extra time failed to produce a winner. Ademola Adeshina and Yisa Sofoluwe missed for Nigeria, and Belgherbi and Maatar also missed for Algeria. A total of 10 players on each side had taken, including goalkeepers Peter Rufai and Nasrredine Drid. They started all over again, and after Augustine Eguavoen scored, Rufai saved from Lakhdar Belloumi. Nigeria lost the final by a solitary goal to Cameroon in Casablanca four days later.

     

    12 March 1990: The Super Eagles defeated Zambia 2-0, with excellent goals from Uche Okechukwu and Rashidi Yekini in Annaba. In the final played four days later in Algiers, Cherif Oudjani’s long-range effort sailed past Aloysius Agu for the only goal of the match to give Algeria their first continental title.

     

    23 Jan 1992: Regional rivals Ghana and Nigeria started like a house-on-fire in Dakar, and Mutiu Adepoju headed Thompson Oliha’s cross past Edward Ansah in the 11th minute. Abedi Pele restored parity with his own header two minutes before half time, and Ghana won it with a fierce shot into the roof of the net by Prince Polley nine minutes into the second half. Two days later, the Eagles edged Cameroon 2-1 for the bronze medals.

     

    6 April 1994: Michel Bassole headed Cote d’Ivoire in front after 19 minutes, but Benedict Iroha equalized after a mesmerising one-two with Jay Jay Okocha at the Stade El Menzah. Bassole scored again, and Nigeria also scored (through Rashidi Yekini) to make it 2-2 before half time. Both teams threw the kitchen sink at themselves in the second half and during extra time, but there were no more goals and it ended in a penalty shootout. Samson Siasia lost his kick but Bassole and Amani Yao also fluffed for the Elephants. Four days later at the same venue, Nigeria defeated Zambia 2-1 to win the trophy and gold.

     

    10 Feb 2000: Banned from the 1998 finals for their failure to turn up in South Africa in 1996 to defend their title, Nigeria were brimming with vitality as co-hosts with Ghana in 2000. In the semi-finals, Coach Johannes Bonfrere unscrewed the plans of the Bafana Bafana by playing Tijani Babangida from the left side, and he caused them all sorts of problems besides scoring two first-half goals at the National Stadium, Lagos. The Eagles lost the Final to Cameroon three days later after a penalty shootout at the same venue.

     

    7 Feb 2002: At the Stade Modibo Keita, Bouba Diop put Senegal ahead early in the second half. Wilson Oruma failed to convert a penalty kick, but Julius Aghahowa made it 1-1 two minutes from the end. In first-half of extra time, Lassina Diao got the winner for Senegal, and the Eagles were condemned to third place. They defeated hosts Mali 1-0 in the city of Mopti two days later to win the bronze.

     

    11 Feb 2004: The November 7 Stadium in Rades was a cauldron of noise and passion as the Eagles, who had eliminated Cup holders Cameroon in the quarter-finals, took the kick-off against the host nation. Jay Jay Okocha and Nwankwo Kanu made life difficult for the Khaled Badri-led defence but the first half produced no goal. There were 60,000 spectators whose whistling rang out each time more than that of Beninoise referee Bonaventure Codjia Coffi. Nigeria went ahead when Okocha scored from the spot after Kanu was double-teamed in the box. Badra levelled from the spot as well eight minutes from time, after Seyi Olofinjana tripped Ziad Jaziri. In the penalty shootout, Peter Odemwingie lost his kick and Nigeria were sent to the third-place match after Karim Haggui beat Vincent Enyeama. The Eagles won the third-place match by beating Mali 2-1 back in Monastir three days later, with goals by Okocha (who would emerge the tournament’s Most Valuable Player) and Odemwingie.

     

    7 Feb 2006: Nigeria, who had again eliminated the Cup holders (Tunisia) in the quarter-finals, survived a torrid first half at the Alexandria Stadium. In the second half, Joseph Enarkharire mis-timed his leap from a high ball and Didier Drogba sneaked in to beat Enyeama from close range. It was the only goal of the game, and the Eagles would beat Senegal by a solitary goal from Garba Lawal in Cairo to pick up the bronze medals.

     

    28 Jan 2010: Asamoah Gyan scored the only goal of the match from a corner kick at the Estadio 11 de Novembro in Luanda. It meant the Eagles had to go back to Benguela, where they prosecuted their group phase matches, for the third- place match against Algeria, which they won with a goal by Obinna Nsofor after a sublime pass by Nwankwo Kanu.

     

    6 Feb 2013: Nigeria had sensationally eliminated in-form Cote d’Ivoire in the quarter-finals, and arrived at the Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban as clear favourites against Mali. Elderson Echiejile, Brown Ideye and Emmanuel Emenike scored before half time, and Ahmed Musa added a fourth on the hour. The Eagles went ahead to defeat Burkina Faso in the final played four days later at Soccercity, the only goal scored by Sunday Mba.

     

    14 July 2019: Nigeria had eliminated Cup holders Cameroon in the Round of 16, and then kicked out South Africa (who eliminated hosts Egypt) in the quarter-finals. Five minutes from recess against Algeria at the Cairo International Stadium, William Ekong inadvertently diverted the ball into his own net. Odion Ighalo, who would emerge tournament top scorer, scored from the spot to level in the second half. But the Fennecs flew into the Final after Riyad Mahrez’s vicious shot from a free-kick deep in added time sailed past Daniel Akpeyi. Ighalo scored the only goal of the third-place match against Tunisia three days later to give Nigeria the bronze medals.     

  • AFCON 2023: We are not worried about our poor record against Super Eagles – Bafana Bafana goalkeeper, Williams

    AFCON 2023: We are not worried about our poor record against Super Eagles – Bafana Bafana goalkeeper, Williams

    Ronwen Williams, the Bafana Bafana of South Africa goalkeeper, has fired warnings to the Super Eagles of Nigeria ahead of tonight semi-final clash in Bouake.

    According to Williams, statistics don’t play games in football.

    Williams, who recently put his name in history’s book after saving four penalties during shoot-outs against Cape Verde in the quarter-final, gave the warning during his pre-match press conference on Tuesday.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that historically, the Super Eagles have more wins against the Bafana Bafana in terms of head-to-head.

    However, Williams insisted that Hugo Broos’ side are not worried about their poor record against Nigeria.

    “Stats don’t play the game. You know many statistics that were against us in this tournament and we proved that stats don’t play the game,” Williams said.

    “So, what has happened in the past, we can’t change that, but what we can change is tomorrow’s result, tomorrow’s performance. So we don’t look at that because that can’t change now.

    “We control what we can control and that is tomorrow’s performance and tomorrow’s result.”

  • AFCON 2023: See head to head between Nigeria, South Africa

    AFCON 2023: See head to head between Nigeria, South Africa

    As the AFCON 2023 gradually winds down, the Super Eagles of Nigeria will slug it out with the Bafana Bafana of South Africa on Wednesday in Bouakke for a place in the final of the competition.

    Both Teams have clashed 15 times before now, with most games won recorded by the Super Eagles of Nigeria,  below is the Head to Head between the two footballing nations.

    Nigeria vs South Africa Head to Head

    10 Oct 1992: Nigeria 4 South Africa 0 (1994 WCq, Lagos)

    16 Jan 1993: South Africa 0 Nigeria 0 (1994 WCq, Johannesburg)

    10 Feb 2000: Nigeria 2 South Africa 0 (AFCON semi-final, Lagos)

    31 Jan 2004: Nigeria 4 South Africa 0 (AFCON finals, Monastir, Tunisia)

    17 Nov 2004: South Africa 2 Nigeria 1 (International Friendly, Durban)

    1 June 2008: Nigeria 2 South Africa 0 (2010 FIFA WCq, Abuja)

    6 Sept 2008: South Africa 0 Nigeria 1 (2010 FIFA WCq, Port Elizabeth)

    14 Aug 2013: South Africa 0 Nigeria 2 (International Friendly, Johannesburg)

    10 Sept 2014: South Africa 0 Nigeria 0 (2015 AFCON qualifier, Johannesburg)

    19 Nov 2014: Nigeria 2 South Africa 2 (2015 AFCON qualifier, Uyo)

    29 Mar 2015: South Africa 1 Nigeria 1 (International Friendly, Durban)

    10 June 2017: Nigeria 0 South Africa 2 (2019 AFCON qualifier, Uyo)

    17 Nov 2018: South Africa 1 Nigeria 1 (2019 AFCON qualifier, Johannesburg)

    10 July 2019: Nigeria 2 South Africa 1 (2019 AFCON q-final, Cairo)

  • AFCON 2023: Super Eagles clear favourites to condemn ‘Boys’ to third place match

    AFCON 2023: Super Eagles clear favourites to condemn ‘Boys’ to third place match

    With their defence having been breached only once after five matches in this tournament, and considering their vast superiority in the record of previous encounters, Nigeria’s Super Eagles have the favourite tag going into Wednesday’s Africa Cup of Nations semi-final against South Africa in Bouake.

     

    Wednesday’s game will be the 15th clash between both countries at full international level. Nigeria have won seven of the previous 14 matches, with five of those matches drawn and two won by South Africa.

     

    Apart from having to deal with the incredible energy, effervescence and pace of Africa Player of the Year Victor Osimhen, another major problem that the Bafana Bafana will be up against early, in-game and at the latter stages is the intractability of wing-terrors Ademola Lookman and Moses Simon.

     

    Lookman, with three goals in the tournament so far (all coming in the knockout rounds), plus assisting Osimhen to score the equalizer against Equatorial Guinea, and Simon (with two assists) can be fleeting and entirely unpredictable for any defence, with both switching wings at will.

     

    A stingy rearguard, marshalled by on-field captain William Ekong, has been able to provide all the answers to a number of tricky questions by the opposition in their last four matches, and looks as solid as the Berlin Wall at the height of its glory.

     

    Goalkeeper Stanley Nwabali, who plays his club football in South Africa, and who was thrown into the forefront as number one at this competition despite only one previous cap, said he would have a sweet day stopping all efforts by the Bafana Bafana and then seeing them shunted to the third-place match.

     

    “I know them and they know me. It will be an interesting evening in Bouake.”

     

    Calvin Bassey, Semi Ajayi, Zaidu Sanusi and Olaoluwa Aina are the other pegs in that rearguard, and the attack-minded Aina offers even more problems for the 1996 champions.  

     

    Ranked 42nd in the world and 12th in Africa (as against South Africa’s global ranking of 66th and 12th in the world), the Super Eagles are unbeaten in 10 competitive matches over the past 10 months, and even achieved a rare win in a friendly game when they edged Mozambique in Portugal in October 2023.

     

    As far as the Africa Cup of Nations go, Nigeria is aiming for a fourth star on its crest, while the Bafana (Boys) are only aiming for a second triumph, following their win on home soil 28 years ago. Even that win has always been downplayed by Nigerians as it happened in the absence of Cup holders Nigeria, who were stopped from travelling to the Rainbow Nation by military strongman Sani Abacha following a spat with President Nelson Mandela over the execution of environmental rights activist Ken Saro Wiwa and some others in November 1995.

     

    The first meeting between both countries was on 10th October 1992, when Richard Owubokiri opened the floodgates of goals in a 4-0 win for Nigeria at the National Stadium, Lagos. Rashidi Yekini scored a brace. It was a 1994 FIFA World Cup qualifying match. The return leg at the FBN Stadium in Johannesburg ended scoreless.

     

    Nigeria spanked South Africa 2-0 in the semi-finals of the 2000 AFCON they co-hosted with Ghana, with Tijani Babangida scoring both goals, and four years later, an Eagles’ team wounded by Morocco in its first match descended heavily on the Bafana, beating the latter 4-0 in a group phase match in Monastir, Tunisia.

     

    Four years ago, in the AFCON quarter-finals, the Eagles edged the Bafana 2-1 in Cairo, with the goals scored by Samuel Chukwueze and William Ekong. Both players will be in Bouake with Ekong to lead the squad on the field and Chukwueze likely to play some part in the proceedings.

     

  • BREAKING: Osimhen left behind as Super Eagles arrive Bouaké for AFCON semi final clash against South Africa

    BREAKING: Osimhen left behind as Super Eagles arrive Bouaké for AFCON semi final clash against South Africa

    The Super Eagles of Nigeria have arrived in Bouaké, Côte d’Ivoire where they are scheduled to play their semi final match against the Bafana Bafana of South Africa in the ongoing 2023 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON).

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the Super Eagles of Nigeria arrived in Bouaké without star striker Victor Osimhen, who is said to be down with a stomach upset.

    According to a statement posted on the X (formerly Twitter) account of the Super Eagles, the Napoli forward is being assisted by the team medics.

    The statement reads: “Members of the team travelled from Abidjan to Bouaké today via a 10pm Air Cote D’Ivoire flight.

    “Osimhen did not however make the trip as a result of abdominal discomfort.

    “Team medics confirmed that he has been placed under close watch with a member of the medical team staying behind in Abidjan with him.

    “If cleared by tomorrow morning, he will join the rest of the squad before 5 pm”.

    TNG reports the semi final fixture against South Africa saw the Super Eagles leaving Abidjan for the first time since the commencement of the 2023 AFCON.

    The Nigerian team played all its group matches, Round of 16 and quarter-final matches in Abidjan.

    In continuation of preparation for the epic clash, the team on Sunday trained at their usual Ecole Nationale de la Police playing turf, Abidjan.

    Jose Peseiro, the team’s gaffer in company of a player will have the official pre-match news conference on Tuesday by 11am (Nigerian time) in Bouake.

    The team will subsequently have their first training session behind closed doors later in the day.

    Recall that when Cote d’Ivoire hosted their only previous AFCON in 1984, Nigeria also played their semi-final match in the city of Bouake against Egypt, winning 8-7 on penalties, after a pulsating 2-2 draw.

    The Super Eagles of Nigeria will on Wednesday lock horns with perennial rivals Bafana Bafana of South Africa at the Stade de la Paix, Bouake.

    The match will be a repeat of the 2000 AFCON semi-finals in Lagos, which saw Nigeria defeat South Africa 2-0.

    Also in the 2019 AFCON in Egypt, Nigeria again showed superiority by eliminating the Bafana Bafana 2-1 in the quarter-final stage.

  • Super Eagles fly to Bouake on Tuesday

    Super Eagles fly to Bouake on Tuesday

    African champions-in-waiting Nigeria will only arrive in the city of Bouake on Tuesday, for their potentially-explosive first semi-final of the 34th Africa Cup of Nations against South Africa’s Bafana Bafana.

     

    The three-time champions will continue their preparations for the encounter in Abidjan on Sunday and Monday, and will only have the official training on arrival in Cote d’Ivoire’s second city on Tuesday afternoon.

     

    When Cote d’Ivoire hosted their only previous Africa Cup of Nations finals 40 years ago, Nigeria also played their semi-final match in the city of Bouake, against Egypt.

     

    In what was easily ranked as the match of the tournament, the Pharaohs, led by Mahmoud Al-Khatib and including Taher Abou Zeid, Magdi Abdel Ghani, Ali Shehata, Ibrahim Youssef and goalkeeper Thabet El-Batal, led 2-0 before the half hour. But Stephen Keshi pulled one back from the penalty spot before half time, and then made the inch-perfect pull-out from which Bala Ali netted the equalizer in the second half. Nigeria won the ensuing penalty shootout 8-7.

     

    Nigeria’s squad that day included goalkeeper Peter Rufai, Kingsley Paul, Yisa Sofoluwe, Sunday Eboigbe, Humphrey Edobor, Chibuzor Ehilegbu, Ademola Adeshina, Mudashiru Lawal, Henry Nwosu and Rashidi Yekini.   

  • AFCON 2023: Gusau heaps plaudits on President Tinubu, Akpabio, Pinnick as Eagles progress

    AFCON 2023: Gusau heaps plaudits on President Tinubu, Akpabio, Pinnick as Eagles progress

    President of Nigeria Football Federation, Ibrahim Musa Gusau has applauded the contributions of His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, President of the Senate, Chief Godswill Akpabio and Nigeria’s FIFA Member Amaju Melvin Pinnick as the Super Eagles wended elegantly and unapologetically into the Africa Cup of Nations semi-finals in Cote d’Ivoire.

     

    Gusau, ever modest and level-headed even in the midst of mass excitement and euphoria of Nigeria’s progress, told thenff.com that he would rather give credit for the team’s advancement to key individuals who have played major roles behind the scenes to spur the team to rise to higher heights.

     

    “Let me tell you something: that virtual interaction that our Father of the Nation, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu (GCFR) had with the players prior to the match against Angola was highly motivating and inspiring at the same time. He told them to go for it because they can do it and that they have the capacity to go all the way. The players told me his words kept ringing in their ears.

     

    “We also commend the President of the Senate of the Federal Republic, Chief Godswill Akpabio (CON) for finding the time to come all the way to Abidjan to cheer the Eagles to victory against the Angolans. It was a very tough game but the players knew the whole of Nigeria was behind them having heard the words of Mr. President and knowing that the country’s number three man was in the stands cheering them on.”

     

    Three-time champions Nigeria have cruised into the last four of the 34th Africa Cup of Nations, with solid performances against host nation Cote d’Ivoire, Guinea Bissau, Cameroon and Angola, following an opening day 1-1 draw with Equatorial Guinea.

     

    “I must also give kudos to Nigeria’s Member of the esteemed FIFA Council, Mr. Amaju Melvin Pinnick, my predecessor in office. He has been amazing in the way he has supported everything we are doing and provided valuable advice every now and then. He is a real patriot with so much passion and the NFF is grateful to him.”

     

    Nigeria will now square up to the Bafana Bafana of South Africa in the competition’s first semi-final at the Stade de la Paix (Stadium of Peace) in Bouake on Wednesday evening.

  • AFCON 2023: South Africans plays fast, counter-attacking football – Oliseh warns Super Eagles

    AFCON 2023: South Africans plays fast, counter-attacking football – Oliseh warns Super Eagles

    Former Super Eagles Captain and  head coach, Sunday Oliseh has warned the team to be wary of the Bafana Bafana of South Africa.

    Oliseh advised the team to put up their best performance against the fast South Africans, saying the South Africans are a dangerous counter-attacking side.

    Jose Peseiro’s men will be up against the Bafana Bafana in an AFCON semi-final tie at the Stade de la Paix  in Bouakke on Wednesday by 6pm Nigerian time.

    The former midfielder also advised the Super Eagles not to allow the game to drag into a penalty shootout.

    “South Africa are compact and dangerous when they go forward,” Oliseh said on a Channels TV programme.

    “When they go forward, they can hurt us.

    “And we should not allow the game to go to a penalty shootout because of the aura around the heroics of the goalkeeper.

    “He saved four penalties and the Super Eagles must have watched that.”

    South Africa and Nigeria last met at the AFCON in the 2000 edition which Nigeria co-hosted with Ghana.

    The Super Eagles won the semi-final tie 2-0 with Tijani Babangida scoring a brace.

  • AFCON 2023: Scoring my first professional goal in Abidjan an unforgettable experience – Odegbami

    AFCON 2023: Scoring my first professional goal in Abidjan an unforgettable experience – Odegbami

    Nigerian football legend, Olusegun Odegbami rechristened ‘mathematical’ because of his calculative accuracy on the pitch has described how and when he scored his first professional goal for Nigerian senior national team known as the Green Eagles as at then.

    Odegbami who spoke at the launching of entrepreneur, Obi Cubana’s  Odogwu bitters in Abidjan, Cote D’Ivoire on Sunday night relayed his experience upon scoring his first professional goal for Nigeria.

    According to Odegbami, he scored the goal right in Abidjan against the Ivorian national team in 1979 during the World Cup qualifiers.

    He added that the Green Eagles had already defeated the Ivorian national team 3-0 in Lagos but were already losing 2-0 in the first half of the return leg in Abidjan.

    Continuing, he said upon resumption of second half, he got a pass from Henry Nwosu right in the Green Eagles half and he raced and dribbled his way to score his first professional goal, describing it as a very sweet experience and feeling.

    ‘It  was a very interesting and unforgettable moment for me, I don’t think I have ever shared this experience before”.

    ”I love this country so much and it was the fist ever African country i visited” He said.

  • AFCON 2023: How we will play Super Eagles – South Africa coach

    AFCON 2023: How we will play Super Eagles – South Africa coach

    Hugo Bruce, South African coach, says he will approach the semi-final match against Nigeria differently from Bafana Bafana’s style in their quarter-final game against Cape Verde on Saturday.

    Recall goalkeeper Ronwen Williams was the hero as South Africa beat Cape Verde 5-3 on penalties following a goalless 120 minutes to advance to the Africa Cup of Nations semi-finals.

    After an impressive four penalty saves by Williams, Bafana Bafana secured their place in the semi-finals for the first time since 2000 where they will meet Nigeria.

    Bruce told newsmen at a post-match conference that the game against Nigeria would be an entirely different ‘kettle of fish’.

    “The semi-final match will be different against Nigeria, which has good players like (Ademola) Lookman.

    “We will not lose focus. The players will be in good condition, so we need to rest and recover to start our preparation,” he said.

    He noted that the pressure of qualifying for the semi-finals for the first time in AFCON made the game tougher, adding that winning the game by penalty shootout wasn’t a fluke.

    “When we got to the penalty shootout, it was a special thing for the players, because during training they were scoring them.

    “When we have a goalkeeper who stops four penalty kicks, this is not luck but a lot of hard work.

    “There was a lot of pressure in the match. Everyone wanted to qualify.

    “This match was unlike the previous ones. We did not show the same performance as we had in previous matches,” he said.

    He also noted that not many people in South Africa believed in the team, saying that he was proud of what his boys had achieved so far.

    “In spite of all the doubts, we believed in it, and the players believed in themselves as well.

    “Reaching the semi-finals is in itself a good thing for South African football,” Bruce said.

    AFCON 2023: The return of Nigeria, South Africa rivalry

    South Africa’s Bafana Bafana renewed their football rivalry with Nigeria’s Super Eagles in the semi-final with their win over Cape Verde.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the Semi Final clash between the Super Eagles and Bafana Bafana will take place on February 7 at Stade De Bouake, Cote d’Ivoire, at 6.00 p.m. Nigerian time.

    Nigeria and South Africa have met 15 times in competitive football since 1992.

    The Super Eagles have won eight of such encounters, while the Bafana Bafana won two, with both teams drawing on five occasions.

    The Bafana Bafana secured their place in the semi-finals for the first time since 2000.

    AFCON 2023: Semi-finalists set for fierce battle

    The 2023 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) competition has entered the semi-final stage with four teams set for what analysts believe will be a fierce battle for slots in the final.

    On Saturday, hosts Cote d’Ivoire came from a goal down to throw out Mali while South Africa eliminated the stubborn Cape Verde 5-3 on penalties.

    The Super Eagles of Nigeria became the first country to book a spot in the semi-finals with a composed 1-0 victory over the hard fighting Angolans,  while DR Congo came from behind to beat Guinea 3-1.

    Nigeria, who are now the highest ranked team in the tournament, will lock horns with perennial foe, Bafana Bafana of South Africa on Wednesday at the Stade de la Paix, Bouake by 6pm (Nigerian time).

    It will be hosts Cote d’Ivoire against DR Congo at the Alassane Ouattara Stadium, Abidjan in the second semi-final fixture by 9pm (Nigerian time).

    AFCON 2023 Semi-finals

    Wednesday (Feb. 7)

    1: Nigeria vs South Africa (Stade de la Paix, Bouake, 6 pm)

    2: Cote d’Ivoire vs DR Congo (Alassane Ouattara Stadium, Abidjan, 9 pm)

    AFCON 2023 third place play-off

    Saturday (Feb. 10)

    Loser semi-final 1 vs Loser semi-final 2 (Felix Houphouet-Boigny Stadium, Abidjan, 9 pm)

    AFCON 2023 Final

    Sunday (Feb. 11)

    Winner semi-final 1 vs Winner semi-final 2 (Alassane Ouattara Stadium, Abidjan, 9 pm)

    TNG reports the AFCON 2023, which began on January 13 in Cote d’Ivoire will end on February 11.