Jump to content

Africa Cup of Nations

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Theurgist (talk | contribs) at 16:35, 30 January 2012 (Most successful national teams). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Africa Cup of Nations
File:Capture d’écran 2011-09-02 à 05.17.19.png
Founded1957
RegionAfrica (CAF)
Number of teams16
Current champions Egypt (7th title)
Most successful team(s) Egypt (7 titles, including one as UAR)
2012 Africa Cup of Nations
Sign during the 2010 edition of the tournament in Angola

The Africa Cup of Nations, also referred to as the African Cup of Nations or African Nations Cup, officially CAN (French for Coupe d'Afrique des Nations), is the main international association football competition in Africa. It is sanctioned by the Confederation of African Football (CAF), and was first held in 1957. Since 1968, it has been held every two years. The title holders at the time of a FIFA Confederations Cup qualify for that competition.

In 1957 there were only three participating nations: Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia. South Africa were originally scheduled to compete, but were disqualified due to the apartheid policies of the government then in power.[1] Since then, the tournament has grown greatly, making it necessary to hold a qualifying tournament. The number of participants in the final tournament reached 16 in 1998 (16 teams were to compete in 1996 but Nigeria withdrew, reducing the field to 15), and since then, the format has been unchanged, with the sixteen teams being drawn into four groups of four teams each, with the top two teams of each group advancing to a "knock-out" stage.

Egypt is the most successful nation in the cup's history, winning the tournament a record seven times (including when Egypt was known as the United Arab Republic between 1958 and 1971). Ghana and Cameroon have won four titles each. Three different trophies have been awarded during the tournament's history, with Ghana and Cameroon winning the first two versions to keep after each of them won a tournament three times. The current trophy was first awarded in 2002 and with Egypt winning it indefinitely after winning their unprecedented third consecutive title in 2010.

As of 2013, the tournament will switch to being held in odd-numbered years so that it does not clash with the FIFA World Cup.[2]

History

1950s-60s: Early growth of the ANC competition

The origins of the African Nations Cup date back to June 1956, when the creation of the Confederation of African Football was proposed during the third FIFA congress in Lisbon. There were immediate plans for a continental nations tournament to be held, and in February 1957, the first African Cup of Nations took place in Khartoum, Sudan. There was no qualification for this tournament, the field being made up of the four founding nations of CAF (Sudan, Egypt, Ethiopia, and South Africa). South Africa's insistence on selecting only caucasian players for their squad due to that nation's apartheid policy led to its disqualification, and as a consequence Ethiopia were handed a bye straight to the final.[3] Hence, only two matches were played, with Egypt being crowned as the first continental champion after defeating hosts Sudan in the semi-final and Ethiopia in the final. Two years later, Egypt hosted the second ANC in Cairo with the participation of these same three teams. Host and defending champions Egypt repeated as cup winners, this time downing Sudan.

The field grew to include nine teams for the third ANC in 1962 in Addis Ababa, and for the first time there was a qualification round to determine which four teams would play for the title. Host Ethiopia and reigning champion Egypt received automatic berths, and were joined in the final four by Nigeria and Tunisia. Egypt made its third consecutive final appearance, but it was Ethiopia that emerged as victors, after first beating Tunisia and then downing Egypt in extra time.

1960s: Ghanaian domination

In 1963, Ghana made its first appearance as it hosted the event, and won the title after beating Sudan in the final. They repeated that as they became champions two years later in Tunisia – equalling Egypt as two-time winners – with a squad that included only two returning members from the 1963 team.[4]

The 1968 competition's final tournament format expanded to include eight of the 22 teams entered in the preliminary rounds. The qualifying teams were distributed in two groups of four to play single round-robin tournaments, with the top two teams of each group advancing to semi-finals, a system that remained in use for the finals until 1992. The Democratic Republic of Congo won its first title, beating Ghana in the final. Starting with the 1968 tournament, the competition has been regularly held every two years in even numbered years. Côte d'Ivoire forward Laurent Pokou led the 1968 and 1970 tournaments in scoring, with six and eight goals respectively, and his total of 14 goals remained the all-time record until 2008. Play was covered for television for the first time during the 1970 tournament in Sudan,[4] as the hosts lifted the trophy after defeating Ghana – who were playing their fourth consecutive final.

1970s: A decade of champions

Six different nations won titles from 1970 to 1980: Sudan, Congo-Brazzaville, Zaire, Morocco, Ghana, and Nigeria. Zaire's second title in the 1974 edition (they won their first as the Democratic Republic of Congo) came after facing Zambia in the final. For the only time to date in the history of the competition, the match had to be replayed as the first contest between the two sides ended in a 2-2 draw after extra time. The final was re-staged two days later with Zaire winning 2-0. Forward Mulamba Ndaye scored all four of Zaire's goals in these two matches: he was also the top scorer of the tournament with nine goals, setting a single-tournament record that remains unmatched. Three months earlier, Zaire had become the first black African nation to qualify to the FIFA World Cup. Morocco won their first title in the 1976 ANC held in Ethiopia and Ghana took its third championship in 1978, becoming the first nation to win three titles. In 1980, Nigeria hosted the event and beat Algeria to capture its first honours.

1980s: Cameroonian and Nigerian domination

Ghana's fourth continental title came in the 1982 cup tournament; they beat Algeria in the semi-finals in extra time, and faced host Libya in the final. The match ended in a 1-1 draw after 120 minutes and Ghana won the penalty shootout to become champions. Cameroon won their first title two years later by beating Nigeria and in the 1986 cup they faced Egypt – absent from the final since 1962 – with Egypt winning the title on penalty kicks. Cameroon reached its third consecutive final in the 1988 tournament and won their second championship by repeating their 1984 victory over Nigeria. In 1990, Nigeria lost once again as they made their third final appearance in four tournaments, this time falling to Algeria.

1990s: The return of South Africa

The 1992 Cup of Nations expanded the number of final tournament participants to 12; the teams were divided into four groups of three, with the top two teams of each group advancing to quarter-finals. Ghanaian midfielder Abedi "Pelé" Ayew, who scored three goals, was named the best player of the tournament after his contributions helped Ghana reach the final; he was, however, suspended for that match and Ghana lost to Côte d'Ivoire in a penalty shootout that saw each side make 11 attempts to determine the winner. Côte d'Ivoire set a record for the competition by holding each of their opponents scoreless in the six matches of the final tournament.

The 12-team, three-group format was used again two years later, where hosts Tunisia were humiliated by their first round elimination. Nigeria, who had just qualified to the World Cup for the first time in their history, won the tournament, beating Zambia, who a year before had been struck by disaster when most of their national squad died in a plane crash while traveling to play a 1994 World Cup qualification match. Nigerian forward Rashidi Yekini, who had led the 1992 tournament with four goals, repeated as the top scorer with five goals.

South Africa hosted the 20th ACN competition in 1996, marking their first ever appearance after a decades long ban was lifted with the end of apartheid in the country and a failed attempt to qualify in 1994. The number of final round participants in 1996 was expanded to the current 16, split into four groups. However, the actual number of teams playing in the final was only 15 as Nigeria withdrew from the tournament at the final moment for political reasons.[5] Bafana Bafana won their first title on home soil, defeating Tunisia in the final.[6]

The South Africans would reach the final again two years later in Burkina Faso, but were unable to defend their title, losing to Egypt who claimed their fourth cup.

2000s: Egypt's unprecedented Treble

Ghana's Sulley Muntari about to take a free kick at the 2008 tournament

The 2000 edition was hosted jointly by Ghana and Nigeria, who replaced the originally designated host Zimbabwe. Following a 2-2 draw after extra time in the final, Cameroon defeated Nigeria on penalty kicks. In 2002, Cameroon's Indomitable Lions made the second consecutive titles since Ghana had done it in the 1960s and after Egypt had done it before in 1957 and 1959. Again via penalty kicks, the Cameroonians beat first-time finalists Senegal, who also debuted in the World Cup later that year. Both finalists were eliminated in quarter finals two years later in Tunisia, where the hosts won their first title, beating Morocco 2-1 in the final. The 2006 tournament was also won by the hosts, Egypt, who reached a continental-record fifth title. The 2008 tournament was hosted by Ghana, and saw Egypt retain the trophy, winning their record-extending sixth tournament by defeating Cameroon 1-0 in the final.[7] Egypt set a new record in the 2010 tournament that was hosted by Angola by winning their third consecutive title in an unprecedented achievement on the African level after defeating Ghana 1-0 in the final, retaining the gold-plated cup indefinitely and extending their record to 7 continental titles (including when Egypt was known as the United Arab Republic between 1958 and 1971).[8]

On 31 January 2010, Egypt set a new African record, not being defeated for 19 consecutive Cup of Nations matches, since a 2-1 loss against Algeria in Tunisia in 2004,[citation needed] and a record 9 consecutive win streak.[citation needed] Egypt also set another record on that day, where it became the first African nation to win three consecutive cups joining Mexico, Argentina, and Iran who won their continent cup 3 times in a row.

Future

Ahead of the 2008 Africa Cup of Nations several European clubs called for a rethink of the tournament's schedule. As it takes place during the European season, players who are involved miss several matches for their clubs.[9]

In January 2008, FIFA president Sepp Blatter announced that he wanted the tournament to be held in either June or July by 2016, to fit in the international calendar, although this would preclude many countries in central and west Africa from hosting the competition (as these months occur during their wet season).[10]

In May 2010, it was announced that the tournament would be moved to odd-numbered years from 2013. This will mean the tournament will not take place in the same year as the World Cup. It also means there will be two tournaments within twelve months in January 2012[11] (co-hosted by Gabon and Equatorial Guinea) and January 2013 (hosted by South Africa).[2]

On 29 January 2011, Morocco won the bid to host the 2015 edition and South Africa won the right to host the 2017 tournament. But due to the 2011 Libyan civil war, Libya and South Africa traded years with South Africa hosting in 2013 and Libya hosting in 2017.[citation needed]

Trophy

Throughout the history of the Nations Cup, three different trophies have been awarded to the winners of the competition. The original trophy, made of silver, was the Abdelaziz Abdallah Salem Trophy, named after the first CAF president, Egyptian Abdelaziz Abdallah Salem. As the first winner of three Nations Cup tournaments, Ghana obtained the right to permanently hold the trophy in 1978.[12]

The second trophy was awarded from 1980 to 2000, and it was named "Trophy of African Unity"[13] or "African Unity Cup".[12] It was given by the Supreme Council for Sports in Africa to the CAF prior to the 1980 tournament and it was a cylindrical piece with the Olympic rings over a map of the continent engraved on it. It sat on a squared base and had stylized triangular handles. Cameroon won the Unity Cup indefinitely after they became three-time champions in 2000.

In 2001, the third trophy was revealed, a gold-plated cup designed and made in Italy.[citation needed] Cameroon, permanent holders of the previous trophy, were the first nation to be awarded the new trophy after they won the 2002 edition. Egypt won the gold-plated cup indefinitely after they became three-time champions in 2010, in an unprecedented achievement by winning three consecutive continental titles.

Results

Summaries

Year Host nation Final Third Place
Champion Score Second Place
1957
Details
 Sudan1
Egypt
4 – 0
Ethiopia

Sudan
1959
Details
 United Arab Republic2
United Arab Republic
2 – 13
Sudan

Ethiopia
Year Host nation Final Third Place Match
Champion Score Second Place Third Place Score Fourth Place
1962
Details
 Ethiopia
Ethiopia
4 – 2
aet

United Arab Republic

Tunisia
3 – 0
Uganda
1963
Details
 Ghana
Ghana
3 – 0
Sudan

United Arab Republic
3 – 0
Ethiopia
1965
Details
 Tunisia
Ghana
3 – 2
aet

Tunisia

Ivory Coast
1 – 0
Senegal
1968
Details
 Ethiopia
DR Congo
1 – 0
Ghana

Ivory Coast
1 – 0
Ethiopia
1970
Details
 Sudan
Sudan
3 – 2
Ghana

United Arab Republic
3 – 1
Ivory Coast
1972
Details
 Cameroon
Congo
3 – 2
Mali

Cameroon
5 – 2
Zaire
1974
Details
 Egypt
Zaire
2 – 2
aet
2 – 0
replay

Zambia

Egypt
4 – 0
Congo
1976
Details
 Ethiopia
Morocco
n/a4
Guinea

Nigeria
n/a4
Egypt
1978
Details
 Ghana
Ghana
2 – 0
Uganda

Nigeria
2 – 05
Tunisia
1980
Details
 Nigeria
Nigeria
3 – 0
Algeria

Morocco
2 – 0
Egypt
1982
Details
 Libya
Ghana
1 – 1
(7 – 6)
penalties

Libya

Zambia
2 – 0
Algeria
1984
Details
 Côte d'Ivoire
Cameroon
3 – 1
Nigeria

Algeria
3 – 1
Egypt
1986
Details
 Egypt
Egypt
0 – 0
(5 – 4)
penalties

Cameroon

Ivory Coast
3 – 2
Morocco
1988
Details
 Morocco
Cameroon
1 – 0
Nigeria

Algeria
1 – 1
(4 – 3)
penalties

Morocco
1990
Details
 Algeria
Algeria
1 – 0
Nigeria

Zambia
1 – 0
Senegal
1992
Details
 Senegal
Ivory Coast
0 – 0
(11 – 10)
penalties

Ghana

Nigeria
2 – 1
Cameroon
1994
Details
 Tunisia
Nigeria
2 – 1
Zambia

Ivory Coast
3 – 1
Mali
1996
Details
 South Africa
South Africa
2 – 0
Tunisia

Zambia
1 – 0
Ghana
1998
Details
 Burkina Faso
Egypt
2 – 0
South Africa

DR Congo
4 – 46
(4 – 1)
penalties

Burkina Faso
2000
Details
 Ghana
 Nigeria

Cameroon
2 – 2
(4 – 3)
penalties

Nigeria

South Africa
2 – 2
(4 – 3)
penalties

Tunisia
2002
Details
 Mali
Cameroon
0 – 0
(3 – 2)
penalties

Senegal

Nigeria
1 – 0
Mali
2004
Details
 Tunisia
Tunisia
2 – 1
Morocco

Nigeria
2 – 1
Mali
2006
Details
 Egypt
Egypt
0 – 0
(4 – 2)
penalties

Ivory Coast

Nigeria
1 – 0
Senegal
2008
Details
 Ghana
Egypt
1 – 0
Cameroon

Ghana
4 – 2
Ivory Coast
2010
Details
 Angola
Egypt
1 – 0
Ghana

Nigeria
1 – 0
Algeria
2012
Details
 Equatorial Guinea
 Gabon
To be played To be played
2013
Details
 South Africa To be played To be played
2015
Details
 Morocco To be played To be played
2017
Details
 Libya To be played To be played
  1. ^ South Africa were disqualified from the tournament due to the country's apartheid policies.
  2. ^ Only three teams participated.
  3. ^ There was no final match; the three teams played each other once, with the winner on points receiving the Cup. It finished: UAR 4pts, Sudan 2, Ethiopia 0.
  4. ^ There was no final match; the tournament was decided in a final group contested by the last four teams. It finished: Morocco 5pts, Guinea 4, Nigeria 3, Egypt 0.
  5. ^ The third-place match was tied 1–1 when the Tunisian team withdrew from the field in the 42nd minute in protest at the officiating. Nigeria were awarded a 2–0 walkover.
  6. ^ No extra time was played.

Most successful national teams

Team Champions Runners-up Third place Fourth place
 Egypt 7 (1957, 1959*, 1986*, 1998, 2006*, 2008, 2010) 1 (1962) 3 (1963, 1970, 1974*) 3 (1976, 1980, 1984)
 Ghana 4 (1963*, 1965, 1978*, 1982) 4 (1968, 1970, 1992, 2010) 1 (2008*) 1 (1996)
 Cameroon 4 (1984, 1988, 2000, 2002) 2 (1986, 2008) 1 (1972) 1 (1992)
 Nigeria 2 (1980*, 1994) 4 (1984, 1988, 1990, 2000*) 7 (1976, 1978, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2010) -
 DR Congo 2 (1968, 1974) - 1 (1998) 1 (1972)
 Tunisia 1 (2004*) 2 (1965*, 1996) 1 (1962) 2 (1978, 2000)
 Sudan 1 (1970*) 2 (1959, 1963) 1 (1957*) -
 Ivory Coast 1 (1992) 1 (2006) 4 (1965, 1968, 1986, 1994) 2 (1970, 2008)
 Algeria 1 (1990*) 1 (1980) 2 (1984, 1988) 2 (1982, 2010)
 Ethiopia 1 (1962*) 1 (1957) 1 (1959) 2 (1963, 1968*)
 Morocco 1 (1976) 1 (2004) 1 (1980) 2 (1986, 1988*)
 South Africa 1 (1996*) 1 (1998) 1 (2000) -
 Congo 1 (1972) - - 1 (1974)
 Zambia - 2 (1974, 1994) 3 (1982, 1990, 1996) -
 Mali - 1 (1972) - 3 (1994, 2002*, 2004)
 Senegal - 1 (2002) - 3 (1965, 1990, 2006)
 Uganda - 1 (1978) - 1 (1962)
 Guinea - 1 (1976) - -
 Libya - 1 (1982*) - -
 Burkina Faso - - - 1 (1998*)
Total 27 27 27 25
* as hosts

Champions by region

Federation (Region) Champion(s) Number
UNAF (North Africa) Egypt (7), Algeria (1), Morocco (1), Tunisia (1) 10 titles
UNIFFAC (Central Africa) Cameroon (4), Congo DR (2), Congo (1) 7 titles
WAFU (West Africa) Ghana (4), Nigeria (2), Côte d'Ivoire (1) 7 titles
CECAFA (East Africa) Ethiopia (1), Sudan (1) 2 titles
COSAFA (South Africa) South Africa (1) 1 title

Records and statistics

General statistics by tournament

Year Champion Winning coach Top scorer(s)[citation needed] Most valuable player[citation needed]
1957  Egypt Egypt Mourad Fahmy Egypt Mohamed Ad-Diba (5) Egypt Mohamed Ad-Diba
1959  United Arab Republic Hungary Pál Titkos United Arab Republic Mahmoud Al-Gohari (3) United Arab Republic Mahmoud El-Gohary
1962  Ethiopia Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Slavko Milošević United Arab Republic Abdelfatah Badawi (3)
Ethiopia Mengistu Worku (3)
Ethiopia Mengistu Worku
1963  Ghana Ghana Charles Gyamfi United Arab Republic Hassan El-Shazly (6) United Arab Republic Hassan El-Shazly
1965  Ghana Ghana Charles Gyamfi Ghana Ben Acheampong (3)
Ghana Osei Kofi (3)
Ivory Coast Eustache Manglé (3)
Ghana Osei Kofi
1968  DR Congo Hungary Ferenc Csanád Ivory Coast Laurent Pokou (6) Democratic Republic of the Congo Kazadi Mwamba
1970  Sudan Czech Republic Jiří Starost Ivory Coast Laurent Pokou (8) Ivory Coast Laurent Pokou
1972  Congo Republic of the Congo Amoyen Bibanzulu Mali Salif Keita (5) Republic of the Congo François M'Pelé
1974  Zaire Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Blagoje Vidinić Zaire Ndaye Mulamba (9) Zaire Ndaye Mulamba
1976  Morocco Romania Gheorghe Mărdărescu Guinea Aliou Mamadou Keita (4) Morocco Ahmed Faras
1978  Ghana Ghana Fred Osam-Duodu Uganda Phillip Omondi (3)
Ghana Opoku Afriyie (3)
Nigeria Segun Odegbami (3)
Ghana Karim Abdul Razak
1980  Nigeria Brazil Otto Glória Morocco Khaled Labied (3)
Nigeria Segun Odegbami (3)
Nigeria Christian Chukwu
1982  Ghana Ghana Charles Gyamfi Ghana George Alhassan (4) Libya Fawzi Al-Esawi
1984  Cameroon Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radivoje Ognjanović Egypt Taher Abouzaid (4) Cameroon Théophile Abega
1986  Egypt England Mike Smith Cameroon Roger Milla (4) Cameroon Roger Milla
1988  Cameroon France Claude Le Roy Algeria Lakhdar Belloumi (2)
Cameroon Roger Milla (2)
Ivory Coast Abdoulaye Traoré (2)
Egypt Gamal Abdelhamid (2)
Morocco Aziz Bouderbala
1990  Algeria Algeria Abdelhamid Kermali Algeria Djamel Menad (4) Algeria Rabah Madjer
1992  Ivory Coast Ivory Coast Yeo Martial Nigeria Rashidi Yekini (4) Ghana Abedi Pele
1994  Nigeria Netherlands Clemens Westerhof Nigeria Rashidi Yekini (5) Nigeria Rashidi Yekini
1996  South Africa South Africa Clive Barker Zambia Kalusha Bwalya (5) Zambia Kalusha Bwalya
1998  Egypt Egypt Mahmoud El-Gohary Egypt Hossam Hassan (7)
South Africa Benni McCarthy (7)
South Africa Benedict McCarthy
2000  Cameroon France Pierre Lechantre South Africa Shaun Bartlett (5) Cameroon Lauren Etame
2002  Cameroon Germany Winfried Schäfer Cameroon Patrick Mboma (3)
Cameroon René Salomon Olembé (3)
Nigeria Julius Aghahowa (3)
Cameroon Rigobert Song
2004  Tunisia France Roger Lemerre Cameroon Patrick Mboma (4)
Mali Frédéric Kanouté (4)
Morocco Youssef Mokhtari (4)
Nigeria Jay-Jay Okocha (4)
Tunisia Francileudo dos Santos (4)
Nigeria Jay-Jay Okocha
2006  Egypt Egypt Hassan Shehata Cameroon Samuel Eto'o (5) Egypt Ahmed Hassan
2008  Egypt Egypt Hassan Shehata Cameroon Samuel Eto'o (5) Egypt Hosny Abd Rabo
2010  Egypt Egypt Hassan Shehata Egypt Mohamed Nagy (5) Egypt Ahmed Hassan

Overall top goalscorers

[citation needed]

Goals Scorers
18 Cameroon Samuel Eto'o
14 Ivory Coast Laurent Pokou
13 Nigeria Rashidi Yekini
12 Egypt Hassan El-Shazly
11 Cameroon Patrick Mboma, Egypt Hossam Hassan
10 Democratic Republic of the Congo Ndaye Mulamba, Ivory Coast Joel Tiéhi, Ethiopia Mengistu Worku, Tunisia Francileudo Santos, Zambia Kalusha Bwalya
9 Ivory Coast Abdoulaye Traoré
8 Angola Manucho, Ivory Coast Didier Drogba, Egypt Ahmed Hassan, Ghana Wilberforce Mfum, Guinea Pascal Feindouno
7 Angola Flávio, Cameroon Roger Milla, Egypt Taher Abouzaid, Egypt Ali Abugreisha, Mali Frédéric Kanouté, Nigeria Jay-Jay Okocha, South Africa Benni McCarthy
6 Democratic Republic of the Congo Mayanga Maku, Egypt Mohamed Aboutreika, Ghana George Alhassan, Ghana Abedi Pele, Morocco Ahmed Faras, Nigeria Julius Aghahowa, Nigeria Segun Odegbami, South Africa Shaun Bartlett, Zambia Christopher Katongo
5 Algeria Lakhdar Belloumi, Algeria Rabah Madjer, Algeria Djamel Menad, Republic of the Congo Jean-Michel M'bono, Egypt Hosny Abd Rabo, Egypt Mohamed Ad-Diba, Egypt Mohamed Nagy "Gedo", Egypt Amr Zaki, Egypt Emad Moteab, Mali Fantamady Keita, Nigeria Muda Lawal, Nigeria Peter Odemwingie, Ghana Asamoah Gyan

Most appearances in the final match

Appearances Nation
8  Egypt (7 as Egypt and 1 as  United Arab Republic)
 Ghana
6  Cameroon
 Nigeria
3  Tunisia
 Sudan
2  Algeria
 Ethiopia
 Morocco
 Ivory Coast
 South Africa
 Zambia
 DR Congo (once as  Zaire)
1  Congo
 Mali
 Senegal
 Uganda
 Guinea
 Libya
 Gabon

Most tournaments hosted

Hosts Nation Year(s)
4 times  Egypt
 Ghana
1959, 1974, 1986, 2006
1963, 1978, 2000*, 2008
3 times  Ethiopia
 Tunisia
1962, 1968, 1976
1965, 1994, 2004
2 times  Libya
 Morocco
 Nigeria
 South Africa
 Sudan
1982, 2017**
1988, 2015**
1980, 2000*
1996, 2013**
1957, 1970
1 time  Algeria
 Angola
 Burkina Faso
 Cameroon
 Ivory Coast
 Equatorial Guinea
 Gabon
 Mali
 Senegal
1990
2010
1998
1972
1984
2012*
2012*
2002
1992
  • * Co-hosts

Participating nations

Team Sudan
1957
United Arab Republic
1959
Ethiopia
1962
Ghana
1963
Tunisia
1965
Ethiopia
1968
Sudan
1970
Cameroon
1972
Egypt
1974
Ethiopia
1976
Ghana
1978
Nigeria
1980
Libya
1982
Ivory Coast
1984
Egypt
1986
Morocco
1988
Algeria
1990
Senegal
1992
Tunisia
1994
South Africa
1996
Burkina Faso
1998
Ghana
Nigeria
2000
Mali
2002
Tunisia
2004
Egypt
2006
Ghana
2008
Angola
2010
Equatorial Guinea
Gabon
2012
Total
apps
 Algeria GS 2nd 4th 3rd GS 3rd 1st GS QF GS QF GS QF 4th 14
 Angola GS GS GS QF QF q 6
 Benin GS GS GS 3
 Botswana q 1
 Burkina Faso GS GS 4th GS GS GS GS GS 8
 Cameroon GS 3rd GS 1st 2nd 1st GS 4th GS QF 1st 1st QF QF 2nd QF 16
 Congo GS 1st 4th GS QF GS 6
 DR Congo GS 1st GS 4th 1st GS GS QF QF QF 3rd GS QF GS QF 15
 Ivory Coast 3rd 3rd 4th GS GS GS 3rd GS GS 1st 3rd GS QF GS GS 2nd 4th QF q 19
 Egypt 1st 1st 2nd 3rd 3rd 3rd 4th 4th 4th 1st GS GS GS QF QF 1st QF QF GS 1st 1st 1st 22
 Equatorial Guinea q 1
 Ethiopia 2nd 3rd 1st 4th GS 4th GS GS GS 9
 Gabon GS QF GS GS q 5
 Ghana 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 1st GS 1st GS 2nd QF 4th GS QF QF GS 3rd 2nd q 18
 Guinea GS GS 2nd GS GS GS QF QF QF q 10
 Kenya GS GS GS GS GS 5
 Liberia GS GS 2
 Libya 2nd GS GS 3
 Malawi GS GS 2
 Mali 2nd 4th 4th 4th GS GS q 7
 Mauritius GS 1
 Morocco GS 1st GS 3rd 4th 4th GS QF GS GS 2nd GS GS GS 14
 Mozambique GS GS GS GS 4
 Namibia GS GS 2
 Niger GS 1
 Nigeria GS 3rd 3rd 1st GS 2nd 2nd 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd 3rd 3rd QF 3rd 16
 Rwanda GS 1
 Senegal 4th GS GS 4th QF QF QF 2nd QF 4th GS GS 12
 Sierra Leone GS GS 2
 South Africa 1st 2nd 3rd QF GS GS GS 7
 Sudan 3rd 2nd 2nd 1st GS GS GS q 8
 Tanzania GS 1
 Togo GS GS GS GS GS GS 6
 Tunisia 3rd GS 2nd 4th GS GS 2nd QF 4th GS 1st QF QF GS q 15
 Uganda 4th GS GS GS 2nd 5
 Zambia 2nd GS 3rd GS 3rd QF 2nd 3rd GS GS GS GS GS QF q 15
 Zimbabwe GS GS 2
Legend
  • 1st – Champions
  • 2nd – Runners-up
  • 3rd – Third place
  • 4th – Fourth place
  • QF – Quarter Finals
  • GS – Group stage
  • q – Qualified
  •     — Hosts
  •     — Withdrew after qualification
  •     — Disqualified after qualification

Overall team records

Team P W D L GF GC Dif %age Win
 Egypt 90 51 15 24 154 84 +70 56.7
 Ghana 71 40 13 18 96 59 +38 56.3
 Cameroon 71 37 20 14 110 67 +43 52.1
 Ivory Coast 71 29 17 25 103 84 +19 40.8
 Nigeria 80 42 19 19 111 78 +33 52.5
 Zambia 55 22 13 20 68 62 +6 40.0
 Algeria 57 20 17 20 67 67 0 35.1
 Morocco 51 18 19 14 59 46 +13 35.3
 Tunisia 53 16 21 16 69 66 +3 30.2
 DR Congo 56 16 15 25 65 81 -16 28.6
 Senegal 43 15 11 17 49 40 +9 34.9
 South Africa 31 13 9 9 37 32 +5 41.9
 Guinea 32 10 11 11 45 48 -3 31.2
 Mali 28 10 8 10 38 43 -5 35.7
 Sudan 20 6 5 9 24 31 -7 30.0
 Ethiopia 24 7 2 15 28 54 -26 29.2
 Congo 22 5 6 11 21 34 -13 22.7
 Angola 17 3 8 6 24 28 -4 17.6
 Togo 18 2 6 10 13 32 -19 11.1
 Burkina Faso 23 2 6 15 20 46 -26 8.7
 Libya 8 2 4 2 8 9 -1 25.0
 Gabon 11 2 3 6 8 18 -10 18.2
 Uganda 16 3 1 12 17 31 -14 18.7
 Kenya 14 1 4 9 8 24 -16 11.6
 Zimbabwe 6 2 0 4 8 13 -5 33.3
 Liberia 5 1 2 2 5 7 -2 20.0
 Rwanda 3 1 1 1 3 3 0 33.3
 Malawi 6 1 1 4 6 11 -5 16.7
 Sierra Leone 5 1 1 3 2 11 -9 20.0
 Namibia 6 0 2 4 9 18 -9 0.0
 Mozambique 12 0 2 10 4 26 -22 0.0
 Tanzania 3 0 1 2 3 6 -3 0.0
 Benin 9 0 1 8 4 20 -16 0.0
 Mauritius 3 0 0 3 2 8 -6 0.0
Totals 1020 378 264 378 1288 1287 1

Qualification participating nations by year of first participation

Final tournament participating nations by year of first participation

Never qualified teams:  Burundi*,  Cape Verde*,  Central African Republic*,  Chad*,  Comoros,  Djibouti,  Eritrea,  Gambia*,  Guinea-Bissau*,  Lesotho,  Madagascar*,  Mauritania,  São Tomé and Príncipe*,  Seychelles*,  Somalia,  Swaziland

(*): Qualification progress (2013)

See also

References

  1. ^ African Cup of Nations - How it all began BBC Sport, 14 December 2001
  2. ^ a b "Nations Cup switched to odd years". BBC News. 16 May 2010.
  3. ^ BBC News (14 December 2001). "African Nations Cup - How it all began". BBC. Retrieved 9 March 2007.
  4. ^ a b BBC Sport (16 January 2004). "The early years". BBC. Retrieved 9 March 2007.
  5. ^ Mark Gleeson, BBC Sport, Cape Town (12 October 2004). "SA to meet Nigeria". BBC Sport. Retrieved 10 December 2007.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ BBC Sport (16 January 2004). "African Cup of Nations: 1980-2002". BBC. Retrieved 11 March 2007.
  7. ^ "Ghana 2008 all results". International football journalism. 10 February 2008. Retrieved 10 February 2008.
  8. ^ "Ghana 0-1 Egypt". BBC Sport. 2010-01-31. Retrieved 2010-01-31.
  9. ^ BBC Sport (12 December 2007). "African Nations Cup - Possible changes". BBC. Retrieved 14 December 2007.
  10. ^ "Blatter wants Cup of Nations move". BBC Sport. 18 January 2008. Retrieved 18 January 2008.
  11. ^ "Equatorial Guinea: Ahead of AU Summit, Government Curtails Political Rights, Disregards Social Needs". Press Release. Human Rights Watch. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  12. ^ a b BBC News (25 September 2001). "Nations Cup trophy revealed". BBC. Retrieved 16 March 2007.
  13. ^ FIFA.com (1 December 1997). "The Great Adventure of African Football". FIFA. Retrieved 16 March 2007.

Further reading

Template:Link GA