Monday, February 16, 2026
-5.8 C
Tallinn

12 Lessons from African Cup of Nations (AFCON) 2025 in Morocco By Victor Oladokun

RABAT, Morocco, January 20, 2026/ — By Victor Oladokun, Senior Advisor to Dr Akinwumi Adesina.

Like millions of football fans who descended on Morocco for the African Cup of Nations final here in Rabat, and hundreds of millions more who watched globally, this has been an amazing tournament.

The football infrastructure here has been absolutely worldclass. The quality, efficiency, and cost of the trains services are as good as, if not better than some of the best in the world. Moroccan hospitality before, during and after the tournament has been exceptional.

Significant improvements though still need to be made in the overall quality of hotels and customer service, more so ahead of the soon-to-be jointly hosted 2030 #FIFAWorldCup to be held in Morocco, Portugal, and Spain. I am confident Morocco will pull it off.

For now, here are 12 takeaways, based on my up-close observations.

1. #SENEGAL: While understandably frustrated by very poor officiating, walking off the pitch in protest risked match abandonment and damaged Africa’s global football image. It was a terrible call by the Senegalese coach that did not honor host country Morocco, the continent, #CAF or #FIFA. Thank God that #SadioMane had the presence of mind to stand his ground and convince his Senegalese teammates to return to the field and fight as men.

2. #MOROCCO: Ahead of all CAF and FIFA sanctioned football events, Morocco must prioritize a more robust stadium security system to contain fan anger and prevent escalations from erupting into full blown riots when decisions go against the home team. It was unacceptable to see Moroccan stadium officials and players (Hakimi and others included) deliberately throw away the towel of the Senegalese goalkeeper (which is needed to wipe down gloves during play). The same antic was used against Nigeria, including a racist slur by a Moroccan fan who threw a banana at Nigerian goalkeeper #Nwabali. These antics were juvenile, unnecessary, and highly provocative. It really took a shine off of the exceptional and kind hospitality that Moroccans always go out of their way to extend to foreigners. (Topic for another time).

3. #CAF: Africa’s apex football association, must enhance referee and VAR training to minimize controversial calls in high-stakes moments, and to reduce the likelihood of prolonged disputes and delays. In several of the tournament’s matches, the level of officiating fell well below acceptable international standards. Poor officiating in several matches undermined the credibility of the tournament..Calls were made that should not have been made. Calls were also not made that should have been made. Consequently, the media and fans were justified in their allegations or suspicions of official collusion favoring one team over the other. Whether true or not, is not the issue. Sometimes, perception is reality!

4. #FIFA: should develop clear international protocols for handling team walk-offs, including immediate sanctions to Federations, coaches, and players, to deter similar actions in future tournaments.

5. #SENEGAL: And every other country for that matter, needs a mature level-headed player in the mold of #SadioMane to de-escalate tensions swiftly. Thanks to his leadership, sanity prevailed, a full-blown crisis was avoided, the game resumed, and victory was secured.

6. #MOROCCO: And all other countries, should avoid high-risk penalty techniques like the Panenka in pressure situations, unless the taker is mentally prepared, as Diaz’s tame effort proved costly. The same seemingly laissez faire approach decisively cost #Nigeria its Semi Final match against Morocco when #Chukwueze gifted the Moroccan goalkeeper.

7. #CAF: Implement stricter time limits for VAR reviews to avoid extending stoppage time excessively (e.g. 24 minutes), which fueled frustration and chaos.

8. #FIFA: Promote cross-confederation education on sportsmanship to counter perceptions of African football as chaotic, and to ensure fair play overrides national biases.

9. #MOROCCO: As AFCON hosts, and ahead of the 2030 World Cup, consider this a test-run and invest in enhanced crowd management strategies, including riot police readiness, to safeguard players, officials and fans, during heated matches.

10. #SENEGAL: Protesting soft penalties can backfire. The 16-20 minute delay highlighted poor sportsmanship. Any other referee could have called for a forfeit of the match in favor of Morocco, which would only have added to the shameful drama.

11. #CAF: Enforce post-match reviews of referee decisions to build trust, and address complaints like Senegal’s disallowed goal that preceded the penalty drama.

12. #FIFA: Monitor and advise tournament organizers especially in politically charged situations (for example in matches involving arch rivals Morocco and Algeria) and to prevent external factors, including excessive fan nationalism from escalating on-field disputes.

Victor Oladokun, Senior Advisor to Dr Akinwumi Adesina.

Hot this week

Nigeria, Angola Sign Visa Waiver Deal for Diplomatic Passport Holders

Abuja, Nigeria (chatnewstv.com) — Nigeria and Angola have signed...

Leading German conservative calls for shift in top tax rate threshold

Agency Report A leading German conservative politician has called for...

“There will no longer be paperwork”: The professor who wants to kill the PDF

TEL AVIV, Israel (chatnewstv.com) — On the left arm...

SERAP sues CBN over failure to ‘account for missing N3 trillion of public funds’

By Kolawole Oluwadare Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has...

Rubio Urges Europe to Defend Western Civilization in Munich Speech

MUNICH, Germany — U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio...

Latest

Nigeria, Angola Sign Visa Waiver Deal for Diplomatic Passport Holders

Abuja, Nigeria (chatnewstv.com) — Nigeria and Angola have signed...

Leading German conservative calls for shift in top tax rate threshold

Agency Report A leading German conservative politician has called for...

SERAP sues CBN over failure to ‘account for missing N3 trillion of public funds’

By Kolawole Oluwadare Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has...

Rubio Urges Europe to Defend Western Civilization in Munich Speech

MUNICH, Germany — U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio...

Orbán says Germany and EU created rival party to threaten his rule

By Kathrin Lauer (Agency Report) Budapest - Hungarian Prime Minister...

Fraudsters-In-Law: The conspiracy against Abia State By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

In June 2005, the Paris Club of creditors announced...

MSC: Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala Warns Against ‘Wrecking-Ball’ Geopolitics

By Gabriel Ani MUNICH (chatnewstv.com) — The Director General of...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Section

spot_imgspot_img

MORE FROM CHATNEWSTV

Fraudsters-In-Law: The conspiracy against Abia State By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

In June 2005, the Paris Club of creditors announced a deal granting Nigeria “60% cancellation of its Paris Club total debt stock based on...

The SEDC Will Need Protection from Political Extortion By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

When he presented his budget proposals for 2024 to Nigeria’s National Assembly, the first full year of appropriations under his presidency, President Bola Ahmed...

Not In Defence Of Professor Amupitan By Aliyu Ammani

For years, Boko Haram and armed bandits have laid waste to large swathes of Northern Nigeria. They have killed indiscriminately, razed communities, destroyed livelihoods,...

In the House of ‘My Lord’, There are Judgments By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

Abdul Leigh Balogun became a judge of the High Court of Lagos State in 1976. In a career as a trial judge spanning 17...

Nigeria’s Crisis of Judicial Pensions Is Not About the Law of Karma By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

“The term of office of judges, their independence, security, adequate remuneration, conditions of service, pensions and the age of retirement shall be adequately secured...

Donald Trump: Umeagbalasi and the Powers of a Screwdriver Salesman By Jude Chijioke Ndukwe

It is never difficult to see the hand of Esau in the report by The New York Times under the headline, "The Screwdriver Salesman...

AFCON 2025 – An Enchanting Story Begins its Final Journey By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

The last time Morocco hosted the African Cup of Nations (AFCON) in 1988, it lost by a single goal in the semi-finals to eventual...

From Ese Oruru to Walida: Exposing selective outrage in child sexual exploitation cases by Yushau A. Shuaib

I have always resisted being dragged into ethnoreligious arguments. Not because the issues are trivial, but because many of the loudest voices in such...

Mr. Justice Steppin’ Razor By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

If you wanna live - treat me good If you wanna live, live - I beg you treat me good I'm like a walking razor Don't you watch...