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Guinea into Cup of Nations Quarters after Lots Drawn

Guinea qualified for the Africa Cup of Nations quarter-finals on Thursday after a drawing of lots was required to separate them and Mali.

They will go through to a quarter-final on Sunday in Malabo against Group C winners Ghana while Mali go home.

The surreal event took place during a meeting of the tournament Organizing Committee at a hotel in Equatorial Guinea's capital Malabo and was attended by AFP.

A representative of each team was sent to take part -- each picked out a green ball with the winning one containing a piece of paper marked with the number two inside.

Amara Dabo, the financial director of Guinea's sports ministry, picked out the winning ball, with national football federation president Boubacar Baba Diarra representing Mali.

"It is the worst kind of cruelty to force a team to do this," he said after. 

"We would have preferred to lose on sporting criteria, which is why the CAF (Confederation of African Football) must look again at their rules.

"We'd prefer to lose on the pitch. They should have counted the number of corners or free-kicks, or take into account fair-play. But not lose like that. 

"We have built our team patiently. Mali has not had a team like that for 20 years, so to lose like that in a drawing of lots is the worst kind of cruelty. There is no worse way to lose at this stage with the team we have."

Just before the draw, CAF president Issa Hayatou said: "I'm not happy that we have to do this but we have no choice."

The two nations were left to draw lots after they finished deadlocked on three points each behind winners the Ivory Coast in Group D.

Both had identical records after drawing 1-1 in all three of their group games, including against each other in Mongomo on Wednesday evening.

There are precedents at the Cup of Nations for such a curious drama, with a drawing of lots needed in 1988 to take Algeria through to the knockout stage at the expense of the Ivory Coast in Morocco.

Before that, in 1965, Tunisia qualified for the final from a three-team group ahead of Senegal via a draw.

More recently, a drawing of lots was required at the 1990 World Cup in Italy after the Netherlands and the Republic of Ireland finished tied for second place in their group.

Both teams were guaranteed a place in the knockout round but a draw was needed to determine who played who in the next round.

Source: Agence France Presse


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