Nigeria, Burkina Faso to Meet in African Cup Final

  • W460
  • W460
  • W460
  • W460

Nigeria closed in on its first title in nearly two decades by easily advancing to the final of the African Cup of Nations on Wednesday, setting up a matchup with a surprising Burkina Faso team looking to lift the trophy for the first time.

Nigeria cruised to a 4-1 victory over Mali in Durban to reach the final for the first time in more than a decade, while Burkina Faso needed extra time and a penalty shootout to get past favorite Ghana in Nelspruit.

Burkina Faso won 3-2 on penalties after a 1-1 draw in regulation, making it to the final for the first time.

"Surprises are always there," Burkina Faso coach Paul Put said. "Maybe this time is our time."

Seeking its third title, Nigeria is considered the favorite heading into Sunday's final in Johannesburg, where it will be hoping to return to its glory days of the 1990s. The team led by Chelsea duo John Obi Mikel and Victor Moses last won the African Cup in 1994.

The Super Eagles looked impressive in its victory against Mali, finding no difficulties to get past the team led by former Barcelona midfielder Seydou Keita at Moses Mabhida Stadium. The remarkable performance came just three days after it had outplayed Ivory Coast's star-filled squad in the quarterfinals.

The two-time champions scored three first-half goals to quickly put the game out of reach for Mali, which was hoping to lift the trophy to bring joy to fans enduring political instability and conflicts back home.

"Tonight we played against a team that was better than us," Keita said. "It is tough for us to accept it, especially because we had an entire country rooting for us and hoping that we would win this game. All we can do now is to try and analyze this game and try and get the third place in the competition, and bring the joy we failed to give to our people."

Mali finished third in last year's competition, after losing 1-0 to Ivory Coast in the semifinals.

The Super Eagles scored through Elderson Echiejile in the 25th minute, Brown Ideye in the 30th, Emmanuel Emenike in the 44th and substitute Ahmed Musa in the 60th. Mali's lone goal was scored by Cheick Diarra in the 75th.

Nigeria coach Stephen Keshi, who captained the team when it won the title in 1994, may be without Moses in the final after he left Wednesday's match with an injury. Exams on Thursday will determine whether the striker will be fit for the match.

"We'll know about that tomorrow (Thursday), the doctors probably will need to do some scans, then we'll know better," Keshi said. "Hopefully it's not bad, because we need everybody in the team. We'll just cross our fingers."

Burkina Faso will certainly be missing its own leading striker, Jonathan Pitroipa, who was sent off against Ghana after being given a second yellow card for diving just three minutes from the end of extra time.

Burkina Faso will be enjoying its greatest moment in football on Sunday after surviving a thrilling match against Ghana in Nelspruit.

Three Ghanaians missed their spot kicks in the shootout, with Burkina Faso goalkeeper Daouda Diakite pulling off the decisive save from Emmanuel Agyemang Badu to send the underdogs through to the final at Soccer City.

Ghana went ahead in regulation with a penalty converted by Wakaso Mubarak in the 13th minute, but Aristide Bance netted an equalizer in the 60th to keep Burkina Faso alive in first semifinal appearance in 15 years.

"When we arrived in this competition, the only person who believed in us was our coach," Burkina Faso Captain Charles Kabore said.

It was another disappointing elimination for Ghana, which made the semifinals in the last four tournaments. The Black Stars haven't won the title since 1982.

"We cannot find any excuses," team captain Asamoah Gyan said. "I think the better side won."

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