U-23 Africa Cup of Nations

(Redirected from Africa U-23 Cup of Nations)

The U-23 Africa Cup of Nations, known for sponsorship purposes as the TotalEnergies U-23 Africa Cup of Nations, is the quadrennial African football tournament organized by the Confederation of African Football for its nations, consisting of players under 23 years of age. Three nations qualify directly from every edition of this tournament for the football tournament of the Olympic Games.

U-23 Africa Cup of Nations
Organising bodyCAF
Founded2011; 12 years ago (2011)
RegionAfrica
Number of teams8
Current champions Morocco (1st title)
Most successful team(s)
WebsiteOfficial website
2023 U-23 Africa Cup of Nations

History Edit

Beginning in 1956, the year before the foundation of CAF, there has been qualification tournaments for the Olympic Games football tournament for African teams, but they were on a home-and-away basis. In 2011, CAF formed a full-time standalone qualification tournament to align with the upgrades to its U-20 and U-17 competitions and named it the African U-23 Championship. On 6 August 2015, the CAF Executive Committee decided to change the tournament's name to the Africa U-23 Cup of Nations, similar to the senior's version, Africa Cup of Nations.[1] However the name on the tournament logo for the forthcoming 2015 edition would read as the U-23 Africa Cup of Nations.

On 21 July 2016, French energy and petroleum giant TotalEnergies on 28 May 2021, secured an 8-year sponsorship package from CAF to support its competitions.[2][3]

Results Edit

Coincidently, every final has had the same scoreline.

Year Host Final Third place match
Winner Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place
2011   Morocco[4]  
Gabon
2–1  
Morocco
 
Egypt
2–0  
Senegal
2015   Senegal[5][6]  
Nigeria
2–1  
Algeria
 
South Africa
0–0
(3–1 p)
 
Senegal
2019   Egypt[7][8]  
Egypt
2–1 (a.e.t.)  
Ivory Coast
 
South Africa
2–2
(6–5 p)
 
Ghana
2023   Morocco[9]  
Morocco
2–1 (a.e.t.)  
Egypt
 
Mali
0–0
(4–3 p)
 
Guinea

Successful national teams Edit

Team Champions Runners-up Third-place Fourth-place
  Egypt 1 (2019*) 1 (2023) 1 (2011)
  Morocco 1 (2023*) 1 (2011*)
  Gabon 1 (2011)
  Nigeria 1 (2015)
  Algeria 1 (2015)
  Ivory Coast 1 (2019)
  South Africa 2 (2015, 2019)
  Mali 1 (2023)
  Senegal 2 (2011, 2015*)
  Ghana 1 (2019)
  Guinea 1 (2023)

*= Hosts

Participating nations Edit

Team  
2011
(8)
 
2015
(8)
 
2019
(8)
 
2023
(8)
Years
  Algeria GS 2nd 2
  Cameroon GS 1
  Congo GS 1
  Egypt 3rd GS 1st 2nd 4
  Gabon 1st GS 2
  Ghana 4th GS 2
  Guinea × 4th 1
  Ivory Coast GS 2nd 2
  Mali GS GS 3rd 3
  Morocco 2nd 1st 2
  Niger × × GS 1
  Nigeria GS 1st GS 3
  Senegal 4th 4th 2
  South Africa GS 3rd 3rd 3
  Tunisia GS 1
  Zambia GS GS 2
Legend

Results at the Olympics (2012–present) Edit

Nation 12 16 20 24 Years
  Algeria 14 1
  Egypt 8 8 Q 3
  Gabon 12 1
  Ivory Coast 7 1
  Mali Q 1
  Morocco 11 Q 2
  Nigeria 3 1
  Senegal 6 1
  South Africa 13 16 2

Awards Edit

Player of the Tournament Edit

Originally called the "Most Valuable Player (MVP)" until the 2019 edition.

Year Golden Player
2015   Azubuike Okechukwu[10]
2019   Ramadan Sobhi[11]
2023   Ibrahim Adel[12]

Top goalscorer Edit

This is awarded to the player(s) who score the most goals during each edition of the tournament.

Edition Top goalscorer Goals
Morocco 2011 3
Senegal 2015   Etebo Oghenekaro 5
Egypt 2019   Mostafa Mohamed 4
Morocco 2023 3

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Decisions of CAF Executive Committee on 6 August 2015". CAFOnline.com. 9 August 2015. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
  2. ^ "Total, Title Sponsor of the Africa Cup of Nations and Partner of African Football". CAFOnline.com. 21 July 2016. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
  3. ^ "Total to sponsor CAF competitions for the next eight years". africanews. 21 July 2016. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  4. ^ "Egypt to host CAF U-23 Championship serving as 2012 London Olympic qualifiers". CAFOnline.com. 18 September 2011. Archived from the original on 20 May 2012. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  5. ^ "Macky Sall accepts to host U-23 Championship in December". CAFOnline.com. 14 March 2015. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  6. ^ "Senegal set to host 2015 African U23 Championship". BBC Sport. 14 March 2015. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  7. ^ "Egypt to host 2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations tournament". Albawaba. 24 September 2017. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  8. ^ Malit, Robert (23 July 2017). "Egypt win bid to host 2019 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations". KingFut. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  9. ^ Latrech, Oumaima (7 July 2022). "Morocco to Host U23 AFCON Tournament in 2023". Morocco World News. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  10. ^ "Azubuike named Most Valuable Player". CAFOnline.com. 14 December 2015. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  11. ^ "Sobhy guides hosts Egypt to historic U-23 title". CAFOnline.com. 22 November 2019. Retrieved 9 July 2023. Best Player of the tournament: Ramadan Sobhy (Egypt)
  12. ^ "Egypt captain Ibrahim Adel named TotalEnergies U-23 AFCON Best Player". CAFOnline.com. 9 July 2023. Retrieved 10 July 2023.

External links Edit