Algeria star Mahrez reveals recipe for Cup of Nations success
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Algeria captain and former Manchester City star
Riyad Mahrez believes he knows the recipe for winning the Africa Cup of Nations
-- thorough preparations, good luck and experience.
"Whichever country is the best prepared and
enjoys a little bit of luck will go all the way," the 32-year-old winger
told reporters.
"Experience is also a major factor. I and
many teammates in the Algerian squad know all about the Cup of Nations.
"Making a good start is often crucial. We
beat Kenya in our opening match in 2019 and won the tournament. We drew with
Sierra Leone three years later and flopped."
France-born Mahrez, who left the Premier League
for the lucrative Saudi Pro League this year, was a key figure when Algeria won
the 2019 Cup of Nations in Egypt.
He was also part of the squad that fared dismally
when defending the title in Cameroon two years ago as defeats by Equatorial
Guinea and Ivory Coast led to elimination after the first round.
Algeria, with a mix of 2019 survivors and new
blood, are favourites to win Group D at the 2024 finals, which kick off in the
Ivory Coast commercial capital Abidjan on Saturday.
They are the top seeds in a section including
Burkina Faso, a team with second, third and fourth place finishes in their past
four appearances, and outsiders Angola and Mauritania.
The top two in the final standings automatically
advance to the round of 16 and it would be a shock if Algeria and Burkina Faso
did not fill those positions.
That would leave two-time quarter-finalists Angola
and Mauritania, seeking a first win at the tournament, fighting to be one of
the best four third-place finishers and also qualifying.
Born in a northern Paris suburb, Mahrez qualifies
for Algeria because his late father was born in the oil-rich north African
country.
"I visited the village where my father was
born every year and felt a deep sense of belonging. I was really close to the
people, and to my adopted homeland."
Mahrez recalls with visible joy the reception the
Desert Foxes received when they conquered Africa five years ago by defeating
Senegal 1-0 in a final won by a Baghdad Bounedjah goal.
"The bus parade was supposed to take 30
minutes, but actually lasted seven hours. The passion of the people was
incredible. I have not witnessed it in any other country."
Goalkeeper Rais M'Bolhi, defenders Ramy Bensebaini
and Aissa Mandi, midfielders Ismael Bennacer and Sofiane Feghouli and forwards
Youcef Belaili and Bounedjah are other 2019 winners called up.
Also chosen was Nice defender Youcef Atal, who
received an eight-month suspended sentence from a French court last week for
inciting religious hatred in a social media post concerning Gaza.
Burkina Faso have constantly punched above their
weight in recent Cup of Nations and boast a star defender in Edmond Tapsoba
from Bundesliga leaders Bayer Leverkusen.
A setback for the Stallions, though, is the lack
of game time for their best known forward, Bertrand Traore, at Aston Villa this
season.
After shock qualification for the 2006 World Cup
and two last-eight Cup of Nations appearances soon after, Angola have
regressed, missing three of the last four African tournaments.
Mauritania were the worst performers of all 24
teams at the last edition, losing all three group matches and failing to score.

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