Mane and Salah clash in Cup of Nations final
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One of world football’s most exciting attacking duos
will face-off against each other in Sunday’s Africa Cup of Nations final as
Mohamed Salah leads Egypt against a Senegal side spearheaded by Sadio Mane.
The Liverpool pair, a combined force at club level,
will be taking on talismanic roles at opposite ends for their respective
countries as Egypt seek to extend their record number of Cup of Nations
triumphs to eight while Senegal look to win it for the first time.
The match is being played at Yaounde’s Olembe Stadium,
where eight people were killed in a stadium crush last week and that tragedy has
overshadowed the tournament in Cameroon.
Salah has made no secret of his burning desire to win
a major trophy with Egypt, which has so far evaded him, while Mane beamed with
joy and giggled with delight at the post-match press conference after his team won
their semi-final on Wednesday.
Senegal, who are Africa’s top ranked team, were among
the favourites and overcame a languid start to reach the final for the third
time.
They scored only one goal during the opening round but
still finished top of their group and have looked efficient in overcoming their
opponents in the knockout stage.
“We suffered so much with a lot of COVID cases and
several injuries too. We had a very difficult time but with our experience we
kept calm until we recovered the whole group,” said Mane.
Senegal were without captain Kalidou Koulibaly and
goalkeeper Edouard Mendy at the start of the tournament as they recovered from
COVID-19 infections.
But their road to the final proved a lot easier than
Egypt, who lost their opening group game to Nigeria and drew heavy criticism
from home fans for their early performances.
But they have gained momentum, edging the Ivory Coast
in a penalty shootout in the round of 16; Morocco 2-1 after extra time in the
quarter-final and hosts Cameroon on penalties again in Thursday’s semi-final.
"We played amid very hard circumstances but we
managed to overcome all difficulties," said Mahmoud Trezeguet.
"We played 120 minutes for three straight games
but we remained fully focused on getting the job done. We will play against
Senegal with a big determination as we learned from the loss to Cameroon in
2017," he added.
Egypt were runners-up in the 2017 final – where Salah
and Trezeguet both featured - and won the last of their record seven titles in
2010.
They will play Sunday’s final without coach Carlos
Queiroz on the bench after he was sent off for persistent touchline bickering
in Thursday’s semi-final. His assistant Roger de Sa was already forced to sit
in the stands after a four-match ban for fighting in the tunnel after the
quarter-final victory over Morocco.
Sunday’s final will also provide the winners with a
major boost before the countries meet again over two legs in March to decide a
place at the World Cup finals in Qatar.


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