Sundowns, Wydad build slender semi-final leads at home
Ahly's South African forward #10 Percy Tau fights for the ball with Sundowns' South African defender #25 Khuliso Mudau during the African Football League (AFL) semi-final first leg match between Mamelodi Sundowns and Al Ahly at Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria on October 29, 2023. (Photo by PHILL MAGAKOE / AFP)
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The African
Football League semi-finals are balanced on a knife edge after Mamelodi
Sundowns of South Africa and Wydad Casablanca of Morocco built 1-0 first-leg
leads at home on Sunday.
A snap
long-range shot by Thapelo Maseko on 52 minutes that took goalkeeper Mohamed el
Shenawy by surprise brought Sundowns victory over Al Ahly of Egypt in Pretoria.
Hicham
Boussefiane was the match-winner in Casablanca against Esperance of Tunisia
with his cross eluding goalkeeper Moez Ben Cherifia after 58 minutes and
landing in the corner of the net.
The return
matches in the inaugural edition are scheduled for Rades and Cairo on Wednesday
with everything to play for as the four teams chase a four million dollar first
prize.
Unlike
Europe, who scrapped the away-goal rule in club competitions from the 2021-2022
season, Africa continues to use it, adding to the intrigue ahead of the return
matches.
When
Sundowns and Ahly clashed at the CAF Champions League group stage last March in
Pretoria, the South Africans triumphed 5-2.
But there
was little chance of a repeat scoreline as Ahly restricted Sundowns to just a
few scoring chances in the opening half.
Poor control
robbed captain Themba Zwane of a close-range shooting chance and El Shenawy
made a spectacular one-hand save to push away a Maseko header.
When Ahly
surrendered possession cheaply soon after half-time, Maseko turned sharply and
scored with a shot into the corner from outside the box.
A Teboho
Mokoena header rebounded off the crossbar in added time after Ahly had a
penalty appeal rejected when former Sundowns star Percy Tau fell following a
challenge.
Both coaches
were relatively satisfied after the latest episode in one of the great recent
African club rivalries.
"It is
half-time and we are leading. I am happy with that situation," said Rulani
Mokwena of Sundowns.
Ahly coach
Marcel Koller said: "Sundowns' goal came from our mistake and I thought we
should have had a penalty. We can overturn the deficit in Cairo."
A passionate
near-capacity crowd in a 60,000-seat Casablanca stadium saw Wydad dominate for
long periods before deservedly breaking the deadlock.
Recalled Ben
Cherifia captained the Tunis outfit after Amanallah Memmich, 19, featured in
both legs of a quarter-finals victory over TP Mazembe from the Democratic
Republic of Congo.
But the
veteran shot-stopper appeared to be distracted by an inrushing Moroccan when
Boussefiane curled the ball into the six-yard box, and Wydad were ahead.
The home
side almost doubled their lead just four minutes later as a Charki el Bahri
header beat Ben Cherifia only to strike the crossbar and rebound to safety.
When
Esperance created a chance on 70 minutes, Ghaith Ouahabi struck the ball timidly
and the goal attempt was comfortably saved by Youssef el Motie.
Wydad are
hoping to avoid a hat-trick of disappointments in midweek after suffering
losses to Esperance in the 2011 and 2019 CAF Champions League finals.


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