Egypt, Gabon, Morocco and Senegal can draw strength from African
football achievements at recent Olympics when they set off this month in
search of medals.
Nigeria won gold and silver, Cameroon gold and Ghana bronze since the
football tournament was revamped ahead of the 1992 Barcelona Games with
three over-age players allowed in under-23 squads.
The make-up of the African quartet is a surprise with no Nigeria,
Cameroon or Ghana, who were eliminated during a lengthy elimination
process that included three knockout rounds and an inaugural
eight-nation CAF championship.
Gabon emerged shock winners of the first African under-23 tournament and
runners-up Morocco and third-place Egypt also gained automatic entry to
the Olympics.
Senegal came fourth and had to overcome Oman 2-0 in a Coventry play-off
to seal their place with substitute Abdoulaye Sane scoring a late second
goal after Ibrahima Balde had given the west Africans the lead after
just 90 seconds.
With foreign-based footballers who were unavailable for qualifiers now
eligible as only over-age stars need permission from clubs to compete,
some of the African squads have been overhauled.
France-based Sane only made the list of four stand-by players and did
not win promotion when Danish club FC Copenhagen refused to release
over-age striker Dame Ndoye.
Senegal appear long shots to reach the quarterfinals having been drawn
in Group A with Ryan Giggs-captained hosts Great Britain, a Uruguay
squad including star strikers Luis Suarez and Edinson Cavani and the
United Arab Emirates.
After hopes of including Newcastle United goal poachers Papiss Cisse and
Demba Ba were dashed, coach Karim Diouf opted for new West Ham United
midfield signing Mohamed Diame as one of his over-age trio.
Egypt are back at the Olympics after a 20-year absence and tackle
tournament co-favourites Brazil, Belarus and New Zealand in Group C with
a squad led by 33-year-old national team midfield star Mohamed
Aboutrika.
Defender Ahmed Fathy and striker Emad Meteab are the other 'seniors'
among the Baby Pharaohs and coach Hani Ramzy knows all about big
tournaments having played for his country as a centre-back at the 1990
World Cup in Italy.
"We are not going there just to do well," warned Ramzy, whose
preparations have been hampered by a domestic football ban since 74
spectators died on February 1 during post-match Port Said rioting.
While Egypt have chosen only locals and Gabon have included 10 domestic
stars, Dutch coach Pim Verbeek chose only three in a Morocco squad that
includes senior team captain Houssine Kharja for Group D clashes with
Spain, Japan and Honduras.
The presence of the Fiorentina midfielder bolsters an already strong
area with Madrid-based Abdelaziz Barrada one of the outstanding players
at the CAF under-23 championship.
Former South Korea and Australia handler Verbeek is upbeat despite the
absence of injured midfielder Younes Belhanda from French champions
Montpellier, saying he is aiming for a medal without specifying the
colour.
Gabon are the great unknowns ahead of Group B games against Mexico,
South Korea and Switzerland. Was the CAF title a flash in the pan or
does greater glory lie in store for coach Jean-Claude Mbouronot and his
Baby Panthers?
Striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang should catch the eye not only because
of his original hairstyles, but also his predatory instincts which made
him one of the most dangerous strikers when his country co-hosted the
2012 Africa Cup of Nations.
"Playing attractive, lively and spectacular football at the Olympics
will be our aim," says Mbouronot. "A good result for us would be to get
past the first round – to be among the last eight."
Although Egypt and Morocco must contend with Brazil and fellow
favourites Spain, they appear most likely to survive the three-fixture
mini-league phase with Senegal dark horses and Gabon outsiders.
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