After Senegal were stripped of their 2025/26 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) title courtesy of a bombshell ruling by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) on March 17, the Senegalese Football Federation (SFF) has indicated its desire to take the matter to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).
In its ruling, the CAF Appeal Board found the Senegal team guilty of breaching Articles 82 and 84 of the Regulations of the CAF AFCON, thus seeing their initial 1-0 victory over Morocco on January 18 being overturned to a 3-0 result in the Moroccans' favour.
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| Photo courtesy Confederation of African Football |
Article 82 reads, "If, for any reason whatsoever, a team withdraws from the competition or does not report for a match, or refuses to play or leaves the ground before the regular end of the match without the authorisation of the referee, it shall be considered looser (sic) and shall be eliminated for good from the current competition."
Article 84 cemented the ruling for the Appeal Board. Article 84 says, "The team which contravenes the provisions of articles 82 and 83 shall be eliminated for good from the competition. This team will lose its match by 3-0 unless the opponent has scored a more advantageous result at the time when the match was interrupted; in this case, this score will be maintained."
The SFF doesn't plan to go down without a fight, though, and late on March 17, it signalled its intentions to tackle the matter head-on.
"The Senegalese Football Federation denounces an unfair, unprecedented, and unacceptable decision that discredits African football," an SFF release said.
"To defend its rights and the interests of Senegalese football, the federation will initiate, as soon as possible, an appeal procedure before the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne."
The SFF said it remains committed to upholding the values and integrity of sporting justice.
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| A snapshot of Articles 82-84 of the Regulations of the Africa Cup of Nations. |
In an AFCON final which was tense and heated at times, the Senegalese felt aggrieved when a late goal from star forward Ismaila Sarr was disallowed for an infringement. With the scores goalless deep into second-half stoppage-time, the Moroccans were awarded a penalty after a VAR review, with defender El Hadji Malick Diouf adjudged to have fouled in the area. Senegal coach Pape Thiaw was livid, and he ordered his players off the field in protest. Goalkeeper Edouard Mendy and most of the Senegal players even headed back to the dressing room, with veteran forward Sadio Mane imploring his teammates to return to the playing field.
After a delay of over 15 minutes, the Senegal players returned. The lanky Mendy had the easiest of tasks as he saved a tame "Panenka" effort from Real Madrid's Brahim Diaz. Senegal's elation then soared through the roof in the 94th minute, with Pape Gueye scoring the decisive extra-time goal.
Roughly eight weeks later, the Senegalese are now learning the true ramifications of their actions, with CAF effectively awarding the trophy to Morocco.
The CAF Appeal Board confirmed that the Royal Moroccan Football Federation (FRMF) was fined up to US$ 160,000 for some of the actions of their team and supporters in the controversial final. A US$ 50,000 fine was imposed on the FRMF for the conduct of their ball boys, a US$ 100,000 fine was imposed on the Moroccans for interference in the VAR review area, while a US$ 10,000 fine was imposed for a laser incident during the match.


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