Africa Cup of Nations: Caf considers summer move
Caf president Ahmad Ahmad opens the two-day symposium on the future of the continental game |
The Africa Cup of Nations could be moved to the summer as part of changes being discussed by the continent's ruling body.
The Nations Cup's timing in January and February has long angered clubs in Europe, where many Africans play.
The biennial finals could also be boosted from 16 teams to 24.
"That
is the first thing to talk about - we can't get away from it," said
Confederation of African Football (Caf) president Ahmad Ahmad.
"We have already had a lot of suggestions," he added in his opening
address at a two-day symposium on the continental game's future in
Morocco.
An unprecedented number of players turned down call-ups for this year's tournament in Gabon to stay with their clubs.
This included seven Cameroonians who refused to turn out for the team that eventually won the title.
Every
two years, a club-versus-country row breaks out as European clubs
complain about losing players during a crucial stage of the season to
the Nations Cup.
Compounding the clubs' concerns is the fact that their players often come back fatigued from Africa's flagship sporting event.
For this year's tournament, 12 English Premier League clubs were impacted as more than 20 players left their teams mid-season.
Leicester,
Stoke City and Sunderland were the worst affected as they lost three
players apiece for a competition which ran from 14 January to 5
February.
Under previous president Issa Hayatou, Caf argued that
the weather in many parts of Africa meant the tournament had to be
staged at the start of the year.
Hayatou consistently rejected
suggestions of a move to June, saying the weather then was too hot in
northern Africa, too wet in the west and centre and too cold in the
south.
Many believed his view was as much about climatic
conditions as not bowing to pressure from Europe because African
national teams and clubs play regularly during June without adverse
effects.
A move to a tournament in June and July is also set to be
discussed in the Moroccan capital Rabat - as is the less likely
possibility of staging the final every four, rather than two, years.
Ahmad
also wants to review rules on hosting the finals, which are proving
increasingly prohibitive and reducing the number of potential
candidates.
He has already suggested that co-hosting would allow
Caf to consider proposals to increase the number of teams at the finals
to 24.
Cameroon won the 2017 Nations Cup despite missing players who stayed away because of the event's timing |
Africa's leading club competitions - the Caf Champions League and the Confederation Cup - will also be scrutinised.
There
is the potential for a radical date change for the competitions, which
traditionally run from early in the calendar year through to the
respective finals in November.
"Africa has its particularities, like the great distances our clubs have to travel," added Ahmad, who goes by only one name.
"Clubs having to travel via Europe to play games is folly. We need solutions."
Ahmad promised a blanket review of the African game when he successfully stood for the Caf presidency in March.
"Never
before has something like this been organised in Africa," he told the
assembled 200 delegates prior to the start of a series of workshops.
"We
are here for a historic chapter and to effect great changes. These are
decisions that will determine the future of our game.
"My
ambition is to effect profound transformation of Caf and I'm personally
determined to see it through with all the members," Ahmad said in his
opening address.
In addition to the FA presidents, secretary
generals and coaches of each African nation, a host of former stars have
also been invited to give their views - as per Ahmad's election
manifesto.
The invited include Jay-Jay Okocha of Nigeria,
Cameroonians Samuel Eto'o, Geremi and Joseph-Antoine Bell, Hossam Hassan
of Egypt, Rabah Madjer of Algeria and Morocco's Badou Zaki.
Leading
national coaches, DR Congo's Florent Ibenge, Herve Renard of Morocco
and African veteran Claude LeRoy, the Frenchman who currently leads
Togo, have also been asked.
"I feel this could be a crucial day for African football," said Fifa president Gianni Infantino, who is also in attendance.
"All
the stakeholders interested in this beautiful game have to work to
develop African football and bring it to where it belongs, at the top of
world football."
BBC
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