Posts Tagged ‘Ivory Coast’

In an ideal world for Didier Drogba, the so-called golden generation with sickening footprints of failure and unsustainable psychological scarring would finally win the Africa Cup of Nations in February 2015 in Morocco, with him, then aged 36, holding the trophy aloft. But such sentiments are quixotic, for sport seldom provides such ethereal Hollywood endings. Certainly, Ivory Coast coach Sabri Lamouchi has unlocked his inner Corleone to banish the man that is a national treasure from the squad to face Gambia, a first-step gesture to confirming his state as a footballing corpse.

Many would say his exclusion was deserved. Such is the reverence for him in the Ivory Coast that there had never been a cacophonous clamour for him to stand down. Before the Afcon, of course, it would have been sacrilege to suggest the Drog, the Captain, the Leader, the Legend, the Civil War-ending Hero, should be put away, but there has been a sotto voce-acceptance of his exclusion. Drogba is at the age when insipid performances that would have once been forgiven and forgotten are now interpreted as signs of the insidiousness of the dotage process.

Drogba is idolized in Cote D’Ivoire

What’s more, the idolatry for him throughout the team and his monumentality makes him impossible to ignore when he is in the squad. That was certainly the case at the Afcon. The eldest member of the golden generation, there was a Do-It-For-Didier mantra flowing throughout the Ivorian set-up. Despite his indifferent performances, being dropped for the second match against Tunisia after Togo’s Vietnam-based Vincent Bossou marked him out of the opening game and his replacement, Lacina Traore, impressing, he was back for the crunch quarter-final tie against Nigeria. Although he would win a foul and subsequently assist Cheick Tiote’s equaliser, Nigeria’s callow centre-back partnership Kenneth Omeruo and Godfrey Oboabona were rarely troubled.

Merely blaming Drogba would only be a whiff of the post-mortem of the latest edition of the Ivorian Golden Generation Afcon-failing sequel. After all, it wasn’t the strikeforce that was the problem – they scored more than enough to win games – rather it was the disequilibrium in midfield and defence. Kolo Toure has since shown outstanding club form to dissipate the intermittent nanoseconds of narcolepsy that he displayed in January, Emmanuel Eboue has been dropped whilst composed left-back Siaka Tiene has lost his place due to a lengthy lack of first team football at PSG.

Drogba’s exclusion could also inspire a change of philosophy because he was not only a symbol of reverence but also one of reference. As I wrote in the Ivory Coast 2013 Cup of Nations preview: “the ex-Chelsea striker’s big-game bravura, completeness and leadership skills are crucial. Ivory Coast may have a phalanx of good and very good forwards on the bench, but their 4-3-3 system is tailored to Drogba and no other striker has shown they have the all-round attributes to replace him.”

Daddy Cool is ready to take over

My sentiments still stand. Les Elephants have myriad options to don the phosphorescent shirt, and all come with their coruscation and dimness. With 26 goals in 24 games for Vitesse Arnhem in the Eredivisie and a regular impact-stimulator from the Ivorian bench, Wilfried ‘Daddy Cool’ Bony is hitherto the most prolific of the contenders. He is endowed with the top-heaviness of Drogba and has the star aura that goes some way to filling Drogba’s spacious shoes, but tends to be lackadaisical when it comes to the hurly burly of pressing the opposition centre-backs and chasing lost causes. Wigan’s peroxide-haired Arouna Kona offers directness and intricate link-up play to function well in a front-two – which was experimented to devastating success in the 3-0 win over Austria – but isn’t the master-of-all-trades that Drogba was. Lacina Traore’s 6 foot 8 inches certainly provides instant grandeur and with 2 goals in 2 starts, as well as sharing a good understanding with Gervinho and Yaya Toure, it’s easy to understand why he has become a favourite of Lamouchi, he lacks mobility and remorseless finishing however. The dead-eyed Seydou Doumbia, fresh from a length injury lay-off that saw him miss Afcon, is next in line to the throne but he has often flattered to deceive at international level, albeit largely starting on the bench, and is more of a poacher. Turkish second division top scorer Gerard Bi Goua Gohou and Sochaux’s Giovanni Sio, both members of the 2010 Toulon Tournament Ivorian triumph, have received their first call-ups and are outsiders.

It will be interesting to see what happens from here on in until the 2014 World Cup, assuming the Ivory Coast qualify. It’s important they start preparing for a future without Drogba; including him in the upcoming squads would be more of a hindrance than help. Giving him a cooling off period, even for just the next 2-3 squads, whilst experimenting with the striking options only benefits Les Elephants in the long run.

The SFG team draws the post-mortem of Afcon 2013 to a close with a review of the fortunes of the teams in Group D, indefatigably the pre-tournament Group of Death.

Algeria

The Good

‘Algeria must be the only team which dominated both its games and have nothing to show for it!’ said an exasperated Coach Vahid Halihodzic after two matchdays. Despite their dismal showing, most Algerians were proud of their team’s performance during the Cup of Nations. Former captain Rafik Saifi claimed that he, ‘never saw an Algerian team dominate like (that)’. Only a lack of experience and efficiency duped the Algerians from further progressing in this edition of the Cup of Nations. The encouraging aspect is that Vahid’s progress is palpable and his team is bursting with potential.

The Bad

Coach Vahid’s squad selection. He had his reasons for leaving Rafik Djebbour at home, but one wonders if he made the right call. Djebbour, the Greek Superleague’s top scorer, possesses bundles of experience in Africa. Leaving Madjid Bougherra at home for Ali Rial was another bizarre decision. Neither had played in a long time, but Bougherra’s brotherly influence on the group might have been vital. Coach Vahid must assume the responsibility for his squad selection and he does. It is an aspect he will have to improve in the future.

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Mali, for the second year running, have shown that you can get far by being hard to beat.

Mali, for the second year running, have shown that you can get far by being hard to beat.

Winning is overrated, some football purists say. Certainly, when World Soccer gathered a cohort of experts a few years ago to name their greatest teams ever, three of the teams in the top five – Hungary 1953, Holland 1974, and Brazil 1982 – had won zilch. If Sandals For Goalposts compiled a similar list with an African focus, Ivory Coast probably wouldn’t be in the top 5 but they would surely be knocking in the teens of the list; and they’d undoubtedly be Africa’s greatest losers.

Let’s get one thing straight: Ivory Coast are a good team. You don’t reach two finals and lose them both on spot-kicks if you’re a poor team. A great team they’re not, but the ‘England of Africa’ they are not. An accusation levelled at this talented team is that they’re over-confident. But when you’ve had a conveyor belt of ignominious failures, over-confidence becomes nothing more than punditry jargon.

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by Maher Mezahi and Sam Crocker

Ivory Coast 1-2 Nigeria

We could tell you that it was supposed to be their year. We could tell you they were desperately unlucky in last January’s final, when the Elephants crashed out without conceding a single goal. We could tell you ’13 was supposed to be ironically lucky. That Lamouchi’s men had come into the Cup of Nations on a 22 match undefeated run. But you’ll read that elsewhere; instead, let’s give credit to Stephen Keshi and the Nigerian Super Eagles for turning in a spectacular performance. Here’s how they did it:

Tactical set-up

Keshi fortified his reputation of unpredictability when leaving Ahmed Musa out of the line-up. Musa, not unlike his trans-linguistic namesake Moses, nearly single-handedly salvaged a point in an earlier match. He was expected to start, but only the unexpected is to be expected with Stephen Keshi at the helm. The appropriately named Sunday Mba got his week off to a good start as he was pencilled in Musa’s stead. Keshi’s Franco-Tunisian counterpart made a host of changes to his line-up as a makeshift squad were carted out against Algeria.

Sunday Mba was brought in by Keshi

The opening 25 minutes were played at a pedestrian rhythm as neither side wanted to open up in what proved to be a cagey affair. Although Victor Moses’ activity on the left flank was worth noting as he persistently sent Emmanuel Eboue signals of intent. The first real goal scoring opportunity of the match fell to the bullish Emmanuel Emenike in the 27th minute, but the CSKA Moskva striker disappointingly shot high and wide. Unconfirmed reports claim the ball has just landed in Lagos. The bad miss did not deter Emenike as his determination shone through the banality in Rustenberg. Breakthrough came right before halftime as the oft-mentioned Emenike turned Ndri Romaric and won a foul. John Obi Mikel toed the indirect free-kick onto the path of the onrushing Emenike who put his foot through the ball with the force of a locomotive train. The knuckleball changed its trajectory half a dozen times before zooming passed Boubacar Barry and into the Ivorian net. Nigeria took a deserved lead into half-time.

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IvoryCoastXI

Ivory Coast’s Probable XI

“I have always tried to live in an ivory tower, but a tide of shit is beating its walls, threatening to undermine,” wrote French writer Gustave Flaubert in one his famous exchanges with Russian writer Ivan Turgenev. By that token, this Ivory Coast team are so gifted that they require their own ivory tower, yet there has been a conveyor belt of teams with luck and goodwill behind them to undermine their thirst for success, or even just relative success.

Les Elephants haven’t resorted to writing letters to their counterparts just yet, but it’d be understandable if they did. At World Cups, Ivory Coast have twice been cruelly placed in Groups of Deaths; at Cups of Nations, luck has been repeatedly against them. In 2006, for instance, they reached the final, but then faced hosts Egypt in front of an exultant Cairo crowd. In 2008, they met an Egypt team which produced the chef d’oeuvre of their hegemony to beat them 4-1 in the semi-final. In 2010, they went 2-1 up in the 89th minute of a quarter-final they had dominated against Algeria, conceded in injury time and then conceded early in extra-time to eventually bow out. And in last year’s Cup of Nations final, they met a driven Zambia side with a tale behind them that the whole football world wanted to embrace.

There has been a polar variation in methodology  amidst their search for success. While they were playing fluid football from 2006 and 2010, and were coached by ex-pats, they adopted a regressive approach under the indigenous Francois Zahoui in the last edition. Consequently, they didn’t concede a single goal in the tournament and never looked like losing at any point. But this closed-all-hours policy ultimately led to their downfall and Zahoui was sacked.

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