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The knockout stage of the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations was the second and final stage of the competition, following the group stage. It began on 23 January with the round of 16 and ended on 6 February 2022 with the final held at the Olembe Stadium in Yaoundé .
11 October 2021 2022 World Cup qualification: Gabon : 2–0 ... 18 January 2022 2021 AFCON GS: Gabon : 2–2 Morocco: Yaound ...
Group C of the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations took place from 10 to 18 January 2022. The group consisted of debutants Comoros, Gabon, Ghana and Morocco. [1]Morocco and Gabon as the top two teams, along with Comoros as one of the four best third-placed teams, advanced to the round of 16.
Morocco Note: Zimbabwe were excluded from the qualifiers as their suspension by FIFA due to political interference had not been lifted in the deadline set by CAF. 25 March 2023 Friendly
In January 2021, En-Nesyri scored hat-tricks in home wins over Real Sociedad (3–2) [31] and Cádiz (3–0). [32] On 9 March 2021, he scored a brace in a 2–2 away draw against Borussia Dortmund in the second leg of the Champions League round of 16; [ 33 ] however, Sevilla were eliminated as they lost 4–5 on aggregate. [ 34 ]
2 5 1992, 2015, 2023: 2006, 2012 Algeria: 2 1 3 1990, 2019: 1980 DR Congo: 2 0 2 1968 2, 1974 3 — Zambia: 1 2 3 2012: 1974, 1994 Tunisia: 1 2 3 2004: 1965, 1996 Sudan: 1 2 3 1970: 1959, 1963 Senegal: 1 2 3 2021: 2002, 2019 Ethiopia: 1 1 2 1962: 1957 Morocco: 1 1 2 1976: 2004 South Africa: 1 1 2 1996: 1998 Congo: 1 0 1 1972 — Mali: 0 1 1 ...
Gabon only scored twice in the group stage and were eliminated on the goals scored tiebreaker. In 2012 Africa Cup of Nations, Gabon co-hosted the tournament as it won their group matches: 2–0 against Niger, 3–2 against Morocco, and 1–0 against Tunisia. The second match saw Gabon qualify for its first quarter-final since 1996 in the most ...
Gabon; Zambia; This list was different from the list of the host nation bids for both the 2019 and 2021 edition of the Cup of Nations as announced by CAF in November 2013, with Democratic Republic of the Congo, Gabon and Zambia also on the original list. [11] All three official candidates also bid for hosting the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.