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The Mali national football team (Bambara: Mali jamana ntolatantɔn, French: Équipe du Mali de football) represents Mali in men's international football and is governed by the Malian Football Federation. The team's nickname is Les Aigles. They represent the country at tournaments organized by both FIFA and the Confederation of African Football ...
The team has participated in 4 events of the FIFA U-17 World Cup and their best performance came in the 2015 World Cup [1] held in Chile, when Mali reached finished as runners-up. Their best performance at the African level came in the 2015 and the 2017 tournament in Niger and Gabon respectively, when they finished as champions.
Ligue 1 Orange Mali; Founded: 1966: Country: Mali: Confederation: CAF: Number of clubs: 18: Level on pyramid: 1: Domestic cup(s) Malian Cup Super Coupe National du Mali: International cup(s) Champions League Confederation Cup: Current champions: Djoliba : Most championships: Djoliba (24) Current: 2024–25 Malian Première Division
Malian broadcasting began in 1957 as a one kilowatt radio station called Radio Soudan in Bamako, then administrative center of the French colony of French Soudan.After independence in 1960, Radio Nationale du Mali (Radio-Mali) began broadcasting from la maison de la Radio in the Bozola neighbourhood of Bamako.
Ousmane Farota (6 December 1964 – 26 March 2023) [1] was a Malian footballer who played as a goalkeeper. He played primarily for Stade Malien. [2] Farota was a stalwart of the Mali national team in the late 1980s and early 1990s and played in the 1994 African Cup of Nations. [3]
Mali: 1 (0) *Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 25 January 2025 ‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of 20:48, 11 June 2021 (UTC)
The Ligue 1 (for sponsorship reasons known as Ligue 1 Orange) is the premier basketball competition for clubs in Mali. The league consist out of ten teams. The league consist out of ten teams. The most decorated team in the league is Stade Malien , who have won a record nineteen league championships.
Mali (2007): Freedom House report. Six radio station staff freed on completing sentences: Mali. Reporters Without Borders, 26 September 2006. Silicon Mali. Silvia Sansoni, Forbes 02.04.02. VOA Training African Affiliates: Broadcasters’ Fiscal Health Key ‘To Guarantee Pluralism’. Voice of America, 13 September 2005