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Club Sportif Sfaxien (Arabic: النادي الرياضي الصفاقسي), known as CS Sfaxien or simply CSS for short, is a Tunisian football club based in Sfax. The club was founded in 1928 and its colours are black and white (Bianconero). Their home stadium, Taieb Mhiri Stadium, has a capacity of 12,000 spectators.
Both the winners Simba SC and runner-ups Young Africans S.C. of the 2020–21 Tanzania FA Cup qualified for the 2021-22 CAF Champions League resulting in the slot usually allocated to the winner or runner-up of the Tanzania FA Cup to be awarded to the fourth placed team in the 2020–21 Tanzanian Premier League. Notes
The Tunisian club CS Sfaxien won the cup in 2007 by beating the Sudanese Al Merreikh 5 goals to 2 in aggregate score (4-2, 1-0). [5] The following season, Club Sfaxien again won the cup against another Tunisian club, Étoile du Sahel. [6] In 2009, Stade Malien won the edition by beating the Algerian club ES Sétif in the final, on penalties. [7]
Al-Ahly were the defending champions after winning the compatriot of CS Sfaxien, Étoile du Sahel 3–0, reaching a total of five finals, winning four (1982, 1987, 2001, 2005) and losing one while CS Sfaxien reached the final for the first time ever. Both teams met in the Group stage, with each victorious in their home matches - CS Sfaxien ...
CS Sfaxien Tunisia: Al-Merrikh Stadium, Omdurman: 0–1 Stade Taïeb Mhiri, Sfax: CS Sfaxien won 5–2 on aggregate: 2008 Tunisia: CS Sfaxien: 0–0 ES Sahel Tunisia: Stade Taïeb Mhiri, Sfax: 2–2 Stade Olympique de Sousse, Sousse: CS Sfaxien won by the away goal (2–2 on aggregate) 2009 Algeria: ES Setif: 2–0 Stade Malien Mali: Stade 8 ...
The CAF Champions League is a seasonal association football competition established in 1964 as the African Cup of Champions Clubs, open initially to the league champions of all CAF member associations, but since 1997 also currently includes the clubs finishing second in the strongest leagues from the CAF 5-year ranking and the competition's defending champions.
The 1993 CAF Cup was the second football club tournament season that took place for the runners-up of each African country's domestic league. It was won by Stella Adjamé in two-legged final victory against Simba Sports Club of Tanzania.
The 2020–21 CAF Confederation Cup (officially the 2020–21 Total CAF Confederation Cup for sponsorship reasons) [1] was the 18th edition of Africa's secondary club football tournament organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF), under the current CAF Confederation Cup title after the merger of CAF Cup and African Cup Winners' Cup.