Football

After the Final Whistle: How CAF’s Ruling on AFCON 2025 Risks Undermining the Game It Governs -By Jeff Okoroafor

This is not just about Senegal or Morocco. It is about African football’s credibility on the global stage. AFCON has, in recent years, grown in stature and quality, commanding increasing international respect. Decisions like this threaten to reverse that progress, casting doubt on whether outcomes are decided by players or by panels.

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There are moments in sport when the result is disputed, when controversy lingers, when tempers flare and narratives diverge. And then there are moments like this — when what millions watched unfold on the pitch appears to be rewritten in a boardroom.

The Confederation of African Football’s decision to award the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations title to Morocco, on the grounds that Senegal forfeited the final, belongs firmly in the latter category. It is not merely controversial; it is destabilising. It raises a question that goes beyond this single match: What is the value of competition if its outcome can be retroactively redefined?

CAF’s Appeal Board has ruled that Senegal breached Articles 82 and 84 of AFCON regulations, overturning an earlier decision and awarding Morocco a 3-0 victory. On paper, it is a procedural conclusion — a matter of rules, violations, and sanctions. But football is not played on paper. It is played in real time, before a global audience, with a shared understanding that the pitch is the ultimate arbiter.

And that is where this decision begins to unravel.

Because the world did not witness a forfeited final. It witnessed a game that continued. A match that resumed after disruption. A contest that reached its natural conclusion through extra time. Morocco missed a crucial spot kick. The final whistle blew. Medals were handed out. Morocco celebrated second place.

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These are not minor details; they are the substance of sporting legitimacy. To now declare, after the fact, that the match was effectively null — that it should instead be recorded as a 3-0 administrative victory — is to introduce a dangerous ambiguity into the sport’s most sacred principle: that results are earned, not reassigned.

CAF’s justification rests on regulatory breaches. And there is no question that football must have rules, nor that those rules must be enforced. The Appeal Board found that Senegal’s conduct warranted forfeiture, while also sanctioning Morocco for separate infractions — from misconduct by player Ismaël Saibari to off-field incidents involving ball boys, VAR interference, and even a laser-related violation.

Yet this duality only deepens the unease. If both sides were found culpable in different respects, why does the ultimate sanction fall so decisively on one — and in a way that overturns the very outcome of the match itself?

Discipline in football is not new. Matches have been fined, players suspended, federations sanctioned. But the retroactive reassignment of a continental final — after it was played to completion — crosses into far rarer and more troubling territory. It suggests that governance can supersede gameplay, that the spectacle witnessed by millions is, in the end, provisional.

And it is here that perception becomes as important as procedure.

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To many observers, this decision does not read as a clean application of the rules. It reads as something else — as a resolution reached away from the pitch after attempts to shape the outcome within it had failed. That perception, whether fair or not, is corrosive. Football depends not only on fairness, but on the belief in fairness. Once that belief is shaken, the damage extends far beyond a single trophy.

The silence and symbolism surrounding the aftermath only amplify these concerns. Questions linger about decisions made during the match, about why play was allowed to resume if the infractions were severe enough to warrant forfeiture, about how a completed contest can later be deemed invalid. Even the reported departure of Morocco’s coach has been interpreted by some as a sign of discomfort — a narrative that, left unaddressed, only fuels further speculation.

CAF, for its part, may argue that it is reinforcing discipline — that no team, regardless of circumstance, can violate regulations without consequence. That is a defensible position. But enforcement must also be coherent. It must align with the visible reality of the game. Otherwise, it risks appearing selective, or worse, opaque.

This is not just about Senegal or Morocco. It is about African football’s credibility on the global stage. AFCON has, in recent years, grown in stature and quality, commanding increasing international respect. Decisions like this threaten to reverse that progress, casting doubt on whether outcomes are decided by players or by panels.

The governing bodies of sport wield immense power. With that power comes a responsibility not just to apply rules, but to protect the integrity of competition itself. When those two imperatives come into conflict, the consequences can be profound.

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In the end, the enduring image of the AFCON 2025 final is not a legal document or a regulatory clause. It is a match played, a penalty missed, a game completed. That reality cannot be easily erased, no matter how it is recorded in official archives.

CAF may have closed the case. But in the eyes of many, the questions remain open — and they strike at the very heart of what makes sport worth believing in.

Jeff Okoroafor

Jeff Okoroafor is a social accountability advocate and a political commentator focused on governance, accountability, and social justice in West Africa.

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