A memorable night for African football
June 18, 2009 05:56 PM | Posted by Nigel ReedThis was more than an upset, more than a shock result. This was a statement about the state of African soccer on African soil.
Egypt might not qualify for next year's World Cup but may have proved, in the space of 90 minutes Thursday with a 1-0 win over Italy, is that the global heavyweights take African qualifiers lightly at their peril in 12 months time.
What the Egyptians achieved is a result and performance, which should be celebrated across the entire continent and proves, beyond doubt, there is a way to perturb the old world order. I don't think an African team will win the World Cup in 2010 but I do think they can have a significant influence on the way the tournament pans out.
Egypt refused to be overawed by the World Cup holders and, after an uncertain start, visibly grew in confidence against a somewhat predictable Italian display. The only goal was as much to do with sloppy Italian defending, as it was to do with Egyptian flair but was just about deserved on the balance of play.
Half-time came and went, as did wonderkid Guiseppe Rossi - then it was time for Italy to show why they are world champions. Problem was they were facing the African champs who played with tremendous spirit and composure to defend their slender advantage. When the Italians did finally pierce the Pharaohs' back line, they came up against an inspired goalkeeper in El Hadary who played the game of his life to keep the Azzurri at bay.
The Egyptian captain, who demonstrated similar heroics in the African Cup of Nations, was as good as Andrea Pirlo, by his own standards, was poor. The Italian midfielder had four opportunities from free kicks just outside the penalty area, but failed to find the target on any occasion.
Few saw this result coming, perhaps least of all Egypt, but the victory hands them a decent chance of reaching the semifinals. A win over the Americans may be enough while Italy will have to improve dramatically to beat Brazil. In the final analysis, Egypt stood firm against the world champions who simply couldn't find an extra gear when they needed it.
Earlier, we witnessed the yawning gulf in class between North and South America. Brazil strolled to an emphatic 3-0 win over the United States to underline their sublime skill and expose the Americans as a hard working team short on finesse and tactical awareness.
For the second game running the U.S. were harshly reduced to 10-men but it, in all honesty, it wouldn't have mattered had they had 12 on the field - there's no substitute for quality. Brazil were always in the driver's seat and by the time Robinho struck their second goal with 70 minutes remaining the writing was already clearly on the wall.
The Americans were unfortunate not to score in the closing minutes - twice hitting the woodwork –- but any goal would have been mere consolation.
The U.S. will qualify for the World Cup because they're a strong team in a weak Confederation (CONCACAF) but their performances in South Africa have only served to remind us they're not yet close to competing with the big boys.
Egypt, in stark contrast, are struggling to book a return trip to Johannesburg but demonstrated excellent technical ability and, perhaps more importantly, a belief they deserved to dine at the same table as football's nobility.
Great stuff for the neutral and a timely reminder why we love this game. The outcome will appal the Italian tifosi but if you don't make the emotional investment, you're watching the wrong sport.
About the Author
Nigel Reed
Nigel Reed brings his extensive experience, passion and knowledge of the game of soccer to his role as play-by-play announcer for Major League Soccer ON CBC.
Reed has more than 20 years experience covering soccer, most notably a five-year stint from 1999 to 2004 where he was a host and producer for the English Premier League for BBC. He also covered English Premier League giants Liverpool and Everton for BBC Radio and provided analysis for both BBC TV and the BBC website.
Reed, who will also call matches for CBC's FIFA broadcast package, covered weightlifting, taekwondo, soccer and equestrian for CBC's coverage of the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympic Games.
Categories
- Hockey (462)
-
- Bob Cole (2)
- Cassie Campbell (34)
- Craig Simpson (36)
- Elliotte Friedman (83)
- Glenn Healy (6)
- Guy Carbonneau (13)
- Jeff Marek (37)
- Jennifer Botterill (3)
- Jim Hughson (33)
- Kelly Hrudey (33)
- Kevin Weekes (11)
- Marc Crawford (18)
- Mike Milbury (30)
- PJ Stock (19)
- Scott Morrison (66)
- Trade Deadline (25)
- Soccer (220)
-
- Greg Sutton (6)
- Jason de Vos (64)
- John Molinaro (69)
- Nigel Reed (72)
- Ron Kuipers (8)
- Baseball (1)
-
- Jesse Barfield (1)
- Basketball (26)
-
- Paul Jay (26)
- Amateur Sports (71)
-
- Scott Russell (72)
- Curling (4)
-
- Kevin Martin (3)
- Figure Skating (43)
-
- Pj Kwong (40)
- Scott Russell (6)
- Aerial Skiing (4)
-
- Veronika Bauer (4)
- Alpine Skiing (16)
-
- Britt Janyk (1)
- Kelly VanderBeek (15)
- Bobsleigh (13)
-
- Heather Moyse (13)
- Boxing (44)
-
- Chris Iorfida (44)
- Football
-
- Short Track (14)
-
- Jessica Gregg (14)
- Sports (1)
-
- Rowing (5)
-
- Kevin Light (5)
- Snowboarding (9)
-
- Katie Tsuyuki (9)
- Mixed Martial Arts (2)
-
- Jeff Marek (2)
- Badminton (6)
-
- Anna Rice (6)
- Paralympics (3)
-
- Matt Hallat (3)
- Authors (14)
-
- Anna Rice (6)
- Bob Cole (2)
- Britt Janyk (1)
- Cassie Campbell (32)
- Chris Iorfida (40)
- Craig Simpson (36)
- Elliotte Friedman (79)
- Glenn Healy (6)
- Greg Sutton (6)
- Guy Carbonneau (13)
- Heather Moyse (13)
- Jason de Vos (58)
- Jeff Marek (38)
- Jennifer Botterill (3)
- Jesse Barfield (1)
- Jessica Gregg (14)
- Jim Hughson (30)
- John Molinaro (48)
- Katie Tsuyuki (7)
- Kelly Hrudey (32)
- Kelly VanderBeek (14)
- Kevin Light (5)
- Kevin Martin (3)
- Kevin Weekes (10)
- Marc Crawford (18)
- Matt Hallat (3)
- Mike Milbury (30)
- Nigel Reed (67)
- P.J. Stock (19)
- Paul Jay (26)
- Pj Kwong (36)
- Ron Kuipers (4)
- Scott Morrison (62)
- Scott Morrison - My Greatest Day (10)
- Scott Russell (72)
- Veronika Bauer (4)
Recent Post
- Carl Robinson deserved a proper send-off from TFC
- Monday, March 8, 2010
- Getting serious about headshots starts now
- Monday, March 8, 2010
- Winning formula determined by trades, team philosophy
- Monday, March 8, 2010
- Five questions: Montreal’s relative deadline inactivity, Olympic hangover
- Sunday, March 7, 2010
- Olympics reinforce value of talented defenceman
- Friday, March 5, 2010
Archives
- March 2010 (12)
- February 2010 (33)
- January 2010 (51)
- December 2009 (60)
- November 2009 (74)
- October 2009 (65)
- September 2009 (53)
- August 2009 (26)
- July 2009 (35)
- June 2009 (48)
- May 2009 (27)
- April 2009 (40)
- March 2009 (79)
- February 2009 (70)
- January 2009 (64)
- December 2008 (58)
- November 2008 (71)
- October 2008 (71)
- September 2008 (5)


