Here’s 10 reasons on the DSE Football News Network that explain why the Confederation of African Football (CAF) is seen as being in a mess over the Senegal AFCON decision:
- Overturning a result after the final whistle
Changing the winner after the match ended is extremely rare in football. Senegal won on the pitch, so reversing it later makes CAF look inconsistent and reactive.
- Strict rule vs common-sense judgment
CAF applied rules about match abandonment (after the walk-off), but many feel they ignored context — a disputed refereeing decision in a final.
- Timing of the decision
The ruling came days after celebrations, not immediately. That delay:
Created confusion
Made the decision feel politically influenced rather than procedural
- Lack of transparency
CAF hasn’t fully released:
VAR audio
Detailed referee reports
Without that, fans and analysts can’t verify whether the original penalty decision was correct.
- Massive public backlash
Across Africa and beyond, fans, pundits, and even officials have criticised CAF. When trust drops this widely, governance looks weak.
- Even the “winners” are uncomfortable
Reports that Achraf Hakimi questioned the decision highlight how awkward it is:
Morocco are official champions
But legitimacy is being debated
That’s a PR nightmare.
- Dangerous precedent
This decision raises a big concern:
Could future teams exploit protests or incidents to influence outcomes?
Or could governing bodies overturn results more often?
Either way, it creates uncertainty in future tournaments.
- Legal battle looming
Senegal are taking the case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
If CAS overturns CAF’s ruling, it would:
Embarrass CAF
Undermine its authority globally
- Mixed messaging from stakeholders
Different voices (players, officials, media) are saying different things:
Some defend the rules, others call it unjust
CAF hasn’t controlled the narrative well.
- Long-term credibility damage
CAF already faces scrutiny over governance. This situation reinforces perceptions of:
Poor decision-making
Lack of professionalism
Weak leadership
Bottom line
CAF isn’t just dealing with one controversial call — it’s facing a trust crisis.
The mix of legal uncertainty, fan outrage, and unclear communication is why this has spiralled into such a mess.

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