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Gloves of Destiny: How goalkeepers Toldo and Abooja could decide CHAN 2024 semi-final showdown

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When Madagascar and Sudan step onto the pitch for their semi-final at the Benjamin Mkapa Stadium, the spotlight will inevitably fall on strikers, coaches, and tactics.

Yet, in truth, this contest may be defined in the silence between the posts.

Two goalkeepers — Madagascar’s 39-year-old Michel ‘Toldo’ Ramandimbisoa and Sudan’s penalty hero Mohamed Alnour ‘Abooja’ Adam Saeed — carry the weight of nations, their gloves the final line between triumph and despair.

Walls Between the Posts

Few players at CHAN PAMOJA 2024 have captured the imagination like Ramandimbisoa. At 39, he represents both longevity and leadership.

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Though not always wearing the captain’s armband, he has embodied calm and resilience for the Barea.

His saves against Mauritania in the opener set the tone, holding the line even after Madagascar’s leader was dismissed.

Three Man of the Match awards, two clean sheets, and countless interventions later, he has become a tournament icon.

The quarter-final against Kenya showed why. In front of a roaring Kasarani crowd, Ramandimbisoa denied two penalties in the shootout, steering Madagascar to a historic 4-3 victory.

As one teammate put it: “When Michel stands in goal, we feel ten feet taller.”

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On the other side is Mohamed Abooja, Sudan’s fearless last line. Against Algeria — finalists in 2022 and heavy favorites — he etched his name into folklore.

After 120 minutes of drama, Abooja saved twice in the penalty shootout, dismantling Algerian dreams and lifting Sudan into their first CHAN semi-final since 2018.

Abooja, reflecting on that night, told CAFonline.com: “In penalties, you cannot show fear. I read the striker’s body, I commit late, and I trust my instincts. That’s what gave my team the belief to go through.”

Contrasting Styles, Same Impact

Ramandimbisoa’s strength lies in anticipation and positioning. He rarely dives unnecessarily, preferring to command his box like a general, cutting angles before opponents even realize.

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His voice never stops; he organizes, instructs, calms.

Abooja, by contrast, thrives in chaos. He is instinctive, feeding off pressure, often producing the extraordinary when it matters most.

His shootout saves against Algeria were not just technical — they were psychological blows that broke the opposition’s rhythm.

Together, they represent a clash of philosophies: experience versus instinct, composure versus raw courage

Psychological Edge

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Semi-finals are often not about who plays better football, but who manages nerves. Ramandimbisoa, with nearly two decades in the game, knows how to silence pressure.

He explained after the Kenya win: “Penalties are not just about technique. You must be calm. If I look calm, the striker starts to panic. That is my weapon.”

Abooja, meanwhile, thrives on energy: “When I save, I don’t just save for myself — I save for Sudan. I want my teammates to see me fight, so they fight harder.”

Should this semi-final stretch into extra time or penalties, the psychological tug-of-war between these two men could eclipse any tactical battle.

Beyond the Gloves: Carrying Nations

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For Madagascar, Ramandimbisoa symbolizes belief. At 39, he has become the unlikely face of a team that continues to punch above its weight.

For Sudan, Abooja is the beating heart of a side playing under unimaginable adversity, with domestic football crippled by conflict.

Both keepers, in different ways, embody resilience.

Sudan coach Kwesi Appiah said of his No.1: “Abooja is more than a goalkeeper. He gives this team courage. When he saves, the whole nation feels lifted.”

Madagascar coach Romuald Rakotondrabe was equally effusive: “Michel is our leader, even without the armband. He shows our players that nothing is impossible.”

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The Decider in Dar es Salaam

As the Benjamin Mkapa Stadium fills with anticipation, fans will look for goals, for celebrations, for moments of attacking brilliance.

Yet the real story may unfold in the quiet determination of two men between the posts.

If Ramandimbisoa continues his fairytale, Madagascar could reach their first-ever CHAN final. If Abooja repeats his heroics, Sudan could deliver East Africa’s first finalist.

Whichever way it goes, the narrative of CHAN PAMOJA 2024 will remember not only the goals scored but the goals denied — by the walls named Ramandimbisoa and Abooja.

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-CAF

Join the Sports Village Square channel on WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

Kunle Solaja is the author of landmark books on sports and journalism as well as being a multiple award-winning journalist and editor of long standing. He is easily Nigeria’s foremost soccer diarist and Africa's most capped FIFA World Cup journalist, having attended all FIFA World Cup finals from Italia ’90 to Qatar 2022. He was honoured at the Qatar 2022 World Cup by FIFA and AIPS.

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From Porto Glory to Moroccan History: Sektioui’s Winning Touch at CHAN

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In Nairobi’s feverish finale, as Morocco lifted a record third African Nations Championship (CHAN) title, one figure on the touchline never seemed to flinch.

Tarik Sektioui — former FC Porto winger turned national-team coach — had spent a month drilling details, calming nerves and reinforcing belief.

The payoff was a 3–2 win over first-time finalists Madagascar and a place in history for both coach and country.

A mission with meaning

For Sektioui, this was never just a trophy. It was a statement about where Moroccan football is heading and why the project matters.

“It is a very, very important victory that proves that Moroccan football is on a path of development and progress. It will continue,” he CAFOnline.com exclusively. 

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“A huge amount of work is being done and every time we get results, we become hungrier; it’s part of the development process. Winning titles is what motivates us.”

He dedicated the coronation to the highest office.

“I dedicate this coronation to HM King Mohammed VI, because if Moroccan football has reached such heights, it is thanks to his enlightened vision and his far-sighted strategy for a real development of national football. I can only say thank you, my King. May God protect you,” Sektioui said.

From jolt to journey

Morocco’s campaign was not without alarms. A strong start gave way to a shock defeat in the group stage, forcing a reset in approach.

Sektioui’s response was not fury but clarity — a return to structure, a renewed insistence on focus and transitions, and a quiet confidence that his players would absorb the corrections.

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“Each match presents a different scenario with its details that make the difference,” he said.

“We are very confident about the outcome of this match… The match was not easy and if a team plays in a final it is because it has the necessary capabilities to do so.”

That balance of respect and resolve ran through Morocco’s run.

“To win this final, you have to be 100 percent ready at every level. Respecting your opponent means respecting yourself, but we have the means to succeed and win the final,” he added.

A coach shaped by the elite

If Sektioui’s post-match language sounds steeped in elite habits, it is. His 15-year professional career — crowned by three Portuguese league titles, two cups and two Super Cups with Porto — helped hard-wire the competitive behaviours he now demands.

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“It was not an easy career, 15 years in professional football. With Porto, I was three times champion, won two cups and two Super Cups, which taught me the spirit of winning and shaped my personality,” he said. “Football is played with the feet, but everything is in the head.”

That mental framework fed into a coaching arc built at home: domestic club management, a continental title with RS Berkane, guiding the Olympic team to bronze in Paris 2024, and now CHAN gold. The trajectory is coherent — a teacher of details, a manager of moments.

The players’ trust — and the coach’s plan

No title comes without individual form. Oussama Lamlaoui’s tournament felt preordained: league champion, TotalEnergies CAF Confederation Cup top scorer, and then CHAN’s Golden Boot with six. Sektioui backed his striker, but he also coached the game around him.

“I know that (Oussama) Lamlaoui has a lot of qualities. He is an exceptional striker,” Sektioui said.

“He scored a very, very important goal at a crucial moment. I was surprised and very happy. But a few minutes later, I thought about the changes to close the spaces.”

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That phrase — close the spaces — captures Sektioui’s work.

Morocco’s best spells were not only about flair; they were about compactness after losing the ball, midfield screens that bought time for the back line, and a relentless insistence on concentration. 

When focus dipped, Morocco suffered. “We paid dearly for our loss of concentration… In competitions of this kind, there are no weak and easy teams,” he warned.

Leadership, human first

Sektioui speaks often about people before systems. “Proud of my men, proud of what was shown on the pitch. We honoured the Moroccan flag,” he said. “I am happy to play with such a group, full of character and responsibility.”

There were softer notes, too, away from the technical area. Since arriving in Kenya, he said, Morocco had been “warmly” received.

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“I can only thank the Kenyans for their support. Thanks also to CAF for their organization. It was a fantastic stay crowned with the title.”

Even his now-famous green taqiya had a story.

“This hat is six decades old. I inherited it from my father and it represents a good luck charm for me on occasions like these,” he revealed after the final.

“The finals are won, not played”

In the critical hours, Sektioui’s message hardened. “The finals are won, not played,” he said. “We faced a team that doesn’t succumb to pressure, and it wasn’t the easy prey many expected. Congratulations to all Moroccans for the love, support, and trust.”

Faith threaded through his reflections: “God has rewarded us for our efforts before and during the competition, and this win is well-deserved,” he added.

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“Before coming to Kenya, I said we would lift the trophy, and God did not disappoint me. It took some sacrifices and patience, but in the end, we achieved our goal.”

A place in Moroccan football history

The numbers are unambiguous. Morocco’s third CHAN title — after 2018 and 2020 — secures their status as the competition’s standard-bearers.

For Sektioui, the personal footnote is just as striking: he becomes the first Moroccan to win a continental title as a player (the African Youth Championship in 1997) and later as a national-team coach at senior level.

He also joins a select band as only the third Moroccan coach to win CHAN, following Jamal Sellami and Hussein Ammouta. Add an Olympic bronze with the U23s, and the portfolio looks like a roadmap, not a spike.

This, then, is a legacy piece in real time: a coach who learned elite habits abroad, returned home to apply them across age groups and competitions, and now stands atop a programme that keeps producing both results and role models.

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The link between Morocco’s top scorers and their titles — Ayoub El Kaabi (2018), Soufiane Rahimi (2021) and now Lamlaoui (2024/25) — is more than trivia; it speaks to a system that creates decisive players in decisive moments, again and again.

What next?

Sektioui’s answer, implicitly, is more of the same — more humility around opponents, more rigour during transitions, more player accountability, more alignment with a federation project that prizes planning over noise.

“Each team must be approached in a serious, professional manner and with lucidity and commitment, to avoid pitfalls,” he said. That mindset is transportable: from CHAN to age-group football, from Olympic podiums to the senior stage.

If the past month confirmed anything, it is that Morocco’s success is not accidental. It is engineered, curated and constantly reviewed — by a coach who treats details as non-negotiables and a squad that now understands the standard.

The celebration will fade. The film sessions will resume. But one line from the coach is likely to endure inside that dressing room: finals are there to be won — and Morocco, under Tarik Sektioui, increasingly know how.

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-Cafonline

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King Mohammed VI – Architect of Morocco’s Football Renaissance

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By KUNLE SOLAJA, Casablanca

King Mohammed VI’s congratulatory message to the Atlas Lions after their CHAN 2024 victory is more than a royal gesture — it reflects a monarch whose deep passion for football has shaped the trajectory of Moroccan sport.

Since ascending the throne in 1999, King Mohammed VI has made football a cornerstone of Morocco’s soft power and international engagement.

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 King Mohammed VI and the President of Royal Moroccan Football Federation, Fouzi Lekjaa, inspect the Mohammed VI Football Academy

His vision has translated into major investments that have transformed the sport at both grassroots and elite levels.

At the heart of this legacy is the Mohammed VI Football Academy, inaugurated in 2009, which has become a world-class talent hub.

Many of today’s national team stars, including members of the squad that reached the 2022 FIFA World Cup semi-finals, passed through its system.

Beyond player development, the King has overseen infrastructure upgrades that make Morocco one of Africa’s most reliable hosts for continental and global events.

State-of-the-art stadiums, training centres, and a robust domestic league system are testament to this commitment.

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The monarch’s support has also boosted Morocco’s standing in international football politics.

The country has become a trusted ally of FIFA and CAF, hosting multiple youth and women’s tournaments, while continuing its pursuit of a long-cherished ambition: hosting the FIFA World Cup.

From CHAN triumphs to the unforgettable World Cup run in Qatar 2022, Morocco’s football renaissance carries the imprint of a King whose passion for the game is matched by strategic investment.

The Atlas Lions’ latest CHAN victory is thus both a sporting milestone and a reflection of a royal legacy in motion.

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King Mohammed VI Hails Morocco’s CHAN Triumph, Reaffirms Passion for Football

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By KUNLE SOLAJA, Casablanca.

Morocco’s historic victory at the 2024 African Nations Championship (CHAN) was marked not only by the jubilation of fans but also by a heartfelt royal message from King Mohammed VI, whose passion for football once again shone through.

The monarch congratulated the Atlas Lions after their thrilling 3–2 triumph over first-time finalists Madagascar in Saturday’s final at the Moi International Sports Centre, Kasarani, Kenya. With the victory, Morocco claimed their third CHAN title after previous successes in 2018 and 2020.

In his message, King Mohammed VI expressed deep pride in the players’ achievement, calling the victory “a source of joy and pride” for Morocco. “This continental triumph, the third of its kind, reinforces the exceptional achievements and performances recently accomplished by Moroccan football,” he wrote, underlining his unwavering support for the sport that has become central to the kingdom’s international reputation.

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The Atlas Lions were pushed to the limit by Madagascar’s spirited challenge, but Morocco’s pedigree and composure proved decisive. Star striker Oussama Lamlioui delivered a masterclass, scoring twice – including a spectacular 40-yard strike – to finish as the tournament’s top scorer with six goals.

For King Mohammed VI, whose leadership has been instrumental in the growth of Moroccan football, the win was more than just another title — it was a reaffirmation of his long-standing commitment to the game. Under his reign, Morocco has invested heavily in infrastructure, youth academies, and continental competitions, elevating the kingdom’s standing in global football.

As the Atlas Lions lifted the trophy in Nairobi, the royal message resonated across Morocco, blending the players’ on-pitch heroics with the King’s enduring vision of football as a source of national pride and international influence.

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