• Why has African football made so little progress in the last 3 =?UTF-8?

    From Mark@21:1/5 to All on Wed Nov 27 20:35:50 2024
    Back in 1990 Cameroon reached the World Cup Quarter-final, and a lot of
    people were telling us what a bright future there was for African
    football; people were predicting that an African team would win the
    World Cup by 2000 etc.

    Since then, Morocco have reached the World Cup semi-final, we've had 2
    African teams that have won the Olympics, about 3 or 4 teams from Africa
    have been runners-up at the Club World Cup, and that's about all the
    signs of progress that African football has shown.

    What's gone wrong? Why has African football basically stood still, and
    made so little progress since about 1990?

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  • From Mark@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 1 15:21:07 2024
    Nobody got any theories then?

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  • From MH@21:1/5 to Mark on Sun Dec 1 09:16:04 2024
    On 2024-12-01 08:21, Mark wrote:
    Nobody got any theories then?

    The question does lend it itself to particularly rational comment. What
    is "progress" ? How can you lump all the countries of a continent as
    diverse (geographically, genetically, and everything else) as Africa
    into one pot. As well say why has CONCACAF not made any progress since
    Costa Rica surprised everyone in 1990, and the USA and Mexico made quarterfinals ?

    Countries located in Africa (and parts of countries geologically located
    in Africa like the Canaries and Madeira) are producing more and more international calibre players. Just look at all the scorers in the
    (UEFA) Champions' league and other top competitions. But to expect any
    country within the continent to compete with the top (wealthy) nations
    from Europe, as well as Brazil and Argentina, on a regular basis is to
    expect too much. The countries have, in general, to deal with
    infrastructure (including coaching at lower ages and levels) and
    political problems, with players scattered all over the European
    leagues, with top players who perhaps feel no strong affiliation with
    the country they are playing for (eg. born in France or Spain or England
    or Germany for example).

    In addition the qualifying process in the past has been extremely harsh,
    with a low probability of actually selecting the two/three/five teams
    that are the strongest at the moment of the world cup. This may improve
    a lot with the new qualifying system and a 48 team world cup.

    Anyway, why should one expect Nigeria or Egypt or Algeria to do any
    better than the USA or Mexico? The former has a very large population, a wealthy football federation, and a reasonably good professional league,
    along with good facilities and a US college system that allows player development using scholarships. The latter is a football crazy nation
    with a large population, a decent league, and the advantage of fairly
    easy qualification for every world cup.

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  • From Real_Mardin@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 1 17:14:30 2024
    It's true that African teams made great progress between 1982 and 2002
    in terms of World Cup results. I too, once used to belive that Cameroon
    or Nigeria would have won the World Cup by now.

    Is the problem (from Africa's perspective) simply that the emergence of
    good African sides like Cameroon 1990 and Nigeria 1994 coincided with a
    time where European and South American football started to take
    professionalism to a new level in terms of tactics, athleticism and
    scouting?

    So where African sides did make a good degree of progress (but from a
    low starting position) Europe and South America (who were already in a
    stronger position than Africa) simply progressed at a better rate?

    I will still continue to be an Indomitable Lion every AFCON

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  • From Real_Mardin@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 1 17:15:28 2024
    On Sun, 1 Dec 2024 17:14:30 +0000, Real_Mardin wrote:

    It's true that African teams made great progress between 1982 and 2002
    in terms of World Cup results. I too, once used to belive that Cameroon
    or Nigeria would have won the World Cup by now.

    Is the problem (from Africa's perspective) simply that the emergence of
    good African sides like Cameroon 1990 and Nigeria 1994 coincided with a
    time where European and South American football started to take professionalism to a new level in terms of tactics, athleticism and
    scouting?

    So where African sides did make a good degree of progress (but from a
    low starting position) Europe and South America (who were already in a stronger position than Africa) simply progressed at a better rate?

    I will still continue to be an Indomitable Lion every AFCON

    .and World Cup! (sorry, accidentally hit "post" too soon!)


    RM

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  • From MH@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 1 10:42:00 2024
    On 2024-12-01 09:16, MH wrote:
    On 2024-12-01 08:21, Mark wrote:
    Nobody got any theories then?

    The question does lend it itself to particularly rational comment.

    I meant does NOT lend itself

    What
    is "progress" ?  How can you lump all the countries of a continent as diverse (geographically, genetically, and everything else) as Africa
    into one pot.   As well say why has CONCACAF not made any progress since Costa Rica surprised everyone in 1990, and the USA and Mexico made quarterfinals ?

    Countries located in Africa (and parts of countries geologically located
    in Africa like the Canaries and Madeira) are producing more and more international calibre players.  Just look at all the scorers in the
    (UEFA) Champions' league and other top competitions.  But to expect any country within the continent to compete with the top (wealthy) nations
    from Europe, as well as Brazil and Argentina, on a regular basis is to
    expect too much.  The countries have, in general, to deal with infrastructure (including coaching at lower ages and levels) and
    political problems, with players scattered all over the European
    leagues, with top players who perhaps feel no strong affiliation with
    the country they are playing for (eg. born in France or Spain or England
    or Germany for example).

    In addition the qualifying process in the past has been extremely harsh,
    with a low probability of actually selecting the two/three/five teams
    that are the strongest at the moment of the world cup.  This may improve
    a lot with the new qualifying system and a 48 team world cup.

    Anyway, why should one expect Nigeria or Egypt or Algeria to do any
    better than the USA or Mexico? The former has a very large population, a wealthy football federation, and a reasonably good professional league,
    along with good facilities and a US college system that allows player development using scholarships. The latter is a football crazy nation
    with a large population, a decent league, and the advantage of fairly
    easy qualification for every world cup.



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