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January 22, 2013
Star Sport


 

Crowd trouble, surprise results at African Cup

Zambia's Christopher Katongo (left) is tackled by Ethiopia's Minyahile Teshome during their African Cup of Nations Group C match yesterday at the Mbombela Stadium in Nelspruit, South Africa. The game ended 1-1. - ap photos


Ethiopia supporters react after Adane Girma scored the equaliser against Zambia during their African Cup of Nations Group C match yesterday at the Mbombela Stadium in Nelspruit, South Africa.

NELSPRUIT, South Africa (AP):

The African Cup of Nations produced all the colour, chaos and drama with which it has traditionally been associated yesterday, as well as a couple of surprising results in Group C.

Leading the way was Ethiopia, whose return to the tournament after a 31-year absence drew an estimated 10,000 fans, with busloads of South African-based immigrants flooding into Nelspruit from Johannesburg.

They were rewarded for their support with an unexpected 1-1 draw with defending champions Zambia, but not before they reacted to a red card for goalkeeper Jemal Tassew by throwing vuvuzelas and other debris onto the pitch.

The match was delayed for eight minutes before order was restored, with organisers deploying riot police on the side of the pitch to maintain calm for the remainder of the evening.

The tackle from Tassew was a dangerous one, with the goalkeeper flying into Chisamba Lungu outside the penalty area with his studs up at waist height, yet coach Sewnet Bishaw defended his player.

"The goalkeeper is not only a goalkeeper, he is also a defender and he went to defend the ball. I tell you that should not be a red card," he said. "The reaction of the fans is normal. They are supporting their boys and they want them to win."

Collins Mbesuma capitalised on Zambia's numerical advantage in first-half injury time, but Ethiopia, whose effervescent striker Saladin Seida had missed a penalty in the 25th minute, regrouped during the break.

With Zambia failing to impose themselves in the second half, coach Herve Renard elected to replace left back Joseph Musonda after 60 minutes with a third striker in the form of Jacob Mulenga, but was left to rue his decision.

Five minutes later, Ethiopia attacked down the channel that had previously been protected by Musonda, and Seida's layoff allowed Adane Girma to rifle home the equaliser.

The second match at the Mbombela Stadium was short on entertainment, but it nevertheless produced late drama when substitute Alain Traore struck in the final seconds of stoppage time to give Burkina Faso a 1-1 draw with two-time champions Nigeria.

The Super Eagles controlled the game thanks largely to a man-of-the-match performance from Chelsea midfielder John Obi Mikel, but were made to pay for a lack of ambition and a second yellow card for Efe Ambrose in the 74th minute that saw the defender dismissed.

Spartak Moscow striker Emmanuel Emenike opened the scoring with a composed finish after 23 minutes, but Nigeria, which was without the injured Victor Moses, showed little ambition thereafter and was punished when Traore took advantage of a slip-up by defender Godfrey Oboabona.

That meant that five of the six games at this African Cup have been drawn, with Mali the only team to have gained maximum points in its 1-0 win over Niger on Sunday evening.

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