The AFCON Final Was Decided After the Whistle — Here's the Decision That Changed Everything
The final whistle blew on January 18. Pape Gueye scored, Senegal celebrated, Sadio Mané lifted the trophy.
The Lions of Teranga were AFCON champions; they had beaten the hosts Morocco 1-0 in their own backyard, in Rabat, in front of their own fans.
It was dramatic, it was emotional, it felt like history. And it was, just not the kind anyone expected.
Because 58 days later, CAF sent a statement that basically said, forget all of that.
As of March 18, 2026, Morocco were declared the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations champions. Now, it wasn’t because they scored more goals or because they played better football.
But because of what happened in the 90th minute and a rulebook that nobody thought would be weaponised like this.
Rewind: The Penalty That Broke Everything
To understand the ruling, you have to go back to that stoppage time moment that cracked the final wide open.
Deep into stoppage time, referee Jean-Jacques Ndala pointed to the spot following a VAR check. Morocco's Brahim Diaz fell in the goal box.
The ref initially waved it away, then VAR intervened and flipped the decision. A penalty was awarded to Morocco. This was the final, at home, with the score at 0-0.
The Senegal bench lost it. Coach Pape Thiaw led his players off the pitch for around 15 minutes while fans tried to storm the field.
It was chaos; a pure, televised chaos.
The kind of scene that makes you check if what you are watching is actually real. When the game was restarted, Brahim Diaz saw his Panenka saved by Edouard Mendy.
The game went to extra time and Pape Gueye scored. Senegal won after all.
At the time, it felt like the most improbable comeback you would ever seen — a team that walked off the pitch, came back and still won the trophy.
Except that walk-off is what cost them everything.
The Rule Nobody Was Talking About
The CAF Appeal Board found that Senegal's conduct fell within the scope of Articles 82 and 84 of the Regulations of the Africa Cup of Nations.
Article 82, to be specific, states that if a team leaves the ground before the regular end of a match without the referee's authorisation, they are considered to have forfeited.
Senegal left and the referee didn't authorise it. By the letter of that regulation, the result had to be overturned.
The CAF Appeal Board confirmed the appeal lodged by the Royal Moroccan Football Federation was upheld, recording the result as 3-0 in Morocco's favour.
Three zero, for a game Morocco lost on the pitch.
What This Actually Means
If we are being true to ourselves, Senegal — with Mané, with Nicolas Jackson, with Idrissa Gueye — played a full final, won it in extra time, held the trophy and then had it taken away in a boardroom two months later.That is not a small thing.
That 49-year wait for Morocco's second AFCON title ended not with a goal, but with a statement.
And that is the part that hurts for a lot of people. Morocco didn't win the game, the paperwork decided they did.
There is also a serious football law argument here.
IFAB's Laws of the Game, Rule 5.2, state that the decisions of the referee regarding facts connected with play, including whether or not a goal is scored and the result of the match, are final.
The referee let the game continue; he didn't forfeit Senegal. He restarted the match.
By overruling that, CAF's appeal board essentially overruled the referee which is not supposed to be possible.
A similar situation played out in 2019 when Wydad Casablanca walked off during an African Champions League final.
CAF initially ordered a replay, the case went to CAS and Esperance were declared champion, with CAF embarrassingly rebuked for trying to override the referee's decision.
So there is precedent here, and it is not in CAF's favour.
Africa Is Watching
Senegal's government has called for an independent international investigation into suspected corruption within CAF's governing bodies.
Their football federation has called the decision "unfair, unprecedented, and unacceptable." They will appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne.
Idrissa Gueye said it on his Instagram story: the Senegalese people showed what they are — dignified in victory, dignified in adversity. "We know what we experienced that evening in Rabat," he wrote. "And that, no one can take away from us."
The trophy might be gone. The memory, however, stays.
This isn't just about Morocco or Senegal. It is about what this moment does to AFCON's credibility, the tournament that is supposed to be the crown jewel of continental football.
This Isn't Over
Morocco are champions on paper. Senegal are heading to CAS. The lawyers are gearing up.
African football deserves better than this. The players deserved a clean verdict. The fans deserved a clean trophy.
Instead, we got a final that will be argued about for years, not because of the football, but because of what happened after the whistle.
And that is the most painful part of all.
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