Portal:Football in Africa
Wikipedia portal for content related to Football in Africa / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Introduction
Football is the most popular sport in Africa. Indeed, football is probably the most popular sport in every African country, although rugby and cricket are also very popular in South Africa. The first football stadium to be built in Africa was the Alexandria Stadium in 1929. (Full article...)
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Founded on 24 April 1907 by Omar Lotfy, Al Ahly has a record of 43 Egyptian Premier League titles, 39 Egypt Cup titles and 14 Egyptian Super Cups. Al Ahly is the most successful club in Africa.
In international competitions, the club has won a record 12 CAF Champions League titles, 1 CAF Confederation Cup, a record of 8 CAF Super Cups, a record of 4 African Cup Winners' Cups, 1 Afro-Asian Club Championship, 1 Arab Club Champions Cup, 1 Arab Cup Winners' Cup, a record of 2 Arab Super Cups, and has won 4 bronze medals in the FIFA Club World Cup. With 26 official continental titles, Al Ahly was voted by CAF as the African club of the 20th century.
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Samba began his career in France with Ligue 2 club Sedan. After only three appearances, he was signed by Bundesliga side Hertha BSC, where he struggled for playing time before joining Blackburn Rovers in the Premier League for £450,000 on 25 January 2007. He was appointed club captain ahead of the 2010–11 season and went on to make 185 appearances for the club in all competitions before moving to Russian side Anzhi Makhachkala in February 2012. His three seasons at the club were split by a short return to English football with Queens Park Rangers for six months. In August 2013, Samba left Anzhi for Dynamo Moscow, where made over 50 appearances in all competitions before joining Panathinaikos in August 2016.
Samba made his debut for the Republic of the Congo in 2004 at the age of 20.
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Credit: Davykamanzi |
A public bus in Nairobi, Kenya bearing the name of Spanish footballer Diego Costa, pictured on 17 August 2014. Football in Kenya is controlled by the Football Kenya Federation (FKF), and the nation became a member of FIFA in 1960, prior to their independence in 1963.
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Topics
Open tasks
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- Expand stubs: Competitions in Africa • Organizations
- Expand club articles of teams from Africa.
- Expand biographies of Africans involved in football.
- Create: Requested articles • Most wanted football articles • Requested general football articles
- Add: Infoboxes • Images (General requests, Requested images of people)
- Review: articles currently under review
- Assess: Assessment requests • Assess an article
- Revert vandalism on this portal and on African football articles
- Assist in maintaining this portal and keeping its selected content up to date.
- WikiNews: Create and submit news stories about African football for Wikipedia's sister project WikiNews.
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Sources
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cf/Football_pictogram.svg/51px-Football_pictogram.svg.png)
- "The History Of Soccer In Africa". NPR.org. 2010-06-09. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
- Alegi, Peter (2010). African Soccerscapes. Ohio University Press. pp. 1–2. ISBN 9780896802780.
- Frimpong, Enoch Darfah. "Ghana news: A world of superstition, frustration and disillusionment - Graphic Online". Retrieved 23 September 2017.
- Lacey, Marc (8 August 2002). "Kangemi Journal; For Spellbinding Soccer, the Juju Man's on the Ball". The New York Times. NY Times. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
- "World Cup Witchcraft: Africa Teams Turn to Magic for Aid". National Geographic. Archived from the original on July 10, 2006. Retrieved 2016-03-31.
- Andy Mitten (September 2010). The Rough Guide to Cult Football. Rough Guides UK. ISBN 9781405387965. Retrieved 2016-04-02.
- "African Nations Cup overshadowed by hocus pocus | Football". The Guardian. Retrieved 2016-04-09.
- Kuper, Simon (2006). Soccer Against the Enemy: How the World's Most Popular Sport Starts and Stops Wars, Fuels Revolutions, and Keeps Dictators in Power. Nation Books. p. 123. ISBN 978-1-56025-878-0.