2016 Africa Futsal Cup of Nations qualification

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2016 Africa Futsal Cup of Nations qualification
Tournament details
Dates6–14 December 2015
Teams12 (from 1 confederation)
Tournament statistics
Matches played10
Goals scored83 (8.3 per match)
2020

The 2016 Africa Futsal Cup of Nations qualification was a men's futsal competition which decided the participating teams of the 2016 Africa Futsal Cup of Nations.

A total of eight teams qualified to play in the final tournament, including South Africa who qualified automatically as hosts, and Egypt who qualified automatically as the highest-placed African team in the 2012 FIFA Futsal World Cup.[1]

Teams[edit]

A total of 12 teams entered the qualifying rounds.[2]

Round Teams entering round No. of teams
Preliminary round 12
Final tournament 2

Format[edit]

Qualification ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the aggregate score was tied after the second leg, the away goals rule would be applied, and if still level, the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (no extra time would be played).[3]

The six winners of the preliminary round qualified for the final tournament.

Schedule[edit]

The schedule of the qualifying rounds was as follows.[2]

Round Leg Date
Preliminary round First leg 6 December 2015
Second leg 13 December 2015

Preliminary round[edit]

Winners qualified for 2016 Africa Futsal Cup of Nations.[4]

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Cameroon  4–12  Angola 3–5 1–7
Tunisia  w/o[A]  Nigeria
Zambia  7–7 (a)[B]  Equatorial Guinea 3–2 4–5
Ivory Coast  2–12  Morocco 2–7 0–5
Madagascar  4–17  Mozambique 1–7 3–10
Sudan  4–14  Libya 4–9 0–5[C]
Notes
  1. ^
    Nigeria withdrew from the tournament, therefore Tunisia qualified automatically.[5]
  2. ^
    In the second leg between Equatorial Guinea and Zambia, the referees incorrectly played extra time when the score at full time was 5–4 to Equatorial Guinea (7–7 on aggregate), which Equatorial Guinea went on to win 7–5 (8–7 on aggregate). CAF's rules state that the team with the most away goals wins in the event of a tie,[3] and so CAF later declared the extra time played null and void, and Zambia the winners by virtue of the away goals rule.[6]
  3. ^
    Libya played their home match in Tunisia due to security concerns.
Cameroon 3–5 Angola
  • Atangana 3', 24', 26'
  • Ribeiro 2', 39' (pen.)
  • Dos Santos 6'
  • Barata 12'
  • Martins 36'
Angola 7–1 Cameroon
  • Silva 4', 18'
  • Texeira 10'
  • Ribeiro 20', 33'
  • Neto 36', 39'
  • Atangana 19'

Angola won 12–4 on aggregate.


Tunisia Cancelled Nigeria
Nigeria Cancelled Tunisia

Tunisia won on walkover.


Zambia 3–2 Equatorial Guinea
  • Shanchebo 9'
  • Ndhlovu 12'
  • Chama 14'
Equatorial Guinea 5–4 Zambia
  • Chama 9'
  • Chulu 11'
  • Kaampze 21'
  • Phiri 23'

7–7 on aggregate. Zambia won on away goals.


Ivory Coast 2–7 Morocco







Morocco 5–0 Ivory Coast
Mohamed Jouad 10', 29'
Bilal Bakkali 15'
Youssef Elmazray 25', 33'

Morocco won 12–2 on aggregate.


Madagascar 1–7 Mozambique






Mozambique 10–3 Madagascar











Mozambique won 17–4 on aggregate.


Sudan 4–9 Libya
  • A. Ahmed 4', 30'
  • M. Ahmed 17'
  • Abdelnoor 33'
  • Rahoma 10', 31'
  • Al-Shawain 16'
  • Abdelrahim 18', 26', 29'
  • Al-Toumi 19'
  • Ahmed 32'
  • Al-Khoga 39'
Libya 5–0 Sudan
  • Abdelrahim 3', 23'
  • Al-Serksia 17'
  • Aghila 31'
  • Al-Khoga 37'

Libya won 14–4 on aggregate.

Qualified teams[edit]

The following eight teams qualified for the final tournament.

Team Qualified on Previous appearances in tournament1
 South Africa (hosts) 3 November 2015[2] 3 (2000, 2004, 2008)
 Egypt 3 November 2015[2] 4 (1996, 2000, 2004, 2008)
 Angola 13 December 2015 1 (2008)
 Tunisia 6 December 2015 1 (2008)
 Zambia 13 December 2015 1 (2008)
 Morocco 13 December 2015 3 (2000, 2004, 2008)
 Mozambique 13 December 2015 2 (2004, 2008)
 Libya 13 December 2015 2 (2000, 2008)
1 Bold indicates champion for that year. Italic indicates host for that year.

Goalscorers[edit]

There were 48 goals scored in 6 matches, for an average of 8 goals per match.

5 goals

  • Libya Rabia Abdelrahim

4 goals

  • Angola Paulo Ribeiro
  • Cameroon Barnabé Atangana

2 goals

1 goal

  • Angola Klisman Barata
  • Angola Nuno Dos Santos
  • Angola Celso Martins
  • Angola Gilson Texeira
  • Equatorial Guinea Domingo Manami
  • Libya Salem Aghila
  • Libya Bader Ahmed
  • Libya Abdulhalim Al-Serksia
  • Libya Hamdi Al-Shawain
  • Libya Adham Al-Toumi
  • Sudan Mergani Abdelnoor
  • Sudan Mohamed Ahmed
  • Zambia Kenneth Chulu
  • Zambia Michelo Kaampze
  • Zambia Boniface Ndhlovu
  • Zambia Bobby Phiri
  • Zambia Enock Shanchebo

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Fixtures for Women AFCON 2016 & Africa Futsal Cup of Nations 2016". CAF. 3 November 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d "Fixtures Africa Futsal Cup of Nations South Africa 2016" (PDF). CAFonline.com.
  3. ^ a b "Regulations of the Futsal Africa Cup of Nations" (PDF). CAF.
  4. ^ "News in Brief". CAF. 16 December 2015.
  5. ^ "2016 Africa Futsal Cup of Nations". Futsal Planet. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2016-08-02.
  6. ^ "CAF declares Zambia winner over Equatorial Guinea". AllAfrica. 21 December 2015.

External links[edit]