2023 Africa Cup of Nations

The 2023 Africa Cup of Nations, known in short as the 2023 AFCON or CAN 2023 and for sponsorship purposes as the TotalEnergies 2023 Africa Cup of Nations, was the 34th edition of the biennial Africa Cup of Nations tournament organised by the Confederation of African Football (CAF). It was hosted by Ivory Coast, taking place in the country for the second time following the 1984 edition.

2023 Africa Cup of Nations
Coupe d'Afrique des Nations 2023
Official logo[1]
Tournament details
Host countryIvory Coast
Dates13 January – 11 February 2024
Teams24
Venue(s)6 (in 5 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Ivory Coast (3rd title)
Runners-up Nigeria
Third place South Africa
Fourth place DR Congo
Tournament statistics
Matches played52
Goals scored119 (2.29 per match)
Attendance1,109,593 (21,338 per match)
Top scorer(s)Equatorial Guinea Emilio Nsue
(5 goals)
Best player(s)Nigeria William Troost-Ekong
Best young playerIvory Coast Simon Adingra
Best goalkeeperSouth Africa Ronwen Williams
Fair play award South Africa
2021
2025

This edition of the tournament was initially planned to take place during the Northern Hemisphere's summer like the 2019 Cup, in order to reduce scheduling conflicts with European club teams and competitions.[2][3][4][5] However, it was postponed by CAF to 13 January – 11 February 2024 on 3 July 2022 due to the summer weather concerns in Ivory Coast, although the competition retained the original name for sponsorship purposes.[6][7] This followed the previous edition in 2021 in Cameroon also being moved to the Northern Hemisphere's winter season for similar reasons, albeit coupled with postponement due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the CAF calendar.[8]

Host nation Ivory Coast won the tournament for their third title. They beat Nigeria 2–1 in the final, having also beaten defending champions Senegal in the round of 16 in a penalty shootout after a 1–1 draw.

Host selection

The hosting rights for this edition of the tournament were initially awarded to Guinea during a meeting of the CAF executive committee on 20 September 2014, which also awarded the 2019 edition to Cameroon and the 2021 edition to Ivory Coast. At the time, the announcement of the 2023 host was unscheduled; Guinea was one of the bidders for the 2019 and 2021 editions, and per CAF's assertions, on the basis of the country's presentation "and commitment", the committee "decided to exercise its power to make an immediate decision."[9]

A CAF executive committee meeting on 20 July 2017 brought about changes for the tournament moving forward, including an increase in group stage participation teams from 16 to 24 from the 2019 edition.[10] With the new specifications, Cameroon could not reach the preparation deadlines for the-then following 2019 edition and got stripped of the hosting rights on 30 November 2018,[11] with the hosting rights handed over to Egypt on 8 January 2019.[12] Cameroon opted for and hosted the 2021 edition instead,[13] which led to original 2021 hosts Ivory Coast organising the 2023 edition.[14] Guinea's hosting duties were pushed back to 2025, which until then had unscheduled hosts, though it could not get ready on time either and was eventually stripped from hosting.[15][16]

Although the tournament retained its original 2023 branding, it was moved to January–February 2024 upon Ivory Coast's request, in order to avoid the West and Central African tropical rain season, which typically reaches its peak around June–July.[6]

Marketing

Sponsorship

Title sponsorOfficial sponsorsNational sponsors

Mascot

Akwaba, the official mascot of the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations

The organising board of the 2023 African Cup of Nations, commonly called COCAN 2023, unveiled the competition; "Akwaba", which means "Welcome" in Baoulé language. It is an elephant, which is Ivory Coast's animal symbol. Its kit bears resemblance to Ivory Coast's home colours.[24]

Match ball

On 12 October 2023, CAF and Puma unveiled "Pokou" as the official tournament edition match ball ahead of the final tournament draw. The name was chosen to honour deceased legendary Ivorian forward Laurent Pokou, locally known for scoring five goals in the 6–1 victory over Ethiopia at the 1970 edition of the tournament, which had stood as a record to date.[25]

Official song

On 12 October 2023, CAF unveiled "Akwaba", the official anthem for the competition during the official draw. The song features Nigerian artist Yemi Alade, Egyptian rapper Mohamed Ramadan, and Ivorian music band Magic System. The anthem, whose title means "welcome" in the native Baoulé language, is a fusion of Afrobeats, rap and zouglou considered stylistically similar to the competition's previous anthems.[26][27]

Teams

  Qualified
  Failed to qualify
  Withdrew or did not enter
  Suspended
  Not part of CAF

All 54 teams originally registered for qualification was held in two rounds like in the previous editions in 2019 and 2021. Réunion and Zanzibar were not full members of CAF and were therefore excluded from participation. Eritrea withdrew after the first round draw. Kenya and Zimbabwe were suspended by FIFA at the time of the second round draw and were excluded from the competition after their suspensions were not lifted in time.

In the preliminary round, the twelve lowest-ranked teams in the FIFA world rankings of December 2021 competed against each other in a knockout system with two legs. The six winners of the preliminary round and the remaining 42 higher-placed teams were drawn into twelve groups of four in April 2022. The second round was played from June 2022 to September 2023 in a double round format. The group winners and runners-up from all twelve groups, with the exception of Group H, qualified for the final round. Apart from the hosts from Ivory Coast, only one other team qualified from Group H.

Qualified teams

The following teams qualified for this edition of the tournament with no debutant nation for the first time since the 2015 edition. Seventeen teams that participated in the most recent edition in 2021 returned for the event.

DR Congo, South Africa, Angola, Namibia, and Tanzania made their return to the continental tournament after missing out on the 2021 edition. Zambia made its return after an almost nine-year absence from the event. Mozambique made its fifth appearance after a fourteen-year absence.[28][29]

Comoros failed to qualify after making their debut in 2021, whereas Kenya and Zimbabwe were disqualified due to FIFA's suspension.[30][31] Sudan, Malawi, Gabon, Sierra Leone, and Ethiopia also failed to qualify after appearing in the 2021 tournament.

TeamMethod of
qualification
Date of
qualification
Finals
appearance
Last
appearance
Previous best
performance
 Ivory CoastHosts / Group H runners-up30 January 201925th2021Champions (1992, 2015)
 MoroccoGroup K winners24 March 202319th2021Champions (1976)
 AlgeriaGroup F winners27 March 202320th2021Champions (1990, 2019)
 South AfricaGroup K runners-up28 March 202311th2019Champions (1996)
 SenegalGroup L winners28 March 202317th2021Champions (2021)
 Burkina FasoGroup B winners28 March 202313th2021Runners-up (2013)
 TunisiaGroup J winners28 March 202321st2021Champions (2004)
 EgyptGroup D winners14 June 202326th2021Champions (1957, 1959, 1986, 1998, 2006, 2008, 2010)
 ZambiaGroup H winners17 June 202318th2015Champions (2012)
 Equatorial GuineaGroup J runners-up17 June 20234th2021Fourth place (2015)
 NigeriaGroup A winners18 June 202320th2021Champions (1980, 1994, 2013)
 Guinea-BissauGroup A runners-up18 June 20234th2021Group stage (2017, 2019, 2021)
 Cape VerdeGroup B runners-up18 June 20234th2021Quarter-finals (2013)
 MaliGroup G winners18 June 202313th2021Runners-up (1972)
 GuineaGroup D runners-up20 June 202314th2021Runners-up (1976)
 GhanaGroup E winners7 September 202324th2021Champions (1963, 1965, 1978, 1982)
 AngolaGroup E runners-up7 September 20239th2019Quarter-finals (2008, 2010)
 TanzaniaGroup F runners-up7 September 20233rd2019Group stage (1980, 2019)
 MozambiqueGroup L runners-up9 September 20235th2010Group stage (1986, 1996, 1998, 2010)
 DR CongoGroup I winners9 September 202320th2019Champions (1968, 1974)
 MauritaniaGroup I runners-up9 September 20233rd2021Group stage (2019, 2021)
 GambiaGroup G runners-up10 September 20232nd2021Quarter-finals (2021)
 CameroonGroup C winners12 September 202321st2021Champions (1984, 1988, 2000, 2002, 2017)
 NamibiaGroup C runners-up12 September 20234th2019Group stage (1998, 2008, 2019)

Venues

CAF established the following requirements for the six stadiums for this edition of the tournament:[32]

Number of stadiumsCapacity
(Minimum)
240,000
220,000
215,000

In September 2017, the government of Ivory Coast launched a public tender for the venues of the competition. This included public tender requested bids for renovating and expanding the existing Felix Houphouët Boigny Stadium in Abidjan and the Stade de la Paix (Peace Stadium) of Bouaké, and building new stadiums in Yamoussoukro as well as the cities of Korhogo and San-Pédro. The three new stadiums were to have a capacity of 20,000 each.[citation needed]

In addition to the renovation or construction of stadiums, the tender included the renovation or construction of training facilities in the host cities: eight in Abidjan and four in Bouaké, Korhogo, Yamoussoukro and San-Pédro. It also included the construction of 96 villas (five rooms per villa) in those cities. In addition, the bidding nations were to be submitted to build a three-star hotel of fifty rooms in Korhogo.[33]

2023 Africa Cup of Nations (Ivory Coast)
AbidjanBouaké
Alassane Ouattara StadiumFelix Houphouet Boigny StadiumStade de la Paix
Capacity: 60,000Capacity: 33,000[34]Capacity: 40,000
KorhogoSan-PédroYamoussoukro
Amadou Gon Coulibaly StadiumLaurent Pokou StadiumCharles Konan Banny Stadium
Capacity: 20,000Capacity: 20,000Capacity: 20,000

Opening ceremony

The opening ceremony of the stadium began at 17:25 with the setting up of the animation groups and the cultural activities which lasted until 20:00. Guests and officials were set up until the start of the opening match at 20:00. Among the guests were members of Confederation of African Football (CAF), members of the diplomatic corps, presidents of legislative and judicial institutions, members of government including the president of COCAN 2023 and the presidents of CAF and FIFA.[35][36]

Squads

Match officials

On 12 September 2023, a total of 33 referees, 33 assistants and 12 video assistant referees (VAR) were named for the tournament.[37]

Referees

Assistant referees

  • Abbes Zerhouni
  • Mokrane Gourari
  • Ahmed Ibrahim
  • Mahmoud Abouregal
  • Azgaou Lahsen
  • Mostafa Akarkad
  • Emiliano Dos Santos
  • Lopes Oliveira
  • Djibril Camara
  • Nouha Bangoura
  • Ngoh Hermann
  • Nouho Ouattara
  • Zakhele Siwela
  • Elvis Noupue
  • Sourou Phatsoane
  • Arsenio Maringule
  • Ibrahim Mohamed
  • Hassani Khalil
  • Gilbert Cheruiyot
  • Amsaed Essa
  • Tiama Seydou
  • Amaldin Souleimane
  • Liban Abdoulrazack
  • Ditsoga Marlene
  • Dos Abdelmiro
  • Kwasi Brobbey
  • Ayimavo Eric
  • Yiembe Stephen
  • Dimbiniaina Andriatianarivelo
  • Ahonto Koffi
  • Steven Moutsassi
  • Modibe Samake
  • Zakaria Brinsi

Video assistant referees

Draw

The final draw was held at the Parc des Expositions d'Abidjan in Abidjan on 12 October 2023.[38] The event was hosted by Senegalese-American musician Akon,[39] whilst the draw was conducted by former African footballers Didier Drogba and Mikel John Obi, alongside current internationals Sadio Mané and Achraf Hakimi.[40] The 24 teams were divided into six groups of four each, with the four initial pots determined based on the September 2023 FIFA World Rankings (shown in parentheses), listed below. Ivory Coast were automatically given the top seed and assigned to position A1 in the draw as hosts.[41]

Pot 1Pot 2Pot 3Pot 4
 Ivory Coast (50) (hosts)
 Morocco (13)
 Senegal (20) (title holders)
 Tunisia (29)
 Algeria (34)
 Egypt (35)
 Nigeria (40)
 Cameroon (41)
 Mali (49)
 Burkina Faso (58)
 Ghana (60)
 DR Congo (64)
 South Africa (65)
 Cape Verde (71)
 Guinea (81)
 Zambia (82)
 Equatorial Guinea (92)
 Mauritania (99)
 Guinea-Bissau (106)
 Mozambique (113)
 Namibia (114)
 Angola (117)
 Gambia (118)
 Tanzania (122)

Group stage

All times are local, GMT (UTC±0).

The fixture schedule for this edition of the tournament was released on 20 October 2023, following the group stage draw.[42][43]

Tiebreakers

Teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss).

If two teams were tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 74):[44]

  1. Points in head-to-head matches match between the two tied teams;
  2. Goal difference in all group matches;
  3. Goals scored in all group matches;
  4. Drawing of lots.

If more than two teams were tied, the following criteria were applied instead:

  1. Points in matches between the tied teams;
  2. Goal difference in matches between the tied teams;
  3. Goals scored in matches between the tied teams;
  4. If after applying all criteria above, two teams were still tied, the above criteria were again applied to matches played between the two teams in question. If this did not resolve the tie, the next three criteria were applied;
  5. Goal difference in all group matches;
  6. Goals scored in all group matches;
  7. Drawing of lots.

Group A

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Equatorial Guinea321093+67[a]Advance to knockout stage
2  Nigeria321031+27[a]
3  Ivory Coast (H)310225−33
4  Guinea-Bissau300327−50
Source: CAF
(H) Hosts
Notes:
Ivory Coast  2–0  Guinea-Bissau
Report
Nigeria  1–1  Equatorial Guinea
Report
Attendance: 8,500[46]
Referee: Abongile Tom (South Africa)

Equatorial Guinea  4–2  Guinea-Bissau
Report
Attendance: 13,888[47]
Referee: Samuel Uwikunda (Rwanda)
Ivory Coast  0–1  Nigeria
Report

Equatorial Guinea  4–0  Ivory Coast
Report
Attendance: 42,550[49]
Referee: Mahmood Ismail (Sudan)
Guinea-Bissau  0–1  Nigeria
Report

Group B

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Cape Verde321073+47Advance to knockout stage
2  Egypt30306603
3  Ghana302156−12[a]
4  Mozambique302147−32[a]
Source: CAF
Notes:
Egypt  2–2  Mozambique
Report
Attendance: 11,933[51]
Referee: Dahane Beida (Mauritania)
Ghana  1–2  Cape Verde
Report
Attendance: 11,943[52]
Referee: Jean-Jacques Ndala Ngambo (DR Congo)

Egypt  2–2  Ghana
Report
Attendance: 20,808[53]
Referee: Pierre Atcho (Gabon)
Cape Verde  3–0  Mozambique
Report
Attendance: 5,794[54]
Referee: Samir Guezzaz (Morocco)

Mozambique  2–2  Ghana
Report
Attendance: 6,000[55]
Referee: Ibrahim Mutaz (Libya)
Cape Verde  2–2  Egypt
Report
Attendance: 15,650[56]
Referee: Alhadi Allaou Mahamat (Chad)

Group C

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Senegal330081+79Advance to knockout stage
2  Cameroon311156−14[a]
3  Guinea311123−14[a]
4  Gambia300327−50
Source: CAF
Notes:
Senegal  3–0  Gambia
Report
Cameroon  1–1  Guinea
Report
Attendance: 11,271[58]
Referee: Ibrahim Mutaz (Libya)

Senegal  3–1  Cameroon
Report
Attendance: 19,176[59]
Referee: Mahmood Ismail (Sudan)
Guinea  1–0  Gambia
Report
Attendance: 19,822[60]
Referee: Abdel Aziz Bouh (Mauritania)

Guinea  0–2  Senegal
Report
Attendance: 15,753[61]
Referee: Pacifique Ndabihawenimana (Burundi)
Gambia  2–3  Cameroon
Report

Group D

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Angola321063+37Advance to knockout stage
2  Burkina Faso311134−14
3  Mauritania310234−13
4  Algeria302134−12
Source: CAF
Algeria  1–1  Angola
Report
Attendance: 19,740[63]
Referee: Issa Sy (Senegal)
Burkina Faso  1–0  Mauritania
Report
Attendance: 27,898[64]
Referee: Jalal Jiyed (Morocco)

Algeria  2–2  Burkina Faso
Report
Attendance: 33,501[65]
Referee: Abongile Tom (South Africa)
Mauritania  2–3  Angola
Report
Attendance: 36,318[66]
Referee: Mohamed Maarouf (Egypt)

Angola  2–0  Burkina Faso
Report
Attendance: 15,753[67]
Referee: Jean-Jacques Ndala Ngambo (DR Congo)
Mauritania  1–0  Algeria
Report
Attendance: 28,010[68]
Referee: Omar Abdulkadir Artan (Somalia)

Group E

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Mali312031+25Advance to knockout stage
2  South Africa311142+24[a]
3  Namibia311114−34[a]
4  Tunisia302112−12
Source: CAF
Notes:
Tunisia  0–1  Namibia
Report
Attendance: 13,991[69]
Referee: Omar Abdulkadir Artan (Somalia)
Mali  2–0  South Africa
Report

Tunisia  1–1  Mali
Report
South Africa  4–0  Namibia
Report
Attendance: 9,304[72]
Referee: Youcef Gamouh (Algeria)

South Africa  0–0  Tunisia
Report
Attendance: 12,847[73]
Referee: Issa Sy (Senegal)
Namibia  0–0  Mali
Report
Attendance: 15,231[74]
Referee: Samuel Uwikunda (Rwanda)

Group F

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Morocco321051+47Advance to knockout stage
2  DR Congo30302203
3  Zambia302123−12[a]
4  Tanzania302114−32[a]
Source: CAF
Notes:
Morocco  3–0  Tanzania
Report
Attendance: 15,478[75]
Referee: Alhadj Allaou Mahamat (Chad)
DR Congo  1–1  Zambia
Report

Morocco  1–1  DR Congo
Report
Zambia  1–1  Tanzania
Report
Attendance: 13,342[78]
Referee: Djindo Louis Houngnandande (Benin)

Tanzania  0–0  DR Congo
Report
Zambia  0–1  Morocco
Report
Attendance: 15,231[80]
Referee: Patrice Tanguy (Gabon)

Ranking of third-placed teams

PosGrpTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1C  Guinea311123−14Advance to knockout stage
2E  Namibia311114−34
3D  Mauritania310234−13
4A  Ivory Coast (H)310225−33
5B  Ghana302156−12
6F  Zambia302123−12
Source: CAF
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Disciplinary points; 5) Drawing of lots.
(H) Hosts

Knockout stage

Bracket

 
Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
              
 
27 January – Abidjan (Houphouet Boigny)
 
 
 Nigeria2
 
2 February – Abidjan (Houphouet Boigny)
 
 Cameroon0
 
 Nigeria1
 
27 January – Bouaké
 
 Angola0
 
 Angola3
 
7 February – Bouaké
 
 Namibia0
 
 Nigeria (p)1 (4)
 
29 January – Abidjan (Houphouet Boigny)
 
 South Africa1 (2)
 
 Cape Verde1
 
3 February – Yamoussoukro
 
 Mauritania0
 
 Cape Verde0 (1)
 
30 January – San Pédro
 
 South Africa (p)0 (2)
 
 Morocco0
 
11 February – Abidjan (Ouattara)
 
 South Africa2
 
 Nigeria1
 
30 January – Korhogo
 
 Ivory Coast2
 
 Mali2
 
3 February – Bouaké
 
 Burkina Faso1
 
 Mali1
 
29 January – Yamoussoukro
 
 Ivory Coast (a.e.t.)2
 
 Senegal1 (4)
 
7 February – Abidjan (Ouattara)
 
 Ivory Coast (p)1 (5)
 
 Ivory Coast1
 
28 January – San Pédro
 
 DR Congo0Third place play-off
 
 Egypt1 (7)
 
2 February – Abidjan (Ouattara)10 February – Abidjan (Houphouet Boigny)
 
 DR Congo (p)1 (8)
 
 DR Congo3  South Africa (p)0 (6)
 
28 January – Abidjan (Ouattara)
 
 Guinea1  DR Congo0 (5)
 
 Equatorial Guinea0
 
 
 Guinea1
 

Round of 16

Angola  3–0  Namibia
Report
Attendance: 28,663[81]
Referee: Dahane Beida (Mauritania)

Nigeria  2–0  Cameroon
Report

Equatorial Guinea  0–1  Guinea
Report
Attendance: 36,340[83]
Referee: Omar Abdulkadir Artan (Somalia)


Cape Verde  1–0  Mauritania
Report


Mali  2–1  Burkina Faso
Report
Attendance: 19,184[87]
Referee: Ibrahim Mutaz (Libya)

Morocco  0–2  South Africa
Report
Attendance: 19,078[88]
Referee: Mahmood Ismail (Sudan)

Quarter-finals

Nigeria  1–0  Angola
Report
Attendance: 18,757[89]
Referee: Issa Sy (Senegal)

DR Congo  3–1  Guinea
Report

Mali  1–2 (a.e.t.)  Ivory Coast
Report
Attendance: 39,836[91]
Referee: Mohamed Adel (Egypt)

Cape Verde  0–0 (a.e.t.)  South Africa
Report
Penalties
1–2
Attendance: 12,162[92]
Referee: Jean-Jacques Ndala Ngambo (DR Congo)

Semi-finals


Ivory Coast  1–0  DR Congo
Report
Attendance: 51,020[94]
Referee: Ibrahim Mutaz (Libya)

Third place play-off

Final

Nigeria  1–2  Ivory Coast
Report
Attendance: 57,094[96]
Referee: Dahane Beida (Mauritania)

Statistics

Goalscorers

There were 119 goals scored in 52 matches, for an average of 2.29 goals per match.

5 goals

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

1 own goal

Source: CAF

Discipline

A player was automatically suspended for the next match for the following offences:

  • Receiving a red card (red card suspensions could be extended for serious offences)
  • Receiving two yellow cards in two matches

The suspensions are canceled after group stage round
The following suspensions occurred during the tournament:

Player(s)/Official(s)Offence(s)Suspension(s)
Qualification suspensions
Mohamed Amoura[97] in 2023 Afcon qualification Group F vs Tanzania (matchday 2; 8 June 2022)
in 2023 Afcon qualification Group F vs Tanzania (matchday 6; 7 September 2023)
Group D vs Angola (matchday 1; 15 January 2024)
Group stage suspensions
François Kamano in Group C vs Cameroon (matchday 1; 15 January 2024)Group C vs Gambia (matchday 2; 19 January 2024)
Novatus Dismas   in Group F vs Morocco (matchday 1; 17 January 2024)Group F vs Zambia (matchday 2; 21 January 2024)
Abdou Diallo in Group C vs Gambia (matchday 1; 15 January 2024)
in Group C vs Cameroon (matchday 2; 19 January 2024)
Group C vs Guinea (matchday 3; 23 January 2024)
Ramy Bensebaini in Group D vs Angola (matchday 1; 15 January 2024)
in Group D vs Burkina Faso (matchday 2; 20 January 2024)
Group D vs Mauritania (matchday 3; 23 January 2024)
Núrio Fortuna in Group D vs Algeria (matchday 1; 15 January 2024)
in Group D vs Mauritania (matchday 2; 20 January 2024)
Group D vs Burkina Faso (matchday 3; 23 January 2024)
Mohamed Konaté in Group D vs Mauritania (matchday 1; 16 January 2024)
in Group D vs Algeria (matchday 2; 20 January 2024)
Group D vs Angola (matchday 3; 23 January 2024)
Blati Touré in Group D vs Mauritania (matchday 1; 16 January 2024)
in Group D vs Algeria (matchday 2; 20 January 2024)
Group D vs Angola (matchday 3; 23 January 2024)
Rodrick Kabwe   in Group F vs Tanzania (matchday 2; 21 January 2024)Group F vs Morocco (matchday 3; 24 January 2024)
Alexander Djiku in Group B vs Cape Verde (matchday 1; 14 January 2024)
in Group A vs Mozambique (matchday 3; 22 January 2024)
Suspension canceled after first round
Iddrisu Baba in Group B vs Cape Verde (matchday 1; 14 January 2024)
in Group A vs Mozambique (matchday 3; 22 January 2024)
Suspension canceled after first round
Knock-out stage suspensions
Lubeni Haukongo   in Round of 16 vs Angola (27 January 2024)Suspension to be served outside the tournament
Federico Bikoro in Group A vs Nigeria (matchday 1; 14 January 2024)
in Round of 16 vs Guinea (28 January 2024)
Suspension to be served outside the tournament
Mohamed Hamdy   in Round of 16 vs DR Congo (28 January 2024)Suspension to be served outside the tournament
Sofyan Amrabat in Round of 16 vs South Africa (30 January 2024)Suspension to be served outside the tournament
Odilon Kossounou   in Quarter-final vs Mali (3 February 2024)Semi-final vs DR Congo (7 February 2024)
Christian Kouamé in Round of 16 vs Senegal (29 January 2024)
in Quarter-final vs Mali (3 February 2024)
Semi-final vs DR Congo (7 February 2024)
Serge Aurier in Round of 16 vs Senegal (29 January 2024)
in Quarter-final vs Mali (3 February 2024)
Semi-final vs DR Congo (7 February 2024)
Oumar Diakité   in Quarter-final vs Mali (3 February 2024)Semi-final vs DR Congo (7 February 2024)
Hamari Traoré in Quarter-final vs Ivory Coast (3 February 2024)Suspension to be served outside the tournament
Ola Aina in Round of 16 vs Cameroon (27 January 2024)
in Final vs Ivory Coast (11 February 2024)
Suspension to be served outside the tournament

Awards

The following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:

Man of the Competition William Troost-Ekong[98]
Golden Boot Emilio Nsue (5 goals)[98]
Best Goalkeeper Ronwen Williams[98]
Best Young Player Simon Adingra
Fair Play team  South Africa[98]

Best XI

GoalkeeperDefendersMidfieldersForwardsCoach
Ronwen Williams Ola Aina
Ghislain Konan
William Troost-Ekong
Chancel Mbemba
Teboho Mokoena
Jean Michaël Seri
Franck Kessié
Yoane Wissa
Ademola Lookman
Emilio Nsue
Emerse Faé

Source:[99]

Final ranking

Matches that ended in extra time were counted as wins and defeats, while matches that ended in penalty shootout were counted as draws.[100]

Result of teams participating in 2023 Africa Cup of Nations
Pos.TeamGPldWDLPtsGFGAGD
1  Ivory CoastA741213880
2  NigeriaA74211484+4
3  South AfricaE72411073+4
4  DR CongoF7151865+1
Eliminated in the quarter-finals
5  Cape VerdeB53201183+5
6  AngolaD53111094+5
7  MaliE5221864+2
8  GuineaC5212746−2
Eliminated in the round of 16
9  SenegalC43101092+7
10  Equatorial GuineaA4211794+5
11  MoroccoF4211753+2
12  EgyptB40404770
13  Burkina FasoD4112446−2
14  CameroonC4112458−3
15  NamibiaE4112417−6
16  MauritaniaD4103335−2
Eliminated in the group stage
17  GhanaB3021256−1
18  AlgeriaD3021234−1
19  ZambiaF3021223−1
20  TunisiaE3021212−1
21  MozambiqueB3021247−3
22  TanzaniaF3021214−3
23  Guinea-BissauA3003027−5
24  GambiaC3003027−5

Broadcasting

BBC Radio and RFi acquired audio broadcasting rights to this edition of the tournament.[101][102]

Below is the list of the 2023 AFCON broadcasting rights holders:

TerritoryRights holder(s)Ref.
AlgeriaEPTV[103]
AndorraLaLiga+[104]
AngolaTPA[105]
AustraliabeIN Sports[106]
AustriaSportdigital[107]
BelgiumRTBF[108]
Bosnia and HerzegovinaSport Klub[109]
BrazilBand[110]
BulgariaMax Sport[111]
Burkina FasoRTB[112]
CameroonCRTV, Canal 2[113]
CanadabeIN Sports[114]
Cape VerdeRTC[115]
ChadTélé Tchad[113]
CroatiaSport Klub[109]
Democratic Republic of CongoRTNC[113]
DenmarkViaplay
EgyptOntime Sports
FinlandViaplay
FrancebeIN Sports
GabonGabon TV[113]
GambiaGRTS[113]
GermanySportdigital[107]
GhanaGBC[116]
GuineaRTG[113]
Guinea BissauTGB[113]
IcelandViaplay
IndiaFanCode[117]
IranPerisiana Sports, Poker TV
IrelandSky Sports Ireland[118]
ItalySportitalia[119]
Ivory CoastRTI, NCI[113]
IsraelSports Channel (Israel)[120]
KazakhstanMEGOGO[121]
KenyaKBC[113]
LiechtensteinSportdigital[107]
LuxembourgSportdigital[107]
MalawiMBC[122]
MaliORTM[113]
MENAbeIN Sports[123]
MontenegroSport Klub[109]
MoroccoSNRT[124]
MozambiqueTVM, TV Miramar[125][126]
NamibiaNBC[127]
NetherlandsZiggo Sport[128]
New ZealandbeIN Sports[106]
NigeriaNTA[129]
North MacedoniaSport Klub[109]
NorwayViaplay
PolandMEGOGO[130]
PortugalSport TV
RussiaOkko Sport[131]
San MarinoSportitalia[119]
SenegalRTS[113]
SerbiaSport Klub[109]
SloveniaSport Klub[132]
South AfricaSABC Sport[133]
SpainLaLiga+[104]
Sub-Saharan AfricaNew World TV, Canal+, StarTimes, SuperSport[134][135][136]
SwitzerlandSportdigital[107]
SwedenViaplay
TanzaniaTBC, Azam TV[137]
TogoTVT, New World TV [fr][134]
TurkeyTV8.5, S Sport, Exxen[138]
UgandaUBC, Sanyuka TV[139]
UkraineMEGOGO[140]
United KingdomBBC Three, Sky Sports[101][141]
United StatesbeIN Sports[114]
ZambiaZNBC, Diamond TV[113][142]
ZimbabweZBC[113]

See also

References

External links