Harman Patil (Editor)

Amílcar Cabral Cup

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Founded
  
1979

Region
  
West Africa (Zone 2)

Last champions
  
Mali

Abolished
  
2007

Number of teams
  
8

Amílcar Cabral Cup

The Amílcar Cabral Cup was an international association football tournament for Western African nations. The competition originally was played on an annual basis until 1989, since when it has been played on a biennial basis.

Contents

The tournament is named after Amílcar Cabral. There has been no edition since 2007. Mauritania was to host in 2009, then rescheduled the tournament to 2010 and later cancelled it altogether.

History

In 1970 a predecessor tournament was started. The Tournoi de la zone 2 was held five times until 1977 with Mali winning three and Guinea winning two titles.

Participant Nations

The following eight teams have regularly participated in the tournament. The teams are all in Confederation of African Football's (CAF) Zone 2, i.e. Western Africa. In some years, when a team withdrew a guest team was invited, like Benin in 2001.

  •  Cape Verde
  •  Gambia
  •  Guinea
  •  Guinea-Bissau
  •  Mali
  •  Mauritania
  •  Senegal
  •  Sierra Leone
  • Results

    Note: There are contradictory reports of this match. According to the RSSSF page for the 1988 tournament, the match ended in 0–0 and Guinea won 4–2 on penalties. On a list of international matches of 1988, the match ended in 0–0 and Guinea won 3–2 on penalties. According to a head-to-head search between Guinea and Mali on FIFA website, Guinea won 3–2 in regular time.

    References

    Amílcar Cabral Cup Wikipedia