South African Mokwena to coach Algerian champions Mouloudia

South African Rulani Mokwena was named coach of Algerian champions Mouloudia Alger on Monday, ending weeks of speculation as to where the 38-year-old would work in the 2025/26 season. (X/@MickyJnr__)
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Updated 15 July 2025
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South African Mokwena to coach Algerian champions Mouloudia

  • His move to Algiers follows one season with Moroccan outfit Wydad Casablanca
  • Mokwena will come up against two other former South African Premiership coaches in the Algerian championship

JOHANNESBURG: South African Rulani Mokwena was named coach of Algerian champions Mouloudia Alger on Monday, ending weeks of speculation as to where the 38-year-old would work in the 2025/26 season.

His move to Algiers follows one season with Moroccan outfit Wydad Casablanca. He left after finishing third in the national league and failing to qualify for the CAF Champions League.

Here, AFP Sport also reports on a setback for Sudanese giants Al Hilal as they chase a place in the forthcoming Champions League in the latest football news across Africa.

Mokwena will come up against two other former South African Premiership coaches in the Algerian championship.

German Josef Zinnbauer, the former Orlando Pirates tactician, guided JS Kabylie to second place behind Mouloudia last season and qualification for the Champions League.

Another German, Sead Ramovic, led Chabab Belouizdad to third place and entry to the second-tier CAF Confederation Cup. His previous clubs include TS Galaxy in South Africa.

Young Orlando Pirates forward Mohau Nkota is joining Saudi Pro League club Ettifaq, the Soweto club announced.

Last season was his first with the Buccaneers first team and he scored 12 goals in 39 appearances, including three in Champions League victories over Belouizdad and Mouloudia in Algeria.

The 20-year-old will join fellow African Wissam Chaouali, a Tunisian defender, at a club that finished seventh in the Pro League last season, 33 points behind champions Al Ittihad.

Al Hilal, who have featured in every Champions League since 2004, suffered a setback in their bid to qualify for the 2025/26 edition of the premier African club competition.
The Sudan Elite League pacesetters lost 1-0 to Al Amal Atbara in the fourth round of a mini-league and remain top of the table only on goal difference from Al Zamaleh Umm Ruwaba.

Only two points separate seven of the eight contenders and 16 matches have produced just 18 goals as clubs chase top-four finishes and places in the Champions League and Confederation Cup.

Angolan champions Petro Luanda have hired 48-year-old Spanish coach Franc Artiga as they prepare for their Champions League campaign.

Former Angola forward Flavio Amado had been in charge of the record 19-time national champions, but lacks the necessary coaching qualifications for Confederation of African Football competitions.

Petro have twice reached the Champions League semifinals, losing to Mamelodi Sundowns of South Africa in 2001 and Wydad Casablanca three years ago.

Namibia, one of many African countries lacking a FIFA-approved stadium, will play their remaining 2026 World Cup home qualifiers against Malawi and Sao Tome e Principe in neighboring Botswana.

The matches in September are earmarked for Francistown, 440 kilometers (274 miles) northeast of the capital Gaborone. They previously hosted qualifiers in Soweto near Johannesburg.

Namibia are unbeaten in Group H after three victories and three draws and lie second, four points behind six-time World Cup qualifiers Tunisia.


Arab Cup 2025 attendance surpasses recent AFCON and AFC Asian Cup

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Arab Cup 2025 attendance surpasses recent AFCON and AFC Asian Cup

  • The tournament, held under FIFA jurisdiction for the second time, achieved a record average attendance of 38,644 fans per match
  • Total attendance more than doubled since 2021, with Algeria vs. UAE quarter-final pushing it past one million spectators

RIYADH: For a tournament often dismissed by critics as little more than a friendly or “B-team” competition, the 2025 Arab Cup delivered a compelling response.

A total of 1,236,600 people attended the 32 matches across the tournament, an average of 38,644 spectators per game, as the Arab Cup returned to Qatar for a second consecutive time after its successful staging in 2021. That earlier tournament, initially launched as a Confederations Cup-like test event ahead of the World Cup, drew 571,605 spectators in total.

Despite those figures, the Arab Cup has faced persistent criticism. Questions have been raised around the quality of play and refereeing standards, with some supporters – both within and beyond the Arab world – branding the tournament “meaningless.”

Yet when placed alongside recent continental competitions, the attendance figures tell a different story.

The 2023 African Cup of Nations in Ivory Coast attracted 1,109,593 fans across 52 matches, an average of 21,338 per game. Meanwhile, the 2023 AFC Asian Cup, also hosted in Qatar, recorded 1,507,790 spectators over 51 matches — roughly 29,565 per game, the highest average in the competition’s history.

Direct comparisons, however, require context. Continental — as opposed to regional — competitions draw support from across vast geographies, while the Arab Cup benefits from strong expatriate communities based in the host nation. Expecting the same travel patterns from fans in East Asia or West Asia would be, to say the least, unrealistic.

Even so, the attendance of more than 38,000 fans per game is significant. The Arab Cup was not always popular, with the attendance in 2021 struggling to rise above an average of 17,000 per game. Only four games at the 2025 edition fell below the 20,000 mark.

Historical context further underlines this shift. The 2011 AFC Asian Cup in Qatar, along with multiple editions of the West Asian Football Federation Championship held across the region, struggled to surpass a figure of 13,000 fans per game.

While Morocco will bask in the glory of the 2025 Arab Cup, the tournament itself has shown a broader shift in football engagement across the Arab World — one no longer driven solely by interest in European leagues, but by growing confidence in domestic teams, national projects and regional competitions.

From Saudi Arabia’s ambitions in club football to Morocco’s recent international success and Qatar’s continued role as a host, momentum continues to build across the Middle East and North Africa, with the Arab Cup one of the latest competitions offering tangible evidence of that change.