Africa Cup of Nations refereeing gets a red card

DR Congo’s referee Jean-Jacques Ndala calls a penalty after a review during the Africa Cup of Nations final between Senegal and Morocco, in Rabat, Morocco, Sunday, Jan. 18, 2026. (AP Photo)
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Updated 19 January 2026
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Africa Cup of Nations refereeing gets a red card

  • Most striking image of this AFCON will remain the Senegal players leaving the pitch after Morocco were awarded a penalty at the very end of the second half
  • Criticism of the refereeing is particularly marked at AFCONs, but never before had the grievances taken on such proportions

PARIS: The Africa Cup of Nations unfolded in a climate of suspicion that referees were favoring host nation Morocco, which reached a climax as Sunday’s final tipped into chaos after several contentious decisions.
The most striking image of this AFCON will remain the Senegal players leaving the pitch after Morocco were awarded a penalty at the very end of the second half.
That came shortly after referee Jean-Jacques Ndala had disallowed a goal for Senegal.
The Senegalese reaction was a sign of the prevailing mistrust shown to match officials over the three weeks of the competition.
Criticism of the refereeing is particularly marked at AFCONs, but never before had the grievances taken on such proportions, to the point of spoiling the final in Rabat and tarnishing the image of a tournament whose organization had until then been widely praised.
“From the start it was unhealthy,” Morocco coach Walid Regragui said after the Moroccans lost 1-0 in extra time in front of their home fans, referring to the oppressive atmosphere that accompanied each of his team’s games.
Beyond the pressure exerted by Moroccan supporters during their team’s matches and the limited number of seats allocated to their opponents, the sources of tension between players and referees were legion.
Morocco’s 2-0 win against Cameroon in the quarter-finals sparked the anger of the Cameroonians, who blamed the referee for overlooking a penalty after a foul on forward Bryan Mbeumo.
“Many people want to believe, or make others believe, that we get advantages from the referees. We are the team to beat, so people will try to find every possible reason to say that Morocco is favored,” Regragui said.
Morocco’s semifinal win against Nigeria was also tinged with controversy.
“The referee was dreadful. He made really bad decisions and it’s truly painful to see referees like that in a big match,” said Nigeria midfielder Bright Osayi-Samuel.
Referee overwhelmed
Above all, the final and Congolese referee Jean-Jacques Ndala were in the international spotlight.
Ndala lacked the authority to manage the crisis, according to former French international referee Bruno Derrien.
Derrien told AFP that when Senegal had a goal disallowed for a foul on Paris Saint-Germain defender Achraf Hakimi minutes before the penalty incident, there was “contact, but it’s very light.”
“I think he blows the whistle too quickly. If he had let play continue without sanctioning that foul, the goal would probably have been checked by VAR and likely validated,” Derrien added.
When Senegal defender El Hadji Malick Diouf grabbed Brahim Diaz round the neck and pulled him over at a corner, Ndala eventually awarded a penalty.
Derrien said the penalty was questionable and followed a “micro-foul” at a time when the tension in the tightly-poised match was “enormous.”
Ndala was surrounded by players and staff from both teams and the hostile atmosphere was punctuated by the whistles of Moroccan spectators as he headed to consult the VAR screen.
His decision sparked the fury of the Senegal players, some of whom left the pitch in protest, delaying play for around 20 minutes.
The Congolese referee was also arguably too passive during this farcical episode because football’s rules stipulate that a player must be shown a yellow card “if he delays the restart of play” or if he deliberately leaves the field of play without the referee’s permission.
If applied, that could have led to the dismissal of several Senegalese players who were already on a yellow card.
FIFA president Gianni Infantino on Monday condemned “the behavior of some ‘supporters’ as well as some Senegalese players and technical staff members,” and called on the Confederation of African Football (CAF) to take “appropriate measures.”


Lando Norris says F1 cars gone from best to ‘probably the worst’

Updated 11 sec ago
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Lando Norris says F1 cars gone from best to ‘probably the worst’

  • Norris’ title defense comes amid sweeping changes to the cars
  • The 26-year-old British driver has endured a tough weekend at Albert Park so far

MELBOURNE: Formula 1 champion Lando Norris is struggling with his new era McLaren car and frustrated to line up only sixth in Sunday’s season-opening Australian Grand Prix.
Norris’ title defense comes amid sweeping changes to the cars, and the 26-year-old British driver has endured a tough weekend at Albert Park so far.
F1’s new cars are complex, with unprecedented changes across the chassis and power unit, which now feature an almost 50:50 output split between the turbo 1.6-liter V6 engine and electrical energy harvested from the brakes — one that requires a new, often counterintuitive driving style.
“We’ve come from the best cars ever made in Formula 1, and the nicest to drive, to probably the worst,” he said after Saturday’s qualifying.
He’s not just coming to grips with his car’s complex energy management systems, but also in getting out on track — with the Briton losing significant time in Friday’s two practice sessions.
“Just getting into the rhythm of lifting everywhere to go quicker and using gears you don’t want to use and just understanding that when you lift more, you brake later but you have to brake less,” Norris said.
“That’s why laps are more valuable than ever. In the past, miss P1, not too bothered. Now, you miss five laps, not only do you as a driver have to figure things out quicker, the engine doesn’t learn what it needs to learn and then you’re just on the back foot.”