Goalkeeper Boubacar Barry scored the decisive goal as Ivory Coast
ended a 23-year Africa Cup of Nations title drought by winning 9-8
on
penalties after the final ended 0-0 following extra time.
History
repeated itself as the only other Ivorian title came in 1992 when they
edged the Ghanaians, also on penalties after a goalless draw.
It was a highly tactical and cagey climax to the biennial African football showpiece in Equatorial Guinea city Bata.
Billed
as a ‘dream’ final between the west African neighbours, it became the
fourth decider in the last eight to finish goalless and be settled by
spot-kicks.
Ivory Coast and Ghana made one change each from the
teams that started in convincing semi-final victories over the
Democratic Republic of Congo and Equatorial Guinea respectively.
Ghana captain and star striker Asamoah Gyan passed a late fitness
test on his injured hip and returned in place of semi-final scorer
Jordan Ayew, a son of Black Stars legend Abedi ‘Pele’ Ayew.
Ivory
Coast switched goalkeepers with fit-again veteran Boubacar Barry
recalled and Sylvain Gbohouo dropping to the bench after five
consecutive appearances.
Equatorial Guinea president Teodoro
Obiang, FIFA president Sepp Blatter and CAF president Issa Hayatou were
introduced to the teams before the national anthems.
The
pre-kickoff mood was extremely jovial with rival players warmly greeting
each other as they went through the traditional shaking of hands.
Quicksilver
Ivory Coast winger Gervinho appeared particularly relaxed and
threatened twice in the early stages as Ivory Coast were quicker out of
the blocks.
However, Ghana comfortably dealt with both threats and
when African Footballer of the Year Yaya Toure had a free-kick
opportunity outside the box on 14 minutes, he shot tamely at Razak
Braimah.
Almost immediately, Ivorian midfield enforcer Serey Die
was deservedly yellow-carded by the Gambian referee for a studs-up foul
on Mubarak Wakaso.
Sloppy Ghanaian passing close to their
goalmouth offered Gervinho a chance to present Max-Alain Gradel with a
sight of goal, but his powerful shot finished well off target.
After
soaking up the early pressure, Ghana adopted a more adventurous
approach and came tantalisingly close to taking the lead on 25 minutes
through Christian Atsu.
The pacey winger won possession just
outside the box and his swerving shot eluded the diving Barry only to
rebound to safety off the post.
Ivory Coast were rescued by the
woodwork again nine minutes before half-time when Andre Ayew — an elder
brother of Jordan — hit the other post from an acute angle.
The
opening half finished goalless with Ghana enjoying 55 percent possession
and feeling positive having come closer to scoring than Ivory Coast.
An
early second-half run by Atsu offered Gyan a half-chance, but the
talismanic figure did not come close to troubling Barry with a
disappointing off-target effort.
Another Ivorian was yellow carded
before the hour with Siaka Tiene joining fellow midfielder Die in the
book for pulling back Atsu.
As the game reached the three-quarter
mark, Ivory Coast made the first change with recent Roma signing Seydou
Doumbia coming off the bench to replace the ineffective Gradel.
While
there were moments of anxiety for both defences, clearcut chances
remained elusive and the game predictably drifted into extra-time.
Ghana
finally made a substitution on 99 minutes with Jordan Ayew, whose
penalty goal set up the semi-final romp over Equatorial Guinea, taking
the place of Kwesi Appiah.
The pattern of half-chances continued
in extra-time, but despite the presence of star African strikers like
Gyan and Ivorian Wilfried Bony, the scoreboard operator remained
unemployed until the shootout.
Source:PM News

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