Mmegi

The family meeting gets serious

Ramy Rabia of Egypt celebrates goal with teammates during the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations AFCON Quarterfinal match between Egypt and Cote Ivoire at the Adrar Stadium, Agadir on the 10 January 2026 ©Nabil Ramdani/BackpagePix
Ramy Rabia of Egypt celebrates goal with teammates during the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations AFCON Quarterfinal match between Egypt and Cote Ivoire at the Adrar Stadium, Agadir on the 10 January 2026 ©Nabil Ramdani/BackpagePix

The chairs are fewer now, the voices louder, the stakes unmistakable. The 2025 Africa Cup of Nations has always been The Family Meeting — a sprawling African gathering where everyone arrives with history, hope and hunger.

Some cousins left early, some overstayed the conversation, but now only four remain at the table. On Wednesday night, the family leans in, because it’s time to decide who gets to take the trophy home. First up in Tangier at 19:00 CAT, Senegal and Egypt renew acquaintances that never truly fade. This is not just a semifinal; it’s unfinished business served hot. Senegal edged past 10-man Mali 1-0 in the quarterfinals, Iliman Ndiaye striking early before the Teranga Lions did what they do best — manage, muscle and mature into control. Calm, compact, ruthless when required. This Senegal side knows how to survive a long meeting. Across the table sits Egypt, the most decorated voice in the room, chasing a record-extending eighth title and still talking with the authority of experience. Their 3-2 quarterfinal win over reigning champions Ivory Coast was classic Pharaohs drama — chaos, composure and clutch moments. Omar Marmoush, Rami Rabia and Mohamed Salah all signed the register, with Salah, as ever, carrying the weight of expectation like family inheritance. This is also revenge on the agenda: Senegal beat Egypt on penalties in the 2021 final. Same families.

Same tension. Different night. Then, at 22:00 CAT in Rabat, the hosts take centre stage. Morocco haven’t just invited everyone over — they’ve cleaned the house, set the music and reminded Africa why home advantage matters. A 2-0 win over Cameroon in the quarterfinals, courtesy of Brahim Diaz and Ismael Saibari, sent Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium into celebration mode. Diaz has now scored in all five of Morocco’s matches, a man turning consistency into culture. This is their first AFCON semifinal since 2004, when they finished runners-up, and the Atlas Lions are chasing a second continental crown — and a first since 1976. Almost 50 years later, the elders are watching closely. Nigeria, though, arrive like the cousin who brings the noise and the numbers. The Super Eagles have been the tournament’s most exhilarating attacking force, swatting aside Algeria 2-0 in the quarterfinals through Victor Osimhen and Akor Adams. This is their 17th AFCON semifinal — a regular at The Family Meeting, never shy, never silent, always dangerous. They press, they punch, they play without fear, and they believe this is their time to lead the conversation. By Wednesday night, two seats will be pulled back.

The winners head to the final in Rabat on Sunday, 18 January. The others will contest third place in Casablanca the day before, still part of the story, but no longer in charge of the ending. AFCON 2025 is down to its core. Four nations. One table. One trophy. And on SuperSport, across DStv, The Family Meeting reaches its loudest, proudest moment. AFCON Semifinal broadcast details Wednesday 14 January • 19:00: Semifinal 1: Senegal v Egypt – LIVE on SuperSport PSL and SuperSport AFCON • 22:00: Semifinal 2: Morocco v Nigeria – LIVE on SuperSport PSL and SuperSport AFCON


Editor's Comment
Ramogapi & Co should clear the Bonno confusion

According to a report elsewhere in this publication, various district councils announced that a one-bedroom home now costs over P130,000 more, a near-unthinkable 32% increase. This isn't just a minor adjustment, but a devastating blow to the dream of affordable home ownership for ordinary citizens.What is most alarming is not just the scale of the increase, but the profound confusion it has exposed. Minister Ramogapi has publicly...

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