Confederation of African Football president Patrice Motsepe has publicly acknowledged a procedural error in the handling of the decision to strip Senegal of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations title, an admission that has added fresh scrutiny to one of the most contested rulings in African football history, even as the CAF chief continues to defend the overall outcome.
In a video statement released on Wednesday, Motsepe expressed his extreme disappointment with the events at the final, saying the incidents undermined years of work to build integrity, respect, and credibility in African football. He admitted that CAF made an error in the composition of the Appeals Board that led to the decision to strip Senegal of the title, while simultaneously defending that board’s ruling as legitimate and independent.
Motsepe reiterated that CAF will accept whatever decision the Court of Arbitration for Sport delivers, stressing the need to respect the independence of judicial bodies.
What happened at the final
The controversy stems from a chaotic sequence during the AFCON 2025 final in Rabat on January 18. With the match still goalless deep in regulation time, Senegal players walked off the pitch in protest after the referee awarded Morocco a penalty. The stoppage lasted approximately 15 to 20 minutes. When play resumed, Morocco’s Brahim Diaz missed the penalty. Senegal returned to the field and went on to win 1-0 in extra time through Pape Gueye’s decisive strike.
CAF’s Disciplinary Board initially sanctioned both federations with fines and suspensions but upheld the result. Morocco appealed, and the CAF Appeals Board reversed the Disciplinary Board’s position, ruling that Senegal had breached tournament regulations — specifically Article 84, which states that any team refusing to play shall be eliminated from the competition. Senegal’s 1-0 victory was overturned and replaced with a 3-0 default victory for Morocco.
The impartiality controversy
A key concern surrounding the Appeals Board ruling is the presence of the Tunisian Football Federation president on the panel, which has raised serious questions about impartiality, given Tunisia’s complicated relationship with Senegal in African football politics. Senegal’s legal team has said it is investigating whether members of the Appeals Board may have been compromised, and has reserved the right to pursue separate legal action if evidence is found.
Senegal’s defiance
Senegal has refused to accept the ruling in both word and symbol. The Senegalese Football Federation paraded the AFCON trophy at the Stade de France in Paris ahead of a friendly against Peru on Saturday, and the national team wore shirts carrying two stars — one for the 2021 AFCON title and one for the disputed 2025 triumph — in a deliberate act of symbolic defiance.
FSF president Abdoulaye Fall described the ruling as “the most blatant administrative scam in the history of our sport,” while Senegal’s legal team warned that if CAS allows such a ruling to stand, future tournament titles could effectively be decided in law firms rather than on the pitch. “After what Morocco has managed to get the CAF to do, whether through surprise or malice, if the CAS allows it to go ahead, the next World Cup will be played out in law firms in Paris or the United States,” lawyer Seydou Diagne said.
The Senegalese FA’s general secretary, Abdoulaye Sow, confirmed that the federation has no intention of returning the physical trophy, expressing full confidence in their CAS appeal.
The CAS appeal
Senegal formally lodged their CAS appeal on Wednesday. The case has been registered, but no procedural timeline has been set, as Senegal requested additional time to submit its appeal brief — noting that CAF has not yet provided detailed written reasons for the Appeals Board decision, which Senegal’s lawyers argue is itself a procedural breach of CAF’s own disciplinary code.
Senegal’s legal team, which includes lawyers from Switzerland, Spain, France, and Senegal, will push for an expedited CAS hearing. Lawyer Serge Vittoz said that while CAS cases typically span nine to twelve months, Senegal hopes to secure a verdict within two months if all parties agree to the expedited procedure.
Motsepe said he will visit both Senegal and Morocco to stress the importance of working together to grow African football, and that CAF is implementing changes to its statutes and regulations to strengthen trust and confidence in referees, VAR operators, and judicial bodies going forward.
The Super Eagles finished third at AFCON 2025 in Morocco under coach Eric Chelle, meaning Nigeria were present for the final and its chaotic aftermath. The resolution of this dispute will shape the governance context of African football going into the next AFCON cycle, which Nigeria is expected to participate in as it looks to rebuild after missing out on the 2026 World Cup.