The 33rd Africa Cup of Nations kicks off in Cameroon on Sunday 9 January after being delayed a year by the coronavirus pandemic.
BBC Sport Africa runs the rule over Group B, which includes 2019 runners-up Senegal, Zimbabwe, Guinea and Malawi.
FixturesMonday, 10 January: Senegal v Zimbabwe, Guinea v Malawi
Friday, 14 January: Senegal v Guinea, Malawi v Zimbabwe
Tuesday, 18 January: Malawi v Senegal, Zimbabwe v Guinea
Senegal Appearance: 16th Best finish: Runners-up (2002 and 2019) Coach: Aliou Cisse Captain: Kalidou Koulibaly Fifa ranking: 20 Nickname: Lions of TerangaBabacar Diarra (BBC Sport Africa, Dakar): Remaining the top African side in Fifa’s world rankings for 36 months is a record and a proof of consistency.
Still, any other outcome than becoming champions would be considered a failure for Senegal, beaten finalists in 2019. The federation openly reminded head coach Aliou Cisse of this target while his contract was renewed until the 2022 World Cup.
Since the tournament in Egypt, the backbone of the team has not changed a lot with Edouard Mendy as goalkeeper, captain Kalidou Koulibaly as defensive leader, Idrissa Gana Gueye in the midfield and Sadio Mane the main offensive threat.
- Chamisa under fire over US$120K donation
- Mavhunga puts DeMbare into Chibuku quarterfinals
- Pension funds bet on Cabora Bassa oilfields
- Councils defy govt fire tender directive
Keep Reading
The depth of the squad could be an issue as Monaco winger Krepin Diatta’s season is already over after his knee surgery while the other main rising star, Watford’s Ismaila Sarr, is also recovering from a knee injury and might miss the start of the tournament.
Twenty years after their first appearance in the final, Senegal hope to finally bring a trophy home.
Zimbabwe Appearance: 5th Best finish: Group stage (2004, 2006, 2017, 2019) Coach: Norman Mapeza Captain: Knowledge Musona Fifa ranking: 121 Nickname: The WarriorsSteve Vickers (Sports journalist, Harare): Zimbabwe go into their fifth Nations Cup with issues at boardroom level which risk a ban from international football. The board of the country’s football association (Zifa) was recently suspended and even claimed the appointment of Norman Mapeza as coach was not valid.
The Warriors have been hit by injuries to key players including midfielder Marvelous Nakamba (Aston Villa), Brendan Galloway (Plymouth) and Marshall Munetsi (Reims), while the influential Khama Billiat announced his retirement from international football in November.
This leaves captain Knowledge Musona, playing in Saudi Arabia, and Lyon forward Tino Kadewere as the biggest names in the squad.
Zimbabwe have just one win from their past 18 matches in all competitions – the away victory in Botswana which saw them qualify.
Their last win at the Nations Cup finals was a 2-1 victory over Ghana in 2006, while the 2017 and 2019 campaigns saw them securing one point both times. Given the build-up, it looks like being another difficult finals.
GuineaCellou Tata (Conakry-based sports journalist): Unease is deep in Guinea, after World Cup qualifying was far from a smooth river. Coach Didier Six was dismissed after three games and his deputy, the former international Kaba Diawara, took over the post.
Yet to win a single match, the work that awaits him is enormous. We are not far from the atmosphere of the last Nations Cup, which saw the Syli National ingloriously eliminated in the last 16 by eventual champions Algeria.
Midfielders Amadou Diawara (Roma), Mady Camara (Olympiakos) and Naby Keita (Liverpool) do not gel and what was supposed to be an asset has become a weakness.
The challenge for Kaba Diawara will be to have the courage to put some “executives” aside for the sake of the team – as he showed by omitting Camara from his squad.
After Fifa appointed a normalisation committee for the Guinean Football Federation, the first objective will be figuring out how to avoid the fiasco of 2019.
MalawiFrank Kandu (Football writer in Malawi): Malawi will be making just their third appearance at the continent’s biggest football festival. On previous appearances in 1984 and 2010, they failed to get past the group stage.
Meck Mwase was rewarded with a two-year contract extension for becoming only the third coach to lead the country to the finals, but since qualifying the side has struggled.
The Flames won just one of six group matches in the 2022 World Cup qualifiers – results which forced swift changes by the Football Association of Malawi. Mario Marinica was named head of Malawi’s technical panel with Mwase demoted to assistant coach.
Marinica believes Malawi can beat the likes of Zimbabwe and Guinea but he has a big task making his team ready for the big stage.
“High expectations lead to bitter disappointment. We do not want that to happen. So we will try to improve on our shortcomings so that we have a good performance at Afcon,” the Romanian has said. -BBC