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Zimbabwe Warriors appeal for fair play
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By Nigel Matongorere and Enock Muchinjo
HARARE – A cloud of suspicion continues to hover over
tomorrow’s African Nations Cup qualifier between Liberia and
Mali, which has a bearing on Zimbabwe’s quest to qualify for
next year’s finals in Equatorial Guinea and Gabon. The
Liberia media this week exposed a plot by some corrupt
elements in the Mali camp to bribe the Liberian team to
affect the outcome of their match.
Zimbabwe national team warriors
Mali will qualify from Group A if they beat Liberia,
regardless of Zimbabwe’s result against Cape Verde in Praia
on the same day. This week, Zifa wrote to Fifa president
Sepp Blatter and the Confederation of African Football (Caf)
alerting the world governing body of the match-fixing
suspicions.
“We are going to play under protest because that result
(between Liberia and Mali) is as good as known. Our team is
asking for fairness,” Zifa chief executive Jonathan
Mashingaidze told the Daily News yesterday.
“What is even more worrying is that one of Wilson Raj
Perumal’s runners is a Malian,” said Mashingaidze in
reference to Mali-born Gaye Alassane, who has been accused
of fixing games in Central America in cahoots with the
jailed Perumal.
Alassane, who was featured in our sister paper the Daily
News on Sunday this week, works for a company called
Executive Sports, which was formed by his jailed friend Raj
Perumal. Last year, Alassane was seen in the company of
Zimbabwean players and officials before the Warriors’
pre-World Cup friendly match with Japan in George, South
Africa, which is believed to have been fixed.
Mashingaidze yesterday said Zimbabwe’s head of delegation in
Cape Verde, Elliot Kasu, will also formally make a complaint
to the match commissioner before the match. Match
commissioners represent Fifa. Zimbabwe, Mashingaidze said,
will also dispatch a representative to Monrovia to monitor
the Liberia-Mali match and report back to Zifa and Fifa.
In a move that raises further eyebrows, the Liberians wrote
to Caf last week requesting their match to be brought
forward to today because Mali was observing Ramadan. Liberia
is a Christian country. Meanwhile, a win against Cape Verde
tomorrow in Praia might not be good enough for Zimbabwe to
secure qualification.
This is the sad reality the entire nation has to live with
going into tomorrow’s crucial qualifier against the Indian
Ocean islanders. With only one team getting automatic
qualification from Group A, Zimbabwe will need results
elsewhere to go their way if they are to be part of the
proceedings in Gabon and Equatorial Guinea next year.
Mali currently lead the group with nine points and travel to
Monrovia to face bottom team Liberia, who are already out of
contention for qualification. If Mali win in Monrovia, they
will win the group with an unassailable 12 points. Zimbabwe,
who are on eight points, can only finish with a maximum of
11 points.
There is also no guarantee that Cape Verde will be an easy
opponent for the Warriors tomorrow owing to their excellent
home record during these qualifiers. The Blue Sharks have
won their two matches at home in the campaign. Two teams
will seal their passage by being the best runners-up in the
qualification stage and a win for Zimbabwe over Cape Verde
on Saturday, coupled by a few likely results going their way
elsewhere, they could be one of those two sides.
Meanwhile, the Zimbabwe National Soccer Supporters
Association (ZNSSA) was still running around yesterday to
send their members for the Warriors’ 2012 Afcon qualifier
away to Cape Verde tomorrow. The supporters body is looking
for $310 000 to charter a plane that will carry at least 200
people, said ZNSSA vice-president Paddington Japajapa.
If everything goes according to plan, the ZNSS leadership is
hoping to take 200 fans to Praia. Daily News
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