2002 African Women's Championship Explained

Tourney Name:African Women's Championship
Year:2002
Dates:7 – 20 December
Country:Nigeria
Num Teams:8
Confederations:1
Venues:2
Cities:2
Count:5
Matches:16
Goals:46
Prevseason:2000
Nextseason:2004

The 2002 African Women's Championship was the 5th edition of the biennial African women's association football tournament organized by the Confederation of African Football. It took place in Nigeria between 7 and 20 December 2002.

This edition of the tournament also doubled as the African qualification for the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup. Nigeria beat Ghana 2–0 in the final to with their 5th title, although both were guaranteed qualification to that international tournament edition held in the United States.

Host selection

On 24 January 2001, the Botswana Football Association announced the submission of a hosting bid, but it was neither considered nor came to fruition by CAF.[1]

CAF approached Nigeria at the 2002 African Cup of Nations in Mali for that tournament edition's hosting rights and got it on 19 March that year. Nigeria previously had the honor of hosting the tournament when it began full-scale in 1998.[2]

Qualification

See main article: 2002 African Women's Championship qualification. Nigeria qualified automatically as both hosts and defending champions,[3] while the remaining seven spots were determined by the qualifying rounds, which took place from August to October 2002.

Format

Qualification ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the aggregate score was tied after the second leg, the away goals rule would be applied, and if still level, the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (no extra time would be played).

The seven winners of the final round qualified for the final tournament.

Qualified teams

Ethiopia and Mali made their first appearances in the tournament.

TeamQualified asQualified ondata-sort-type="number"Previous tournament appearances
Hosts and defending champions 19 March 2002 4 (1991, 1995, 1998, 2000)
11 October 2002 1 (1995)
11 October 2002 Debut
12 October 2002 3 (1995, 1998, 2000)
12 October 2002 3 (1991, 1998, 2000)
12 October 2002 4 (1991, 1995, 1998, 2000)
13 October 2002 Debut
13 October 2002 1 (2000)

Officials

The following referees were named for the tournament:

Format

The eight teams were divided into two groups of four teams, where the top two teams in each group advanced to the semi-finals. The finalists of this edition of the tournament qualified for the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup in the United States.

The teams were ranked according to the three points for a win standard.

Results

Group stage

Group A

width=25 width=175 Teamwidth=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=100 Qualification
1330060+69Knockout stage
2320182+66
3301239−61
4301228−61

----

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Group B

width=25 width=175 Teamwidth=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=100 Qualification
1321063+37Knockout stage
231112204
3302123−12
4302124−22

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Knockout stage

In the knockout stage, if a match is level at the end of normal playing time, extra time is played (two periods of 15 minutes each) and followed, if necessary, by kicks from the penalty mark to determine the winner, except for the third place match where no extra time is played.

Semi-finals

Winners qualified for the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup.----

Final

The match was held up for about 5 minutes after fans pelted a lineswoman with sachets of water after Alberta Sackey had not been given offside (but missed the chance anyway).

Statistics

Team statistics

width=25 width=165 Teamwidth=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25
15401152+1312
2540194+512
3521275+27
45212611–57
Eliminated in the group stage
5302123–12
6302124–22
7301239–61
8301228–61

Goalscorers

4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
Unknown goalscorers

3 additional goals

Qualified teams for the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup

The teams below qualified to represent Africa at the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup in the United States.

TeamQualified ondata-sort-type="number"Previous tournament appearances
17 December 2002 1 (1999)
18 December 2002 3 (1991, 1995, 1999)

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: 24 January 2001. Botswana Bids to Host 2002 Africa Women's Soccer. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20010208163404/https://allafrica.com/stories/200101240346.html. 8 February 2001. Panafrican News Agency. allAfrica. 20 November 2017. limited. Gaborone, Botswana.
  2. Web site: 19 March 2002. Nigeria rescue women's CAN. BBC Sport. 18 November 2017.
  3. News: Nigeria rescue women's CAN. BBC Sport. 2017-11-18.