2006 African Women's Championship Explained

Tourney Name:African Women's Championship
Year:2006
Dates:28 October – 11 November
Country:Nigeria
Num Teams:8
Venues:4
Cities:4
Count:7
Matches:16
Goals:54
Player: Portia Modise
Prevseason:2004
Nextseason:2008

The 2006 African Women's Championship was the 7th edition of the biennial African women's association football tournament organized by the Confederation of African Football. Originally scheduled to be held in Gabon in September, it took place in Nigeria for the 4th time from 28 October to 11 November 2006.

Gabon withdrew as hosts due to "organizational reasons",[1] thus CAF gave this tournament edition's hosting rights to Nigeria in May 2006.[2] Initially, this edition of the tournament was scheduled for September 2006, but it was moved to October due to weather considerations.[3]

This edition of the tournament also doubled as the African qualification for the 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup. Nigeria won its 7th consecutive title, beating Ghana 1–0 in the final, although both finalists were guaranteed qualification to that edition of the international tournament in China. South Africa's Portia Modise was named player of the championship.[4]

Qualification

See main article: 2006 African Women's Championship qualification.

The original hosts (Gabon) qualified automatically, while the remaining seven spots were determined by the qualification rounds which took place from March to August 2006.

Nigeria initially entered qualification at the second round and was scheduled to play Equatorial Guinea when CAF elected them as replacement hosts, thus that match was scrapped and both teams qualified for the group stage at Gabon's expense.

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; if scores still level, extra time would be skipped and the use of a penalty shoot-out would determine the qualifier. The seven winners of the qualification round qualified for the group stage.

Qualified teams

Equatorial Guinea made their tournament debut at this edition.

TeamQualified asQualified ondata-sort-type="number"Previous tournament appearances
Replacement hosts 17 May 2006 6 (1991, 1995, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004)
By default 17 May 2006 Debut
4 August 2006 5 (1995, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004)
5 August 2006 1 (2004)
5 August 2006 6 (1991, 1995, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004)
5 August 2006 5 (1991, 1998, 2000, 2002)
5 August 2006 1 (1998)
6 August 2006 2 (2002, 2004)

Group stage

The top two teams of each group advance to the semi-finals.

Group A

Equatorial Guinea arrived at Murtala Muhammed International Airport in a private chartered plane which had no clearance to land, with its players unable to disembark for 3 hours. This left them no other choice than to return home unhappy with the treatment they received by airport officials despite organizers trying to remedy the situation.[5] However, their first match was played as scheduled.

width=175 Teamwidth=20 abbr="Points" Ptswidth=20 abbr="Played" Pldwidth=20 abbr="Won" Wwidth=20 abbr="Drawn" Dwidth=20 abbr="Lost" Lwidth=20 abbr="Goals for" GFwidth=20 abbr="Goals against" GA
93300122
6320162
1301259
13012313

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Group B

width=175 Teamwidth=20 abbr="Points" Ptswidth=20 abbr="Played" Pldwidth=20 abbr="Won" Wwidth=20 abbr="Drawn" Dwidth=20 abbr="Lost" Lwidth=20 abbr="Goals for" GFwidth=20 abbr="Goals against" GA
9330062
4311143
3310235
1301247
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Semi-finals

Winners qualified for the 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup in China.

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Final

This match was described by the BBC as "a drab encounter".

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 17 April 2006. Gabon pulls out of hosting AWC. BBC Sport. 29 May 2006.
  2. News: Boadu-Ayeboafoh. Yaw. 17 May 2006. Nigeria awarded 2006 AWC. Daily Graphic. Graphic Communications Group. 26 November 2017. Google Books.
  3. Web site: Okeleji. Oluwashina. 31 July 2006. CAF delays Women's Championship. BBC Sport. 26 November 2017.
  4. News: Portia simply the Ellis. limited. The Sowetan. 26 November 2017.
  5. Web site: 27 October 2006. E/Guinea Flies into Trouble, Return to Malabo. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20070930163647/http://www.thisdayonline.com/nview.php?id=61612. limited. 30 September 2007. This Day. 29 October 2006.