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Tunisia national football team
Africa Cup of Nations | Third Place Playoff
Jul 17, 2019 at 8pm UK
 
Nigeria national football team

0-1

FT(HT: 0-1)
Ighalo (3')

Preview: Tunisia vs. Nigeria - prediction, team news, lineups

Sports Mole previews Wednesday's Africa Cup of Nations third-place playoff between Tunisia and Nigeria, including predictions, team news and head-to-head records.

The circumstances of Nigeria and Tunisia's late semi-final defeats in this year's Africa Cup of Nations could be telling when the two tangle for one last hurrah at the tournament.

Games for third place rarely seem a thrill for the teams involved, although younger squad members on both sides will be hoping for a chance to shine in Cairo, while their more match-worn teammates will presumably wish they were on the next flight home.

On the face of it, Tunisia are 20 places above Nigeria in the FIFA world rankings, sitting 25th, and had a slightly less agonising form of AFCON heartbreak in that they did not lose to the last kick of the game.

Nigeria, though, are the slenderest of favourites for a match in which form is likely to depart from the nearest window as both sides look to gain a semblance of closure from sappingly cruel exits.


Tunisia

Tunisia's Dylan Bronn scores an own goal and the first for Senegal on July 14, 2019© Reuters

The Eagles of Carthage's late defeat to Senegal could scarcely have been narrower, with both sides seeing penalties saved in normal time.

Compounding their misery after victory had seemed within their grasp, Dylan Bronn lucklessly registered a 100th-minute own-goal as goalkeeper Mouez Hassen's save from a Sadio Mane free-kick rebounded off the defender's head and into the net.

Tunisia also missed out on a 113th-minute penalty when an initial refereeing decision was overturned by VAR.

Still, they have been on an encouraging run of form since losing their first two fixtures at the 2018 World Cup - and even then, they proved typically difficult to beat during a 2-1 opening loss to England.

Coach Alain Giresse, a former Footballer of the Year in France, had led Tunisia to just one defeat in 10 before their semi-final loss, including a win in Croatia during the build-up to this summer's tournament.

They are resolutely hard to break down and eventually disposed of Madagascar comfortably in the quarter-finals, seeing off the tournament surprise packages by scoring three goals without reply in the second half.

All of the goals conceded by Tunisia at this year's tournament have arrived in the final third of matches, with both of the goals scored against them in the knockout stages coming after the 90th minute.

Recent AFCON form: DDDWWL


Nigeria

Nigeria's William Troost-Ekong celebrates scoring their second goal against South Africa on July 10, 2019© Reuters

If Tunisia's final four match was breathless, Nigeria's tumultuous clash with Algeria was every bit as action-packed, as well as offering a more sudden and spectacular conclusion.

As the 94th minute ticked past in Cairo, few could have foreseen even a player of Riyad Mahrez's class producing the masterful free-kick that sent the Manchester City winger's side into the final.

That proved the last action of the game and an unforgiving end to a campaign in which they have frequently entertained, knocking out reigning champions Cameroon 3-2 before seeing off an upwardly mobile South Africa 2-1.

Algeria have been arguably the best team in the tournament this year, but Nigeria will feel frustrated not to have held on to the parity provided by Odion Ighalo's 72nd-minute penalty, awarded for handball following a lengthy VAR check.

That said, coach Gernot Rohr will have been vexed by the surprising lack of threat and creativity manifested by Nigeria for much of the semi-final leading up to their penalty.

Nigeria's opponents dominated much of the encounter and hit the woodwork shortly before scoring the winner, outplaying the Super Eagles when many had thought their superior experience in the latter stages of the tournament could count for more.

Mahrez haunted them early on to force the opener, outfoxing his markers before seeing his cross diverted into the Nigeria net via the midriff of defender William Troost-Ekong, who scored their late quarter-final winner against South Africa.

Nigeria may feel they have a point to prove in the settler for bronze after an underwhelming semi-final showing that resulted in their second loss of the tournament, following up a shock group stage setback when they slumped to a 2-0 defeat against Madagascar.

They have not won by more than a single goal in any of their matches and, having kept four straight clean sheets in the build-up to that loss to Madagascar, have now conceded in four of their last five games.

Rohr was in pragmatic mood following the end of their bid to become champions, praising a squad that was the youngest at the 2018 World Cup and admitting that their tactical and technical quality will improve with age.

Recent AFCON form: WWLWWL


Team News

Nigeria's Kenneth Omeruo celebrates scoring against Guinea on June 26, 2019© Reuters

Part of the reason for Nigeria's exit was their failure to cope effectively with Algeria's high-tempo pressing approach, and that apparent lack of energy could spell the last outing of the tournament for several players this time out.

Rohr is likely to be tempted to make changes in order to enhance the experience of several of his younger talents, with the likes of Chelsea defender Kenneth Omeruo and Paderborn full-back Jamilu Collins - who was given a torrid time by Mahrez - liable to make way.

One name to watch out for could be Henry Onyekuru, the 22-year-old striker who Everton paid Belgian club Eupen £7m for in 2017, so impressed were they at his strike ratio of almost a goal every other game.

Since then, Onyekuru has continued to demonstrate his eye for goal. He netted nine in 19 for Anderlecht in 2017 before his progress was halted by knee ligament damage, then returned last season to hit 14 goals in 31 appearances during a highly successful loan spell with Galatasaray.

Ighalo's position as tournament top scorer looks precarious despite his gutsy penalty against Algeria. The Shanghai Shenhua striker leads the way with four goals so far, but is just one ahead of Mahrez, Algeria teammate Adam Ounas and Senegal's Mane, all of whom are expected to take part in Friday's final.

Giresse could freshen up his side following their extra-time endeavours against Senegal. Defensive midfielder Ferjani Sassi is an option should the coach opt for a more guarded approach against opponents capable of potency, while new prospects such as 18-year-old Leverkusen midfielder Marc Lamti could be brought in.

Tunisia possible starting lineup:
Mouez; Bronn, Meriah, Hadadi, Khazri; Sassi, Lamti, Skhiri; B Mohamed, Msakni, Khenissi

Nigeria possible starting lineup:
Akpeyi; Ekong, Omeruo, Awaziem, Collins; Kalu, Musa, Etebo; Chukwueze, Onyekuru; Ighalo


Head To Head

You have to look all the way back to January 2000 to find the last time this fixture did not finish all square. Tunisia went 2-0 up inside 16 minutes when they met 19 years ago, only for Nigeria to emerge 4-2 winners in Lagos, including a brace from former Paris Saint-Germain and Bolton Wanderers favourite Jay-Jay Okocha.

Since then, the teams have traded penalty shootout triumphs after 1-1 draws - Tunisia winning 5-3 in the AFCON 2004 semi-finals, Nigeria 6-5 in the 2006 quarter-finals. Almost 10 years ago, their last meetings produced no goals in Tunis and a 2-2 draw in Abuja as part of a qualifying campaign that saw Nigeria reach the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

Tunisia's win more than 15 years ago is their sole AFCON victory in this fixture. Nigeria have won three of the six matches between these teams in the tournament, beginning with a 2-1 win in November 1961.

There was an extraordinary conclusion when these two last met to decide third place. With the score level at 1-1, Tunisia walked off the pitch after 42 minutes in Accra in March 1978, leading officials to award Nigeria a 2-0 win and ban their AWOL opponents from the next tournament.

Tunisia have had marginally the better of the 17 matches they have played against Nigeria, with six wins compared to their rivals' five. The all-time figures would be dead level had Tunisia not won a friendly 5-0 in Tunis in 1984.


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We say: Tunisia 1-1 Nigeria

With the domestic season fast approaching and the bitter taste of those semi-final defeats lingering, the already anti-climatic air of a third-placed playoff is unlikely to cause either side to fly out of the traps at the Al Salam Stadium.

These games have historically been close-run and Tunisia are demonstrably capable of nullifying Nigeria's attack. The mystery lies in how many younger players, spared some of the demotivating effects of losing a knockout game, will perform should they be given the chance.

Neither side will want to prolong their stay at a tournament they cannot win, so it could become a case of who cares more about their final act in the shadows of finalists Algeria and Senegal. Desperation - and tired legs - will come into play if the game remains deadlocked late on.



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Written by
Ben Miller
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Group A

TeamPWDLPTS
Q Equatorial Guinea flag Eq Guinea32107
Q Nigeria Nigeria32107
Q Cote D'Ivoire flag Ivory Coast31023
4 Guinea-Bissau flag Guinea-Bissau30030

Group B

TeamPWDLPTS
Q Cape Verde flag Cape Verde32107
Q Egypt Egypt30303
3 Ghana flag Ghana30212
4 Mozambique flag Mozambique30212

Group C

TeamPWDLPTS
Q Senegal flag Senegal33009
Q Guinea flag Guinea31114
Q Cameroon flag Cameroon31114
4 Gambia flag Gambia30030

Group D

TeamPWDLPTS
Q Angola Angola32107
Q Burkina Faso flag Burkina Faso31114
Q Mauritania flag Mauritania31023
4 Algeria Algeria30212

Group E

TeamPWDLPTS
Q Mali flag Mali31205
Q South Africa South Africa31114
Q Namibia Namibia31114
4 Tunisia Tunisia30212

Group F

TeamPWDLPTS
Q Morocco Morocco32107
Q DR Congo flag Congo DR30303
3 Tanzania flag Tanzania30212
4 Zambia flag Zambia30212


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