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Africa Cup Of Nations Winners

Ivory Coast beats Nigeria 2-1 to win 2023 AFCON

Ivory Coast became Africa Cup of Nations champions for the third time as they won the 2023 tournament. Here is the list of all winners since the tournament’s inception

Africa Cup of Nations
yearwinnerrunner-up
2023 –

Winner – Cote D’Ivoire

Runner Up – Nigeria

1957EgyptEthiopia
1959EgyptSudan
1962EthiopiaEgypt
1963GhanaSudan
1965GhanaTunisia
1968Congo (Kinshasa)Ghana
1970SudanGhana
1972Congo (Brazzaville)Mali
1974ZaireZambia
1976MoroccoGuinea
1978GhanaUganda
1980NigeriaAlgeria
1982GhanaLibya
1984CameroonNigeria
1986EgyptCameroon
1988CameroonNigeria
1990AlgeriaNigeria
1992Côte d’IvoireGhana
1994NigeriaZambia
1996South AfricaTunisia
1998EgyptSouth Africa
2000CameroonNigeria
2002CameroonSenegal
2004TunisiaMorocco
2006EgyptCôte d’Ivoire
2008EgyptCameroon
2010EgyptGhana
2012ZambiaCôte d’Ivoire
2013*NigeriaBurkina Faso
2015Côte d’IvoireGhana
2017CameroonEgypt
2019AlgeriaSenegal
2021SenegalEgypt

READ ALSO: Ivory Coast beats Nigeria 2-1 to win 2023 AFCON

Ivory Coast became Africa Cup of Nations champions for the third time as they won a remarkable tournament on home soil in February 2024.

The Elephants fought from a goal down in the final in Abidjan to defeat Nigeria 2-1, Sebastien Haller scoring the winning goal less than two years on from a diagnosis of testicular cancer that put his professional career under threat.

Egypt have been the dominant nation in Africa Cup of Nations history with The Pharaohs winning seven titles including the first edition of the competition back in 1957.

Six other nations have won the trophy more than once with an overall total of 15 winners of the tournament.

RankNationAFCON titlesYears won
1.Egypt71957, 1959, 1986, 1998, 2006, 2008, 2010
2.Cameroon51984, 1988, 2000, 2002, 2017
3.Ghana41963, 1965, 1978, 1982
4.Ivory Coast31992, 2015, 2023
=Nigeria31980, 1994, 2013
=Algeria21990, 2019
=DR Congo21968, 1974
8.Zambia12012
=Tunisia12004
=Sudan11970
=Senegal12021
=Ethiopia11962
=Morocco11976
=South Africa11996
=Congo11972

In the first tournament in 1957, there were only three participating nations: Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia. South Africa was originally scheduled to join, but was disqualified due to the apartheid policies of the government then in power.[4] Since then, the tournament has expanded greatly, making it necessary to hold a qualifying tournament. The number of participants in the final tournament reached 16 in 1998 (16 teams were to compete in 1996, but Nigeria withdrew, reducing the field to 15, and the same happened with Togo’s withdrawal in 2010), and until 2017, the format had been unchanged, with the 16 teams being drawn into four groups of four teams each, with the top two teams of each group advancing to a “knock-out” stage. On 20 July 2017, the Africa Cup of Nations was moved from January to June and expanded from 16 to 24 teams

Today in History: Black Stars of Ghana won the AFCON for the second time

  Exactly 58 years ago, On 21st, November 1965, the Black Stars of Ghana won the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) for the 2nd time. This was the 5th Edition of African Cup of Nations organized by Confederation of African Football (CAF). The tournament was held at Tunisia but the Black Stars did their maximum … Read more

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