Cameroon celebrated the most improbable of victories at the Africa Cup of Nations on Sunday which coach Hugo Broos hoped would pave the way toward a bright future for his team.
The Indomitable Lions showed remarkable character to come from behind and beat Egypt 2-1 in a brilliant final at the Stade de l’Amitie in Libreville, Gabon, with Nicolas Nkoulou and Vincent Aboubakar scoring to spark wild celebrations.
It was the first time a team had come from behind to win the final since 1994 and it was a first continental title for Cameroon since 2002, their fifth in total.
Photo: Reuters
The triumph, witnessed by a crowd made up of a majority of Cameroonians, completed a remarkable journey for a side who had been written off prior to the tournament.
Eight players, notably Liverpool defender Joel Matip and Schalke 04 striker Eric Choupo-Moting, had refused call-ups to the squad, leaving Broos to work with a young and inexperienced side. That team had already eliminated the hosts Gabon, much-fancied Senegal and Ghana en route to the tournament finale, where they claimed Cameroon’s first win against Egypt in a Cup of Nations final at the third attempt.
“I brought in some new young players and we started working. We did a good job and now today we have a team,” Broos said.
His man management has been remarkable and on Sunday it was notable that two substitutes scored the goals.
Nkoulou, the Olympique Lyonnais defender, started only once during the tournament and came on as a first-half replacement for the injured Adolphe Teikeu.
Aboubakar, the powerful center forward who plays for Besiktas in Turkey, also started only one game in Gabon, but he had scored the decisive penalty in the shoot-out against Senegal in the quarter-final and his winner in the final was stunning.
“It is the best way to win a final. I think we took a bit of a blow to the back of the head in the first half, but the substitutions changed the match in the second half,” forward Clinton N’Jie said.
Defender Michael Ngadeu, one of the stars of Cameroon’s run, heaped praise on his Belgian coach, under whom the Indomitable Lions have been beaten just once since his appointment last year.
“He is a magician. The team has been reborn under him,” said the Slavia Prague defender, who scored the opener in the semi-final against Ghana. “A lot of them didn’t believe in him, I’ll admit. A lot of Cameroonians criticized him, but today I think he is the hero. He should get a medal for what he has done. He has given us this solidarity, this mentality. He has given us a joie de vivre.”
Cameroon were the first African nation to make a major impression at the FIFA World Cup finals and for a long time were the leading force on the continent. Their last Cup of Nations final appearance had been in 2008, when a side featuring Samuel Eto’o lost 1-0 to Egypt in Accra, Ghana.
“We are still not on the highest level. We need to be much better, but it’s already a great beginning,” Broos said.
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