2019 CAF Super Cup

The 2019 CAF Super Cup (officially the 2019 Total CAF Super Cup for sponsorship reasons)[2] was the 27th CAF Super Cup, an annual football match in Africa organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF), between the winners of the previous season's two CAF club competitions, the CAF Champions League and the CAF Confederation Cup.

2019 CAF Super Cup
2019 Total CAF Super Cup
Date29 March 2019 (2019-03-29)
VenueThani bin Jassim Stadium, Al Rayyan
RefereeBamlak Tessema Weyesa (Ethiopia)[1]

The match was played between Espérance de Tunis from Tunisia, the 2018 CAF Champions League winners, and Raja Casablanca from Morocco, the 2018 CAF Confederation Cup winners, at the Thani bin Jassim Stadium in Al Rayyan, Qatar on 29 March 2019.[3][4]

Raja Casablanca won the match 2–1 for their second CAF Super Cup title.[5]

The match was originally to be hosted by Espérance de Tunis at the Stade Olympique de Radès in Radès, Tunisia on 29 December 2018,[6] but CAF announced on 12 December 2018 that the match would be played in Qatar on 20 February 2019.[7] However, the date was later changed to 29 March 2019 after both clubs requested a new date for the match. This was the first CAF Super Cup to be played outside of Africa.

The Super Cup of this season followed a transitional calendar which allows the CAF club competitions to switch from a February-to-November schedule to an August–to-May schedule, as per the decision of the CAF Executive Committee on 20 July 2017.[8] The Super Cup of next season will then be played in August after the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations (which has been switched from January/February to June/July) following the new calendar.[9]

Teams

Team Zone Qualification Previous participation (bold indicates winners)
Espérance de Tunis UNAF (North Africa) 2018 CAF Champions League winners 3 (1995, 1999, 2012)
Raja Casablanca UNAF (North Africa) 2018 CAF Confederation Cup winners 2 (1998, 2000)

Venue

Thani bin Jassim Stadium in Al Rayyan, Qatar, hosted the match.

Format

The CAF Super Cup was played as a single match, for this edition at a neutral venue (originally with the CAF Champions League winners hosting the match). If the score was tied at the end of regulation, extra time would not be played, and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (CAF Champions League Regulations XXVII and CAF Confederation Cup Regulations XXV).[10][11]

Ticketing

A total of 20,560 tickets are available in three categories: category 1 for 100 QR, category 2 for 50 QR, and category 3 for 20 QR.[12]

Match

Details

Espérance de Tunis[1]
Raja Casablanca[1]
GK19 Rami Jridi
RB22 Sameh Derbali 54'
CB5 Chamseddine Dhaouadi (c) 76'
CB6 Mohamed Ali Yacoubi 73'
LB20 Ayman Ben Mohamed
CM15 Fousseny Coulibaly
CM30 Franck Kom 81'
RW8 Anice Badri
AM18 Saad Bguir 46'
LW17 Hamdou Elhouni
CF11 Taha Yassine Khenissi
Substitutes:
GK1 Moez Ben Cherifia
DF24 Iheb Mbarki 54'
DF26 Houcine Rabii
MF25 Ghailene Chaalali
MF28 Mohamed Amine Meskini
FW10 Youcef Belaïli 46'
FW14 Haythem Jouini 73'
Manager:
Moïne Chaâbani
GK1 Anas Zniti 90+2'
RB25 Omar Boutayeb
CB13 Badr Banoun (c) 86'
CB8 Sanad Al Ouarfali
LB5 Fabrice Gael Ngah
CM2 Abderrahim Achchakir 89'
CM29 Zakaria El Wardi
RW24 Mahmoud Benhalib
AM18 Abdelilah Hafidi 80'
LW7 Zakaria Hadraf 76'
CF21 Soufiane Rahimi 90+4'
Substitutes:
GK22 Mohamed Bouamira
DF26 Ilias Haddad
MF4 Mohamed Douik
MF19 Ibrahima Niasse
FW9 Mouhcine Iajour 90+4'
FW11 Anas Jabroun
FW30 Ayoub Nanah 80'
Manager:
Patrice Carteron

Assistant referees:[1]
Zakhele Siwela (South Africa)
Waleed Ahmed Ali (Sudan)
Fourth official:[1]
Janny Sikazwe (Zambia)

Match rules[10][11]

  • 90 minutes.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores level.
  • Seven named substitutes, of which up to three may be used.

Prize money

Prize money shared between CAF Champions League winner and CAF Confederations Cup winner in CAF Super Cup are as following :[13]

Final
position
Money awarded
to club
winnerUS$200,000
Runners-upUS$150,000
gollark: I'm not sure what the square root of anti is. I'm sure someone will work it out.
gollark: It's just sqrt(anti)rally.
gollark: I think that would be a rally against a rally against a rally against a rally. It's hard to say. Rally stopped sounding like an actual word some time ago.
gollark: Anti³rally⁴ when?
gollark: Current historians increasingly use lots of past records to assemble a more complete picture of history, instead of just looking at things explicitly written as historical records. There's no reason to think future ones wouldn't do this even more, and we have a *lot* of data on random unimportant people, and the ability to store it basically forever (unless there's some kind of civilizational collapse, in which case it will all just disintegrate into half-remembered legends).

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.