2021 Africa Cup of Nations qualification Group G

Group G of the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations qualification tournament is one of the 12 groups that will decide the teams which qualify for the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations finals tournament. The group consist of four teams: Egypt, Kenya, Togo, and Comoros.[1]

The teams will play against each other in home-and-away round-robin format between November 2019 and September 2020.[2][3]

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, all matches of matchdays 3 and 4 scheduled for March 2020 had been postponed until further notice.[4] FIFA had recommended that all June 2020 international matches (matchday 5) be postponed,[5] and also postponed the September 2020 window (matchday 6) for CAF.[6]

On 30 June 2020, the CAF announced the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations final tournament had been postponed from January 2021 to January 2022, without announcing the new dates of the remaining qualifiers.[7]

Standings

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Comoros 2 1 1 0 1 0 +1 4 Qualify for final tournament TBD 0–0 TBD
2  Kenya 2 0 2 0 2 2 0 2 TBD TBD 1–1
3  Egypt 2 0 2 0 1 1 0 2 TBD 1–1 TBD
4  Togo 2 0 1 1 1 2 1 1 0–1 TBD TBD
Updated to match(es) played on 18 November 2019. Source: CAF
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers

Matches

Togo 0–1 Comoros
Referee: Jean-Jacques Ndala Ngambo (DR Congo)
Egypt 1–1 Kenya

Comoros 0–0 Egypt
Stade Omnisports de Malouzini, Moroni
Referee: Bienvenu Sinko (Ivory Coast)
Kenya 1–1 Togo
Referee: Alhadi Allaou Mahamat (Chad)

Kenya Postponed Comoros
Egypt Postponed Togo

Comoros Postponed Kenya
Stade Omnisports de Malouzini, Moroni
Togo Postponed Egypt

Kenya Postponed Egypt
Comoros Postponed Togo

Egypt Postponed Comoros
Togo Postponed Kenya

Goalscorers

There were 5 goals scored in 4 matches, for an average of 1.25 goals per match (as of 18 November 2019).

1 goal

Notes

gollark: Yes, but there's no performance benefit, you can just run multiple programs.
gollark: https://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=3212479
gollark: AMD and Intel CPUs have for some time been JITing x86 into internal RISC microcode.
gollark: Wrong. The ISA is old, but the microarchitectures of high-performant x86 CPUs are absolutely not ancient. They internally do a ton of optimization tricks to pretend to execute code in order with flat undifferentiated memory as fast as possible, even though the CPU is executing things out of order and aggressively caching and prefetching.
gollark: However, you can just not use it and will probably save a lot of time and segfaults.

References

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