The Confederation of African Football (CAF) is facing renewed scrutiny as the Guinea Football Federation formally requests a review of the 1976 Africa Cup of Nations outcome, citing inconsistencies in disciplinary rulings.
The move follows CAF’s recent decision to strip Senegal of the 2025 AFCON title after a controversial walkout and award the championship to hosts Morocco, despite Senegal having won on the field. Guinea argues that similar standards should be applied retroactively to past tournaments.
During the 1976 tournament, which used a four-team round-robin format, Guinea faced Morocco in a decisive match. Chérif Souleymane put Guinea ahead in the 33rd minute, but Moroccan players briefly left the pitch in protest over a refereeing decision before returning. Ahmed Makrouh scored in the 86th minute to secure a 1-1 draw, which gave Morocco the title with five points, leaving Guinea in second place.
In its appeal, Guinea has called on CAF to “reassess the 1976 AFCON results under the same disciplinary principles now applied to recent tournaments” and to recognize sanctions for teams walking off the pitch. “Give us back our 1976 AFCON trophy,” the federation demanded.
The decision has sparked debate over CAF’s handling of historical results. Legal experts note that rules such as Article 84, which formed the basis of the 2025 ruling, were not in place in 1976, and retroactive enforcement is rare. CAF has not yet responded, leaving observers to speculate on whether the organisation will consider revisiting decades-old decisions.


