CAF launched dual disciplinary probes after Saturday’s Algeria-Nigeria quarterfinal ended with players chasing the referee through the tunnel and accredited reporters trading punches in the mixed zone, threatening the tournament’s global broadcast image.
What ignited the tunnel melee?
Referee Issa Sy’s late whistle sealed a 2-1 Nigeria win that booted Algeria out of the 2026 Africa Cup of Nations. Algerian staff erupted on the pitch, surrounding Sy and forcing security to form a human shield. Video shows Sy still being pursued inside the mixed zone as irate assistants tried to confront him outside the dressing-room corridor.
Media brawl: reporters turned combatants
While players cooled down, accredited journalists waiting for interviews traded punches among camera crews. CAF’s statement confirms the fight was captured on tournament broadcast feeds, raising liability questions for host broadcaster beIN Sports and the Moroccan organizing committee.
CAF’s zero-tolerance promise
The Confederation of African Football said Monday it has referred both incidents to its disciplinary board. Sanctions can range from five-figure fines to multi-match touchline bans and revoked media credentials (AP). CAF warned that “appropriate actions will be sought against anyone whose behavior is not consistent with professional conduct.”
History of North-African flashpoints
Algeria exits in the quarterfinals for the first time since 2015, adding sting to the loss. Previous AFCON clashes involving Algerian fans include the 2019 final whistle chaos in Cairo when supporters hurled objects at Sadio Mané. Nigeria, meanwhile, advances to a semifinal date with Senegal while facing possible key suspensions if its bench personnel are implicated.
Broadcast optics at stake
Sponsors such as TotalEnergies and Visa pay premium rates for a family-friendly product. A global audience of 500 million saw live scuffles before the feed cut to commercial. Industry analysts say persistent violence could shave future rights fees by 10-15 percent (AP).
What happens next?
- Disciplinary verdicts expected within 72 hours before Wednesday’s semifinal.
- Algeria risks fines plus suspended ban for next qualifying cycle.
- Individual player or staff suspensions could carry over to 2027 qualifiers.
- CAF may tighten mixed-zone access, limiting broadcaster freedom.
Keep locked on onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest, most authoritative analysis of every AFCON twist—from disciplinary rulings to Senegal’s title march—as the tournament races toward its Marrakech finale.