Togo
striker Emmanuel Adebayor has fiercely criticized the sandy field that
will host a semi-final at the Africa Cup of Nations, calling it 'a
disgrace' and embarrassing for the continent.
The
Tottenham forward said the sandy and bumpy pitch at Mbombela Stadium in
Nelspruit badly undermined African football and will lead people in
Europe to think the teams are playing 'in the bush.'
Togo
held Tunisia to 1-1 at Mbombela on Wednesday to reach the
quarter-finals for the first time, after which Adebayor said 'it's a
disgrace for our continent to be playing on this pitch when it's on the
TV around the world.'
Disgrace: Emmanuel Adebayor is unhappy with the sandy nature of the Nelspruit pitch
He
added: 'Once again we are in Africa, the Africa Cup of Nations is a big
tournament for Africa - the whole world is watching this,' he said.
'You can't play on a pitch like this. Those people that watch the game
in Europe, they will be sending SMS to me ... asking me, "Are you
playing in the bush or what?" It's a disgrace to our continent, we can
do better.'
Adebayor's
criticism came as tournament organizer the Confederation of African
Football was to hold its mid-tournament review on Friday. While South
Africa was expected to be praised for better attendances at this cup,
the poor Mbombela field has undoubtedly been an eyesore and had already
been criticized by the Zambia and Nigeria teams.
Television
audiences will have seen sand constantly kicked up by players and the
ball often bouncing unevenly at Mbombela for the group games there. The
field will also host Togo's quarter-final against Burkina Faso on
Sunday and one of the semi-finals.
Beach: Television audiences will have seen alarming amounts of sand constantly flicked up
'CAF
have to sort things out to solve the problem,' Adebayor said. 'At the
end of the day we are all African and we have to be honest with
ourselves. It's a beautiful stadium but the pitch is not happening.'
The
problems with the Mbombela field reportedly arose after days of heavy
rain in the northern city of Nelspruit just before the tournament,
leading officials to lay sand on the surface to prevent it becoming
waterlogged.
Zambia
coach Herve Renard said the poor surface was a major reason why his
defending champion sdie was eliminated in the group stage, having
struggled to play on it.
Zebra: Mbombela Stadium hosted World Cup matches in 2010 and will host an Africa Cup of Nations semi-final
The
cup has generally been well organized, with only the Mbombela field, a
few instances of poor refereeing and the misbehavior of Ethiopian fans
in their team's opening game against Zambia the standout problems.
CAF
was expected to provide an update of ticket sales on Friday, with the
tournament already expected to be a vast improvement on the last one in
2012.
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