This article needs to be updated. The reason given is: The competition seems to be dormant, or gone. It has mostly disapeard from the web: social site's accountes are outdated (e.g. last Instagram update dates from july: https://www.instagram.com/p/C89S5CDKRNR/), the official website is dead (or taken by something else...?), and, most of all, the 2024/25 season is well underway with no news of a new edition.. (September 2024) |
Organising body | CAF |
---|---|
Founded | 17 July 2021 |
Region | Africa |
Number of teams | 8 (from 8 associations) in 2023 24 (from TBD associations) from 2025–26 |
Related competitions | CAF Champions League CAF Confederation Cup |
Current champions | Mamelodi Sundowns (1st title) |
Most successful club(s) | Mamelodi Sundowns (1 title) |
Website | Official website [dead link ] |
The African Football League (AFL) is a continental men's club football competition run by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) in 2023.[1][2] It was announced on 28 November 2019 by Gianni Infantino, president of FIFA. It was initially launched as the Africa Super League on 10 August 2022 and was to include twenty-four elite African clubs with a promotion/relegation system,[3] but is scaled down to eight teams for its inaugural campaign. The second season, scheduled for 2024 did not take place, but a restart of the league has been announced for 2025 with an expanded format.[4]
Gianni Infantino launched the tournament during a visit to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to celebrate the 80th anniversary of TP Mazembe, saying the top 20 clubs in Africa should be chosen and made to participate in an African league. Infantino said this league would generate revenues of $100 million, making it among the top ten leagues in the world, and revealed that he was launching an appeal to raise $1 billion in order to give every African country a football stadium that complies with the specifications of FIFA.
On 17 July 2021, the President of CAF, Patrice Motsepe, confirmed the move to implement the African Super League project as a new tournament ran under the umbrella of CAF, with large financial returns for the sides taking part.[5] The Confederation of African Football launched the competition on 10 August 2022 in Arusha, Tanzania, where more information about the competition was released.
CAF initially wanted to start the competition in August 2023, with reports suggest that 24 clubs would feature in three groups of eight teams, ahead of a knockout stage starting at the Round of 16. These teams would have been taken from the best-ranked African clubs over the past few years, with groups played on a regional basis (North, Central/West, South/East). As part of the club licensing criteria, participating clubs would be required to have a youth academy and a women's team.[6]
On 9 June, the president of CAF, Patrice Motsepe, announced the decision to change the name of the African Super League to the African Football League during an interview with beIN Sport.[7] saying "Our friends in Europe advised us not to use the expression 'Super League' due to the negative associations with the recent failed attempt in European football." On 13 June 2023, during that year's CAF General Assembly in Abidjan, Infantino announced that the competition would be scaled back to 8 teams for the inaugural edition and would now kick off on 20 October 2023,[8] which would be followed by an expanded tournament further down the line. The Africa Football League would also not replace CAF's top club competition, the CAF Champions League.[2] On 29 August 2023, the competition format for the inaugural edition was announced, with the previous format announced to be adopted starting in 2024–25.[1] On 20 October 2023, the president of CAF, Patrice Motsepe, unveiled the African football league trophy.[9]
CAF is planning to bring the competition back on 2025 when scheduling issues for the second edition were encountered in 2024.[10][11]
The initial details of the format were announced during the launch ceremony in 2022:
The 2023 edition was contested as an eight-team knockout competition, with two-legged quarter-final, semi-final and final rounds. The previously announced format will be used starting with the 2024–25 campaign.[1][2]
The prize money for the first season has been announced in September 2023 and is as follows:[12]
Territory | Rights holder | Ref |
---|---|---|
MENA | BeIN Sports | [13] |
Morocco | Arryadia | [14] |
World | FIFA+, DAZN | [15] |
† | Won after extra time |
# | Won on away goals |
* | Won on penalty shoot-out |
Season | Home | Score | Away | Venue | Attendance | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nation | Club | Club | Nation | ||||
2023 | Morocco | Wydad AC | 2–1 | Mamelodi Sundowns | South Africa | Stade Mohammed V, Casablanca | 45,000 |
South Africa | Mamelodi Sundowns | 2–0 | Wydad AC | Morocco | Loftus Versfeld Stadium, Pretoria | 50,000 | |
Mamelodi Sundowns won 3–2 on aggregate |
Club | Winners | Runners-up | Years won | Years runners-up |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mamelodi Sundowns | 1 | 0 | 2023 | — |
Wydad AC | 0 | 1 | — | 2023 |
Nation | Winners | Runners-up | Winner | Runners-up |
---|---|---|---|---|
South Africa | 1 | 0 | Mamelodi Sundowns (1) | — |
Morocco | 0 | 1 | — | Wydad AC (1) |
Federation (Region) | Clubs Winners | Clubs Runners-up | Titles |
---|---|---|---|
COSAFA (Southern Africa) | Mamelodi Sundowns (1) | — | 1 |
UNAF (North Africa) | — | Wydad AC (1) | 0 |
WAFU (West Africa) | — | — | 0 |
UNIFFAC (Central Africa) | — | — | 0 |
CECAFA (East Africa) | — | — | 0 |
The project has been subjected to criticism for unrealistic expectations of financial returns. The current continental championships in Africa experience weak infrastructure and high travel costs for fans and teams, which will not be automatically resolved by this new competition.
There are already significant financial disputes between the major teams in North Africa, South Africa and the rest of the continent, which would be exacerbated by the new competition.[16] Further, it is also doubtful whether the competition can arouse the public's attention, despite claims to the contrary, while there are concerns about the impact of the new competition on the current Confederation of African Football Championships such as the CAF Champions League (which prize money of the winners is the at the same level as the Africa Football League winners), the CAF Confederation Cup and national leagues.[17]
In this regard, the Confederation of African Football has also been described as a laboratory of experiments, with the acceptance of the proposal to establish the African Super League contrasting with the rejection of the European Super League by UEFA in April 2021.[18]