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Sadio Mané resembles the leader Africa longs for
Cape Times
|January 26, 2026
IN THE dying minutes of the Africa Cup of Nations final between Senegal and Morocco, football briefly became something bigger than a game.
SENEGAL'S forward Sadio Man e holds up the trophy as he celebrates with his teammates after winning the Africa Cup of Nations final against Morocco at the Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium in Rabat.
(AFP)
The tension was unbearable. Every pass felt heavy, every whistle suspicious, every decision magnified. This was not just a final. It was a contest of pride, history, and continental identity. Neither side wanted to be remembered as the loser.When Morocco was awarded a late penalty, the atmosphere shifted instantly. Tempers flared. Players crowded the referee. The sense of injustice, real or perceived, overwhelmed reason. Then came a decision that stunned everyone watching. The Senegal coach ordered his players to walk off the pitch and abandon the match.
It was a decision born of anger, not leadership. Walking away would not have overturned the referee's call. It would not have restored fairness. It would only have replaced one disputed decision with a far greater disgrace. Abandoning a final strip of dignity stains the very competition it claims to protest.
In the middle of that chaos, one man refused to move.
Sadio Mané stood his ground.
He would not abandon the game. Not in his name. Not in the name of Senegal. Not in the name of football. Without speeches or dramatic gestures, he chose to remain on the pitch. That quiet refusal mattered. It was leadership expressed through principle, not position.
This story is from the January 26, 2026 edition of Cape Times.
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