African giants to know opponents as World Cup-qualifying draw takes place today
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AFP) — African football giants Ivory Coast, Ghana and Nigeria will discover today which country they must defeat to reach the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.
The trio, plus Algeria and Tunisia, are seeded for a play-off draw with Egypt, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Senegal and Ethiopia unseeded.
A noon ceremony at the Cairo headquarters of the Confederation of African Football will create five two-leg ties between seeded and unseeded sides.
And a separate draw will determine who plays at home first as the 51-nation qualifying competition reaches an intriguing climax.
Seedings were decided by the monthly FIFA Africa rankings released this week and topped by the Didier Drogba-captained Ivorians.
First legs are scheduled for October 11-15 and return matches for November 15-19 with the five aggregate winners representing Africa at the global football showcase.
All five qualifiers for the previous World Cup in South Africa three years ago — Algeria, Cameroon, Ghana, Ivory Coast and Nigeria — are in contention.
South Africa also participated, with hosts earning the right automatically, in a tournament where Africa flopped with only Ghana surviving the first round.
Ghana and Marseille midfield star Andre ‘Dede’ Ayew has no concerns ahead of a draw expected to be completed in the Egyptian capital.
“We are ready to face any opponent,” said the son of Ghana legend Abedi ‘Pele’ Ayew and older brother of Marseille team-mate Jordan.
“Ghana will grind out results against whichever country we play and qualify for a third consecutive World Cup tournament.”
Veteran Egypt centre-back Wael Gomaa would be happy to face Ghana as the Pharaohs seek a first World Cup appearance since 1990 in Italy.
“We have been successful against Ghana and Nigeria in the Africa Cup of Nations and know them better than sides like Ethiopia.”
Egypt defeated Nigeria en route to the 2010 Cup of Nations final, where a late Mohamed ‘Geddo’ Nagy goal brought victory over Ghana in Luanda.
Mohamed Abou Trika, one of the greatest African footballers never to feature at a World Cup, hopes Egypt avoid Algeria and Tunisia.
Although World Cup play-offs in Africa were abandoned after the 1990 qualifiers, a two-leg showdown between Egypt and Algeria was necessary four years ago.
It had ugly repercussions with an Algerian victory amid tight security in Sudan sparking riots in Algiers and Cairo and considerable damage to property.
Diplomatic relations were severely strained but veteran Egypt striker Emad Moteab does not fear another showdown between the countries.
Egypt could be the most handicapped of the 10 play-off hosts as political turbulence and related violence has forced them to play behind closed doors.