Giant-killers Ethiopia blamed bad refereeing for a weekend defeat by
Nigeria that virtually extinguished hopes of a first World Cup
appearance.
Hoping to become the first nation from the east of the
continent to compete at the global football showcase, the ‘Waliya
Antelopes’ lost 2-1 at home to the ‘Super Eagles’.
The first-leg
play-off result leaves Ethiopia needing to score at least twice in the
November 16 return match to reach the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.
Coach
Sewnet Bishaw, credited with a major role in reviving Ethiopia after
three decades in the doldrums, laid the blame for the Addis Ababa loss
with the Cameroonian referee.
“We lost the game because the
referee was poor,” Bishaw told reporters after the Antelopes suffered a
first home defeat in five qualifying games.
“We scored a goal that he cancelled and the referee also did other things that were questionable.”
Salahdin
Ahmed believed his close-range poke crossed the goal-line midway
through the opening half before Godfrey Oboabona cleared the ball.
The referee waved play on before a capacity 35,000 crowd and television replays of the incident were inconclusive.
Bishaw,
a stern-faced 61-year-old former biology teacher who has coached only
the national team, also admitted Ethiopian shortcomings.
“After taking the lead we thought it would be easy, but we could not match the pace of the Nigerians after they equalised.”
The coach conceded that the introduction of Omod Okwury and Addis Hintsa during the second half did not have the desired effect.
Ethiopia captain and defender Degu Debebe blamed the defeat on squandered scoring chances during the opening half.
“We
missed some good chances,” he conceded, referring to wild shooting by
Girma Adane after slick, short passes created openings.
Emmanuel
Emenike won the match with a last-minute penalty after earlier
cancelling the lead Behailu Assefa gave Ethiopia soon after half-time.
Algeria were another team furious at a refereeing decision after losing 3-2 to Burkina Faso in a Ouagadougou thriller.
Television
replays suggested the home team should not have been awarded the late
penalty Aristide Bance converted to give the ‘Stallions’ victory.
The
Zambian match official awarded the spot-kick for hand-ball, but Essaid
Belkalem appeared to have his arms behind his back when the ball struck
him on the chest.
“That scandalous decision destabilised our team —
it was one of many unfair calls made against us,” said unused
substitute Abdelmoumene Djabou.
“We deserved a draw and I want to
tell Burkina Faso that they have no chance when we meet again next
month,” the midfielder added.
Ivory Coast coach Sabri Lamouchi was
happy with a 3-1 victory over Senegal in Abidjan, but blamed his
players for conceding a goal six minutes into stoppage time.
“I am
disappointed by the attitude of the players during additional time. I
would have said that we had qualified were it not for the goal Senegal
scored.”
Senegal coach and former France superstar Alain Giresse
blamed a disastrous start that saw his side trail by two goals after 14
minutes.
“We failed to recover but nothing is lost — we have the
means to fight and qualify. It is not an impossible task and we will
work towards it.” .
Tunisia were held 0-0 at home by Cameroon in
another play-off and the much-anticipated first leg between Ghana and
Egypt is set for Kumasi Tuesday.
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