COSAFA trio South Africa, Botswana and Zambia qualify for Women’s Africa Cup of Nations finals

South Africa celebrates their qualification in to the Womens Africa Cup of Nations Qualifier. Photo: Sydney Mahlangu/BackpagePix

South Africa celebrates their qualification in to the Womens Africa Cup of Nations Qualifier. Photo: Sydney Mahlangu/BackpagePix

Published Feb 24, 2022

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Cape Town - South Africa and Botswana booked their tickets for the 2022 Women’s Africa Cup of Nations finals in Morocco, after securing aggregate wins Wednesday.

This feat seals a trio of COSAFA sides at the continental showpiece event in July.

They will join COSAFA rivals Zambia in the finals after the Copper Queens sealed their place on Tuesday following a draw with Namibia.

While South Africa will play a 12th finals tournament, Botswana will make their bow after they saw off a spirited comeback from Zimbabwe to win their tie on the away goals rule.

Botswana had won the first leg in Harare 3-1 but found themselves trailing after goals from Emmaculate Msipa and Priviledge Mupeti levelled the score on aggregate.

However, the Mighty Warriors could not get the third goal they needed, and The Mares sealed a historic trip to Morocco.

South Africa but booked theirs following a 1-1 draw with Algeria in the second leg of their qualifier in Algiers.

Banyana Banyana advanced 3-1 on aggregate as Linda Motlhalo netted a penalty in the second half to equalise, her fifth goal of the qualifiers and her 16th in international football.

Banyana won the spot-kick on 62 minutes as determined work from the pacey Thembi Kgatlana saw her cross deliberately handled by Algeria midfielder Sofia Guellati.

ALSO READ: Banyana brush Algeria aside and grab advantage in Awcon qualifier

It was a needless moment from the home player and a clear penalty, as Motlhalo netted with a low drive into the bottom corner.

Algeria took the lead seconds before the break as the industrious Naima Bouhani showed great determination to see off the attentions of two defenders at the by-line and cross for Sylia Koui to loop a header over goalkeeper Andile Dlamini.

It also maintains Banyana’s record of qualifying for all the Cup of Nations finals since they entered international football and competed for the first time in 1995.

South Africa became the last nation to book their place at the 12-team competition after the host Morocco, debutants Burundi, Togo, Burkina Faso and Botswana, powerhouses Nigeria, Cameroon, Senegal, Uganda, Zambia and Tunisia had already secured qualification.

The leading four teams at the 2022 Cup of Nations will advance automatically to the 2023 World Cup in Australia and New Zealand next year.

IOL Sport

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