The African Nations Cup will be moved to June and July and the size of the competition will grow from 16 to 24 finalists from the next edition in 2019.
These decisions were made by the Confederation of African Football’s (CAF) executive committee on Thursday.
Radical changes to Africa’s leading competitions were formalised as CAF’s executive committee met in Rabat .
The committee adopted recommendations made at a wide-ranging symposium in Morocco earlier in the week.
Other decisions taken at the meeting included the awarding of the 2021 and 2023 Nations Cups to the Ivory Coast and Guinea respectively.
Major changes have also been introduced to Africa’s Champions League and Confederation Cup tournaments, which will now run from August to May, like the UEFA Champions League, rather than over the course of a calendar year.
This week’s symposium was called by new CAF president Ahmad and was aimed at overhauling the game in Africa.
CAF hold a congress in Rabat on Friday to pass changes to the body’s statutes in order to bring it in line with recent FIFA changes.
The expansion of the Nations Cup puts pressure on 2019 hosts Cameroon, who have denied claims that they are behind in their preparations.
“I would like to reassure the national and international opinion that the government is fully committed to fulfilling the CAF’s specifications and to date, no CAF mission has reported any delay in preparations,” said Cameroon sports minister Ismael Bidoung.
African football chiefs are due to inspect Cameroon’s tournament preparation in September, with Morocco on stand-by as a potential back-up host if needed.
“Morocco will not hesitate for a second to respond favourably to any invitation to host this Nations Cup,” said their football association president Faouzi Lekjaa when asked.
(Reuters/NAN)
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