African club football has delivered its verdict! It is both a reward and a warning.
From the latest continental coefficient rankings, only 12 nations will be permitted to register two clubs each in the CAF Champions League and the CAF Confederation Cup next season. It is a privilege reserved for consistency, depth and sustained continental performance.
The countries that have earned that status are:
Egypt
Morocco
Algeria
South Africa
Tanzania
Tunisia
Angola
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Sudan
Mali
Ivory Coast
Nigeria
What does this mean? It means these federations have done the hard work. Their clubs have progressed deep into tournaments, collected coefficient points and protected their continental influence.
Now, the hard truth.
By losing all their group-stage matches this season, Nairobi United leave the continental stage ranked 62nd, having collected just 2.5 points. The minimum awarded for group stage qualification.
That number is not just statistics. It reflects the competitive gap between East African representatives and North or West African heavyweights. Continental football is unforgiving; one poor campaign can ripple through a nation’s coefficient for years.
From a passionate fan’s lens, it stings. Because qualification alone once felt like progress. But modern African football demands more than participation! It demands performance.
And reading between the lines? The rankings are not merely a list. They are a mirror. A mirror showing where investment, tactical evolution and squad depth are thriving — and where rebuilding is required.
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