Tournament details | |
---|---|
Host country | Sudan |
Dates | 30 November – 10 December |
Teams | 8 (from CECAFA confederations) |
Final positions | |
Champions | Uganda (9th title) |
Runners-up | Rwanda |
Third place | Kenya |
Tournament statistics | |
Matches played | 10 |
Goals scored | 28 (2.8 per match) |
Top scorer(s) | Haitham Elrasheed James Omondi (3 goals each) |
← 2002 2004 → |
The 2003 CECAFA Cup was the 27th edition of the CECAFA Cup, which involves teams from Southern and Central Africa. The matches were played in Sudan, from 30 November to 10 December. Burundi, Djibouti and Somalia withdrew before the draw of the groups for the tournament, complaining of financial difficulties.[1][2] Just before the tournament, Ethiopia withdrew, and Tanzania also withdrew after the tournament started.[3] Tanzania originally withdrew on the 27 November 2003, after their government did not pay for travel arrangements to Sudan.[1] A day later though, on the 28 November, Tanzanian business magnate Azim Dewji produced cash to pay for airplane tickets, but the connecting flight from Nairobi, Kenya, to Khartoum, Sudan, were all full.[1] Yahya Mata, chairman of the interim committee of the Football Association of Tanzania (abbreviated to FAT), stated that "We have pulled out of the tournament, after failure to secure connecting flights from Nairobi to Khartoum", the second withdrawal within four days prompted ridicule.[1] In July 2003, Tanzania had been fined $5,000 USD, and forced to pay $11,313 USD to Sudan for the team not showing up for their final qualification match for the 2004 OFC Nations Cup, who then cited financial difficulties, and were estimated to be in $100,000 USD of debt.[4]
Including Tanzania, there were eight teams who competed at the tournament, compared to ten in the previous competition.[5] A team withdrew from each group, Tanzania from group A and Ethiopia from group B before any matches were played, meaning that only three teams competed in each group, and only three matches were played in each group. Hosts Sudan won both of their group stage matches, and Rwanda also emerged from group A on goal difference. Kenya progressed from group B with a win and a draw, as did Uganda. Uganda and Rwanda beat Sudan and Kenya respectively, both on penalties. Kenya won the third place play-off, followed by Uganda beating Rwanda in the final to win the tournament.
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page).