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West African Club Championship: Difference between revisions

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m →‎Winners by year: Côte d'Ivoire, not Cote d'Ivoire
 
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*[[1988 WAFU Club Championship|1988]] [[Association Sportive des Forces Armées de Guinée|ASFAG]], [[Conakry]], [[Guinea]]
*[[1988 WAFU Club Championship|1988]] [[Association Sportive des Forces Armées de Guinée|ASFAG]], [[Conakry]], [[Guinea]]
*[[1989 WAFU Club Championship|1989]] [[Ranchers Bees]], [[Nigeria]]
*[[1989 WAFU Club Championship|1989]] [[Ranchers Bees]], [[Nigeria]]
*[[1990 WAFU Club Championship|1990]] [[ASEC Abidjan]], [[Cote d'Ivoire]]
*[[1990 WAFU Club Championship|1990]] [[ASEC Abidjan]], [[Cote d'Ivoire|Côte d'Ivoire]]
*[[1991 WAFU Club Championship|1991]] [[Africa Sports]], [[Cote d'Ivoire]]
*[[1991 WAFU Club Championship|1991]] [[Africa Sports]], [[Cote d'Ivoire|Côte d'Ivoire]]
*[[1992 WAFU Club Championship|1992]] [[Stade Malien]], [[Mali]]
*[[1992 WAFU Club Championship|1992]] [[Stade Malien]], [[Mali]]
*[[1993 WAFU Club Championship|1993]] [[Bendel Insurance]], [[Nigeria]]
*[[1993 WAFU Club Championship|1993]] [[Bendel Insurance]], [[Nigeria]]
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*[[2010 WAFU Club Championship|2010]] [[Sharks F.C.]], [[Nigeria]]
*[[2010 WAFU Club Championship|2010]] [[Sharks F.C.]], [[Nigeria]]
*[[2011 WAFU Club Championship|2011]] [[Dynamic Togolais]], [[Togo]]
*[[2011 WAFU Club Championship|2011]] [[Dynamic Togolais]], [[Togo]]
*[[2017 WAFU Club Championship|2017]] [[AS Tanda]], [[Cote d'Ivoire]]
*[[2017 WAFU Club Championship|2017]] [[AS Tanda]], [[Cote d'Ivoire|Côte d'Ivoire]]


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 07:03, 7 July 2024

West African Club Championship
Founded1975
Abolished2017
RegionAfrica (CAF)
Number of teams13–16
Last championsAS Tanda (2017)
Most successful team(s)Africa Sports, Bendel Insurance (3)
2017 WAFU Club Championship

The West African Club Championship (UFOA Cup), also known as the General Eyadéma Cup, was a football tournament for West African clubs from 1977 to 1999. It was open to league runners-up in the West Africa (or Zone 3) region of the CAF. While the first matches were played of the 2000 tournament, the competition was cancelled before the final, largely for financial reasons. While the intention of the CAF was to revive a national squad tournament in its place, the planned annual CSSA Nations Cup has not been regularly scheduled since.[1] The tournament was resurrected in 2009 to pit each member country's highest team not featuring in the CAF Champions League or the CAF Confederation Cup. The final four was played in December with Togo as the host.[2]

Winners by year

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Rec Sports Soccer Foundation:UFOA Cup.
  2. ^ "NIGERIAN TRIBUNE – Sports". www.tribune.com.ng. Archived from the original on 2009-05-18.