مصر 3 دورات متتالية 18 فوز متوالى ايه تانى مصر اللى طلعت اول مجموعة بتسع نقاط كاملة و لا الجزائر ام اربع نقاط منهم نفطة الصعود امام انجولا بطريقة غير شريفة و غير رياضية بهدف يتيم مصر اللى احتياطيها هدافين البطولة هى دى مصر يا عبلة اللى هتعلم على كل الفرق علامات انها منتخبات منتهية الصلاحية عرفتى يا عبلة ؟ عرفتى يا خضرا ؟ عرفت يا سعدان و يا زعلان ؟ عرفت يا روراوة ؟ عرفت يا ايدى ماييه ؟ عرفت بقى كل دة كان ليه ؟ عشان كأس افريقيا و يفضل اننا نشوف صحف العالم قالت ايه عن مصر نبدا بصحف مصر و بعدين الاجنبى و ما ننساش فلسطين اللى الجزائريين نازلين عياط على الورق عليها
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بعد نهائي كأس الأمم: مصر تؤكد جدارتها باللقب وغانا راضية عن منتخبها
وسائل الإعلام العالمية: إذا لعب المصريون فهم الأبطال ومحطمو الأرقام .. وعذرًا للنجوم السوداء
المصريون يدخلون التاريخ برقم قياسي عالمي
شحاتة يهدي الكأس للشعب المصري ويؤكد: كنا الأجدر بالصعود إلى كأس العالم
"الفراعنة" يسيطرون على جوائز أنجولا 2010
الإعلام العالمي يشيد بالإنجاز المصري
الفراعنة يرفعون كأس أمم إفريقيا بهدف "جدو" في الدقائق القاتلة
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Skysports.com understands that Sunderland have completed the signing of Egypt international right-back Ahmed Al-Muhammadi.
The fee is believed to be in the region of £2million for the 22-year-old who helped Egypt win the African Cup of Nations on Sunday.
No sooner had Al-Muhammadi played his part in Sunday's 1-0 win over Ghana in the final of the tournament had he signed for Sunderland.
The Black Cats have been searching for defensive reinforcements throughout the month having conceded 11 times in their last three outings.
Bruce knows all about Al-Muhammadi having been impressed with him while on trial with the North East side last August.
While Sunderland were unable to agree a fee with ENPPI Club back then, they have reached an accord this time around.
It remains to be seen what length of deal the Egyptian ace has signed at the Stadium of Light with more details expected to emerge on Monday
و من فلسطين اللى عمالين يقولوا عنها حاجات كذب شوفوا فرحوا لمصر ازاى و كاتبين ايه
Gaza, Feb 1, 2010 (Pal Telegraph) -No sooner had the final whistle, so-called rule against Egypt, Ghana, the Pharaohs won the continental title for the third time in a row and seventh in its history, so I went out the masses of the Gaza Strip, carrying the flags of Egypt, which embraced the flags of Palestine citizens filed this evening in the yard of the Unknown Soldier in central Gaza City and various city streets, with organized (random) workshops for dance, Dabke Palestinian People, amid chants of praise and celebrate the victory of the Egyptian team.
Thousands of citizens in various cities of the Gaza Strip, chanting 'O بنحبك Egypt ... Congratulations to Egypt 'and dancing to celebrate the victory of Egypt in packed groups of young men and boys waving Egyptian flags over the cars went through the streets of the city amid the hustle of "Elzimamir" and cheers.
And that was the starting whistle, the referee even paralyzed traffic in the city streets and rallied citizens in their homes on television.
And rooms packed with cafes, hotels, local clubs with dozens of young men who were keen to book places vacant for them to overcome the crisis of power outages in the sector.
Said Abu Mohammed, director of Cafe Delice in Gaza, which set up a huge screen to view the game, 'the cafe, siren, all workers in any match for the Egyptian team. "
He added that the cafe is located under intense pressure at work during the games faced by the Egyptian team that the overwhelming majority support in Gaza, Egypt.
And received the Egyptian goalkeeper Essam El-Hadary, known as 'the High Dam' lion's share of cheers. It is a car window out boy head and shouted "Hey Ya Issam urban ... You are the High Dam.
He said Mohammed Shabarawi (32 years) that this day is a feast for him after the third al-Fitr and Eid Al Adha, Egypt for him 'or the Arabs and the victory was a victory for all Arabs'.
The taxi driver Abdel Karim said that the safety of 'very happy with the victory of Egypt African Cup of Nations', pointing out that all attempts to 'dirty' to tarnish the image of Egypt and the Nile, which 'will not deter us from the support Habibtna Egypt and the Egyptian team'.
He pointed out that the game went on one of the local stations in Gaza, which broadcast directly.
Has paid a number of local radio stations in Gaza special attention to the game as they opened their telephone lines before the game to listen to the expectations of the public and interested athletes.
Said Tamer Abu Nkirp (40 years), it encourages Egypt because half of the blood from Egypt, 'I am Palestinian and my mother and an Egyptian born in Egypt and encourage Egypt and I love Egypt.'
The boy, said Zia honor innocent children 'support Egypt because I love Egypt, and I love Egypt because Egypt.'
Egypt had won the Africa Cup for the third time in a row after beating Ghana of a goal scorer Mohammad Naji (Guido) in the final minutes of the match played tonight at the Stade November 11 for Angola
Egypt in seventh heaven as they conquer Africa again
Ghana 0 Egypt 1: Nagui's late strike secures Pharaohs a record-breaking Africa Cup of Nations win
Monday, 1 February 2010
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With an 84th-minute winner, Mohamed Nagui confirmed this Egypt's side place not merely in the pantheon, but on its highest step. Since Hassan Shehata replaced Marco Tardelli as coach in 2004, they have not lost a Cup of Nations game, and last night claimed an unprecedented third straight title.
There were records broken or extended everywhere you looked. This was Egypt's seventh Cup of Nations success, three more than Ghana and Cameroon, their nearest challengers. Six of the side – Essam El Hadary, Hani Said, Wael Gomaa, Ahmed Fathi, Ahmed Hassan and Emad Meteeb – have played in all three finals, while Shehata equalled the Ghanaian CK Gyamfi's record of three titles as coach. “It’s not the greatest team of all time,” Shehata said, “but they’ve won three championships and we are the best in Africa.”
The most remarkable achievement of all, though, is that of Hassan, the playmaker and captain. This was his fourth Cup of Nations triumph: to put that in perspective, that is as many as any other nation and twice as many as Nigeria. He is an extraordinary player and a superb leader, but for all his insistence that he would like to play on "till I'm 100", the suspicion must be that, at 34, for him this will be the end.
As Egypt's veteran team manager Samir Adly acknowledged, this is a generation coming to the end of its cycle. "In February," Adly said, "we start again." It could be an experimental side that faces England in a friendly in March.
For Egypt, winning has become so frequent victories have developed their own traditions. At the final whistle, El Hadary, unusually suspect last night, climbed to adopt his familiar celebratory pose on the crossbar while Shehata was thrown into the air by delirious players; they even continued the habit of producing their least convincing performance in the final.
With the centre-back Mahmoud Fathalla suspended, Hossam Ghaly came into the side in midfield, with Fathi taking up his third different position of the tournament and slotting in on the right side of Egypt's back three. Presumably responding to Egypt's three-man back line, Ghana turned from their usual 4-4-2 to a 4-2-3-1 with Agyemang Opoku shifting from his usual central support-striking role to a position on the left. Cameroon did something similar in the final two years ago, and the game ran a similar course, as Egypt were initially frustrated before finding a late winner.
Ghana, who given their unexpected passage to the final might perhaps have been expected to quail having got there, showed no nerves, and even seemed happier in their new shape.
They started better than their coach Milovan Rajevac could have dared dream, maintaining possession, working neat triangles, seeming almost surreally confident, as though the magnitude of the occasion hadn't quite filtered through. Egypt, for the first time since the opening 20 minutes against Nigeria, seemed a touch uncertain. Even Hassan seemed rattled, and it can only have been his reputation that saved him from a booking towards the end of the first half as he followed up an attempt to punch the ball over the line with a crude foul on Kwadwo Asamoah.
Possession is one thing, though, chances something else, and partly because of their occasional lack of directness, and partly because of the excellence of Said, Egypt's libero, Ghana struggled to create.
Asmaoah Gyan, the great resurrected hero of these finals, was left to lope around up front by himself, where he enjoyed a rugged battle with Wael Gomaa, his man-marker. The comparison with Emile Heskey is inevitable. Like the England striker, Gyan frustrates as much as he delights, and is held in higher esteem by coaches and team-mates than by fans. Two years ago, on home soil, a couple of misses in Ghana's opening game drew such derision that he almost quit the squad, reportedly being persuaded to stay only after the intervention of Michael Essien.
He's been excellent in this tournament, though, and was again yesterday, despite his almost constant isolation. Had his 75th-minute free-kick flashed in rather than just wide after an uncertain flap from El Hadary, it could all have been a very different story. There were tears at the end, but this young team, gifted, well-organised and remarkably mature, will surely enjoy success at some time in the future.
After a superb defensive performance in which the two centre-backs, Isaac Vorsah and David Addy, with all of 40 years between them, were magnificent, Ghana even seemed to be building pressure as the second half wore on. Gyan had a couple of half-chances, and Agyemang Opoku was a fraction from getting a toe to Samuel Inkoom's low cross.
Perhaps Ghana were over-encouraged and thought that they could press forward more in search of a winner. Perhaps they were simply tired. But for the first time space appeared between Ghana's defence and midfield. Nagui, such a threat from the bench, ran on, exchanged passes with Mohamed Zidan, and curled a precise finish into the corner to confirm that, with five goals, he was the tournament's top scorer.
The finale may have been a little unconvincing, but Egypt deserved their triumph. Over the tournament they were the best side, and played a pleasing style of football that brought 15 goals in six games.
There may have been suspicions that they had enjoyed home advantage rather too much when they won on Egyptian soil four years ago, but their achievements since have more than validated that success. They will not be at the World Cup, but this may be the greatest team Africa has ever produced.
Ghana (4-2-3-1): Kingson; Inkoom, Addy, Vorsah, Sarpei; Agyemang-Badu, Annan; D Ayew, Asamoah, Opoku (Addo, 89); Gyan (Adiyiah, 87)
Egypt (3-5-2): El Hadary; Fathy (Moatasem 90), H Said, Gomaa; El Mohamady, A Hassan, Ghaly, Hosny, Moawad (Abdelshafi, 57); Zidan, Meteeb (Nagui, 70).
Referee: K Coulibaly (Mali).
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