West African Football Union

The West African Football Union (French: Union des Fédérations Ouest-Africaines de Football; Portuguese: União das Federações Oeste Africanas), officially abbreviated as WAFU-UFOA and WAFU, is a sports governing body representing the football associations in West Africa that was founded in 1975 and is a subregional body of the Confederation of African Football (CAF).

  • West African Football Union
  • Union des Fédérations Ouest-Africaines de Football
  • União das Federações Oeste Africanas
Formation1975 (1975)
Type
Region served
West Africa
Membership
Official language
English, French and Portuguese
AffiliationsCAF, FIFA
Website

It mainly organizes qualifying tournaments/championships for the CAF Women's Champions League and CAF's national team competitions except the Africa Cup of Nations, but also organizes its own competitions, like the currently-inactive WAFU Nations Cup.

Presidents

  • K. Tandoh (1975–1977)
  • Seyi Memene (1977–1984)
  • Abdoulaye Fofana (1984–1988)
  • Jonathan Boytie Ogufere (1988–1994)
  • Dieng Ousseynou (1994–1999)
  • Abdulmumini Aminu (1999–2002)
  • El Hadji Malick Sy (2002–2004)
  • Jacques Anouma (2004–2008)[1]
  • Amos Adamu (2008–2010)
  • Kwesi Nyantakyi (2011–2018)[2]
  • Kurt Okraku (2019–present)

Member associations

WAFU consists of all football associations of West Africa, but got spilt into two zones by CAF, who cited "organisational issues facing WAFU."[3]

  • Zone A (Niger)
  • Zone B (Volta Niger)

Mauritania is the only WAFU member to also be a member of the Union of Arab Football Associations (UAFA).

Country Zone Governing body
 Cape Verde Zone A Cape Verdean Football Federation
 Gambia Gambia Football Association
 Guinea Guinean Football Federation
 Guinea-Bissau Football Federation of Guinea-Bissau
 Liberia Liberia Football Association
 Mali Malian Football Federation
 Mauritania Football Federation of the Islamic Republic of Mauritania
 Senegal Senegalese Football Federation
 Sierra Leone Sierra Leone Football Association
 Benin Zone B Benin Football Federation
 Burkina Faso Burkinabé Football Federation
 Ghana Ghana Football Association
 Ivory Coast Ivorian Football Federation
 Niger Nigerien Football Federation
 Nigeria Nigeria Football Federation
 Togo Togolese Football Federation

Competitions

WAFU runs main and qualifying competitions covering men, women and youth.

Current title holders

Competition Year Champions Rank/Score Runners-up Next edition Dates
National teams (men)
WAFU Nations Cup 2019  Senegal 1st  Ghana TBA
WAFU Zone A Nations Cup 2024 5 – 17 July
Zone A U-20 Championship 2023  Senegal 2st  Gambia 2024 15 – 30 September
Zone B U-20 Championship 2023  Ivory Coast 1st  Burkina Faso 2024 17 – 31 October
Zone A U-17 Championship 2023  Mali  Senegal 2024 WAFU Zone A U-17 Championship 20 Oct – 3 Nov
Zone B U-17 Championship 2024  Burkina Faso 3–1[4]  Ivory Coast
Zone A U-15 Championship 2022  Senegal 3–0[5]  Liberia TBD
Zone A Schools Championship 2022 CS Ben Sekou Sylla 1st New Yundum TBD
Zone B Schools Championship 2022 CEG Sainte Rita 1st CS Venus Saioua TBD
WAFU Zone A Beach Soccer 2024 3 – 7 July
National teams (women)
Zone A Women's Cup 2023  Senegal 2nd  Cape Verde TBD TBD
Zone B Women's Cup 2019  Nigeria 1st  Ivory Coast TBD TBD
WAFU Zone A U20 Women's Cup 2024  Senegal  Guinea-Bissau
WAFU Zone B U20 Women's Cup 2023  Ghana 1st  Nigeria TBD TBD
Zone A Girls Schools Championship 2022 Scan Aid 1st Ecole Congresso De Cassaca TBD
Zone B Girls Schools Championship 2022 CEG Colby 1st Ecole Chanvigny B TBD
Clubs (women)
CAF Women's Champions League Qualifiers (Zone A) 2023 AS Mandé 1st AS Dakar 2024 TBD
CAF Women's Champions League Qualifiers (Zone B) 2023 Ampem Darkoa Ladies 1st Delta Queens 2024 TBD

Defunct competitions

Competition Duration
CEDEAO Cup1977–1991
West African Club Championship1977–2011
Amílcar Cabral Cup1979–2007
West African Nations Cup1982–1987
UEMOA Tournament2007–2016

FIFA World Rankings

Men's national teams

Rankings are calculated by FIFA.[6]

WAFU Zone FIFA Country Points +/
1 A 17  Senegal 1624.73
2 B 30  Nigeria 1520.27
3 A 38  Ivory Coast 1498.8 1
4 B 44  Mali 1477.9 1
5 B 62  Burkina Faso 1390.38
6 B 65  Cape Verde 1425.64 1
6 B 68  Ghana 1358.77 1
7 A 76  Guinea 1324.65 1
8 A 97  Benin 1225.68
9 B 105  Mauritania 1195.5
10 A 113  Togo 1170.34 6
11 B 113  Guinea-Bissau 1163.44 1
12 A 126  Sierra Leone 1137.36 2
13 B 129  Niger 1125.5 1
14 A 130  Gambia 1114.8 1
16 A 152  Liberia 1029.58

Last updated 4 April 2024

Top-ranked men's national football teams

See also

References

  1. "Wafu Cup to make a comeback". BBC Sport. 29 September 2008. Retrieved 2 January 2010. Amos Adamu, president of Wafu,...
  2. "Nyantakyi resigns from FIFA, CAF, and WAFU positions". Graphic Online. 11 June 2018. Retrieved 9 October 2022.
  3. "West African Football Union (Wafu) disbanded by Caf". BBC Sport. 17 May 2011. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
  4. "Tapsoba double fires Burkina Faso to WAFU B U-17 AFCON qualifying title". CAFOnline.com. 29 May 2024. Retrieved 30 May 2024.
  5. "Senegal win WAFU A U15 boys tournament". CAFOnline.com. 21 August 2022. Retrieved 21 August 2022.
  6. "The FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking (Men)". FIFA. Retrieved 30 May 2024.
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